Thereβs a quiet shift happening in the culture of work β one thatβs easy to miss, but heavy with consequence.
We are training a generation of professionals to perform duty as performance β not by accident, but by design.
βIn an economy built on optics, productivity, and personal branding, even sincerity has been shaped to serve the system.β
Young professionals arenβt choosing this; theyβre inheriting it.
They are being rewarded not just for excellence, but for appearing extraordinary while doing what used to be ordinary.
When applause follows basic responsibilities β showing up, replying promptly, offering an opinion in a meeting β the baseline inflates. Humility becomes optional.
The routine is repackaged as rare. Duty is confused with generosity. And over time, this reshapes more than just workplace expectations. It deforms the very idea of leadership.
We begin raising professionals who know how to appear trustworthy, but not how to hold trust.
Who learn how to talk about impact, but not how to bear it.
Who expect affirmation for presence, but arenβt grounded in purpose.
This isnβt just a workplace trend. Itβs a cultural rehearsal choreographed by extractive logic β teaching the next generation that leadership is performance, and that applause is a sign youβre doing something meaningful.
But what if itβs not?
The Performance of Professionalism
In meeting rooms, inboxes, and industry conferences, a strange hunger has emerged. Professionals arenβt just delivering their roles β theyβre pausing mid-delivery, looking up, and waiting for applause.
A well-written report.
A process improvement.
A spreadsheet that balances.
A deadline met.
A recommendation made.
All perfectly valuable. But also⦠the job.
What used to be called competence now masquerades as grace.
What used to be expected is now presented as exceptional.
And what is transactional is increasingly paraded as sacrificial.
Itβs not that good work shouldnβt be honored. It should.
But it should be honored quietly β through trust, through respect, through the freedom to keep doing it.
The danger is when we start confusing service rendered with grace bestowed.
Because there is a difference.
- Grace is given freely. Service is given for a fee.
- Grace is a gift. Service is an agreement.
- Grace asks nothing. Service expects payment, and sometimes praise.
Professionalism is not martyrdom.
Responsibility is not charity.
Doing what we said we would do is not an act of heroism.
This doesnβt mean our work isnβt worthy.
But it does mean we donβt need to frame our effort as something sacred just to feel seen.
The dignity of work is real β even when no one claps.
Letβs keep doing it anyway.
Still Leadership
This confusion isnβt harmless. Itβs creeping into how we define leadership itself.
When professionals seek applause for showing up, leaders begin to believe that showing up is enough. The bar drops from stewardship to visibility. From service to status. And eventually, from responsibility to reward.
But leadership isnβt about applause. Itβs about endurance.
Itβs about staying steady when no one sees you.
And choosing not to perform, even when it would be easier than being real.
If this tension resonates, you may find this reflection meaningful:
π Still Leadership: The Quiet Practice of Holding Steady
A reminder that the future is shaped not by what gets the most praise,
but by what we pass on as normal.