As Jersey approaches the upcoming elections, many will be reflecting on the future direction of our island.
I have been doing the same and wanted to offer a perspective shaped by an increasing awareness of how closely organisational leadership principles apply beyond the workplace and into society itself.
The cost of living continues to rise. Housing remains a challenge for many. Young people are questioning whether they have a future here and some are already leaving, with no intention of returning. Businesses are navigating increasing complexity, cost and regulation. And for many, systems feel harder to navigate than they need to be.
Individually, these are policy issues. Collectively, they reflect how life is being experienced on our island.
From workplace culture to societal culture
For much of my career, I have worked with organisations on workplace wellbeing and leadership. One of the most consistent lessons is that culture is not created by initiatives. It is shaped by leadership.
The same is true at a societal level.
Politicians, like business leaders, shape culture through the decisions they make, the priorities they set, the tone they adopt, and the environment they create. If we want a society that feels enabling, supportive, and forward-looking, then our approach to leadership must reflect that.
In business, leaders are not expected to be experts in every field. Their role is to draw on expertise, listen carefully, and make informed decisions. The same principle applies in public life. Politicians are not there to have all the answers, but to represent the needs and wishes of their electorate, drawing on expert advice and making decisions in the best interests of those they serve.
This makes listening essential.
Without a clear understanding of lived experience, even well-intentioned policies can miss the mark. In organisations, the most effective leaders are those who listen genuinely to their people. The same principle applies more widely. Listening to islanders and their lived experience of housing, cost of living, work, and daily life is essential if policy is to reflect reality, not just intention.
Alongside listening comes trust. In the workplace, when people are trusted, they take ownership and perform at their best. When they are over-managed or constrained by unnecessary processes and restrictions, the opposite often happens.
Beyond tweaks at the edges
When things are not working, there is often a temptation to ‘tweak’ – to add another initiative or layer of process. But meaningful change does not come from the edges. It comes from rethinking how the system itself operates.
Much of the public debate understandably focuses on specific measures and outcomes. But without addressing how decisions are made, how priorities are set, and how different parts of the system work together, even well-intentioned solutions can struggle to deliver in practice.
We may be at a similar point in Jersey. Incremental adjustments can be helpful, but if the overall experience remains one of pressure, complexity, or constraint, then it is worth asking whether a more fundamental shift in approach is needed.
There is a well-known observation, often attributed to Ernest Hemingway, about how problems unfold: “Gradually, then suddenly”. It describes how pressures can build quietly over time through small compromises, overlooked issues, or decisions that seem manageable in isolation – until a tipping point is reached.
In organisations, this might show up as declining morale, rising costs, or inefficiencies that are tolerated for too long. In economies and societies, the pattern can be similar. Pressures accumulate, whether financial, structural, or social, while outwardly, things may appear stable.
This is not a prediction, but a reminder: good leadership is not only about responding to immediate challenges, but about recognising early signals and acting before issues become more complex and far more difficult to address.
Working together, not in silos
Another important lesson from organisational life is the value of collaboration. In businesses, when departments operate in silos, the result is often inefficiency, duplication, and a fragmented experience.
Progress happens more effectively when people work together, sharing insight, aligning around common goals, and recognising that outcomes are interconnected.
There is a clear parallel at a societal level.
Many of Jersey’s challenges – housing, cost of living, workforce pressures, and wellbeing – are deeply interconnected. When decisions are made in isolation, unintended consequences are often felt elsewhere.
A more integrated, collaborative approach can lead to better outcomes, greater efficiency, and a more coherent experience for everyone.
Enabling, not constraining
Another lesson from organisational life is that excessive oversight can unintentionally hinder performance.
While governance and regulation play an important role, there is a balance to be struck. When systems become overly complex or prescriptive, they can add cost, reduce agility, and create frustration.
This is not about reducing standards, but about ensuring that frameworks support rather than inadvertently restrict. In some areas, there may well be an opportunity to create more enabling conditions for businesses to operate effectively, both locally and within global financial and digital platforms. Working with those closest to the issues, and enabling co-ordinated, timely action, is essential.
Economic strength and wellbeing are not competing goals
A growing body of research shows that productivity, retention, and long-term economic performance are closely linked to how people experience their work and daily lives.
Strong economies depend on people who are able to live and work sustainably.
Financial services remain central to Jersey’s prosperity, alongside other sectors including tourism, hospitality, agriculture, care, digital, and the third sector – all of which contribute to the island’s diversity and identity.
This is where what is often described as wellbeing-driven leadership becomes relevant. Not instead of economic thinking but alongside it. Because ultimately, success is not just about output. It is about how life is experienced.
Creating the conditions for people to stay
One of the most pressing challenges is the risk of losing people – particularly the younger generation – who do not feel that Jersey offers a viable or fulfilling future.
This is about more than economics. It is about opportunity, affordability, and a sense of possibility.
If we want people to stay, and to build their lives here, we need to ensure that Jersey works not just in theory, but in practice.
A moment for reflection
As we approach the elections, this is an opportunity to reflect on how we lead, what we value, and how decisions are experienced by those they affect.
Jersey is, in many ways, a remarkable place. A safe, beautiful island with a strong sense of community, where people care and contribute. It is not perfect, but it has much to offer, and much worth protecting.
Perhaps the opportunity now is not simply to focus on what is not working, but to build on what is, while thoughtfully addressing the challenges people speak about.
Because leadership is not just about managing systems. It is about shaping the conditions in which people live their lives – and protecting what already makes those lives worth living.




