Liz Wiseman asked herself a question that took her years to research: why do some leaders cause all of us around them to become smarter and others simply cause our brains to go into hibernation when we enter the office? Those who create more smartness in everyone around them she labels Multipliers, while those who create less she labels Diminishers. She says that, with the same group of people, Multipliers get about two times as much capability out of their people as Diminishers do.
The bad news is that most Diminishers don’t realize they’re diminishing. Wiseman refers to them as Accidental Diminishers: a leader who always responds to an employee’s question before giving them time to answer, a leader who always rushes to save someone who is struggling, or a leader who sets such a fast-paced environment that no one else feels like taking charge. All good intent — but a shrinking team.
Wiseman organized her research around five practices. A Talent Magnet identifies what people are naturally excellent at and places them in areas of importance. A Liberator provides space for employees to think and talk freely — and to make mistakes without fear. A Challenger challenges team members with questions larger than their current thinking. A Debate Maker causes meaningful arguments prior to making important decisions instead of simply allowing people to agree by default. An Investor empowers employees by providing ownership for their work and holding them accountable for outcomes — and does not take the work back.
None of these are soft. Multipliers hold employees to extremely high standards — they just believe the intelligence necessary to meet those standards already exists in the room.
It’s rare that a leadership book makes you recognize yourself in the villain. The Accidental Diminisher chapter is worth the money alone. The five-discipline model also translates well to actual teams: each one maps to concrete behaviors that can be changed immediately.
The major weakness is the excessive use of anecdotes from executives. As with most business books built from research, the middle repeats its ideas through story after story that stops adding information after the third one. When you finish reading chapters 1 and 2 and the Accidental Diminisher chapter, skim the rest.
Anybody leading people — a manager, founder, team lead — and especially anybody suspecting their team is quieter around them than among themselves. If your issue is your own productivity as opposed to your team’s, Peter Drucker’s The Effective Executive is the sharper choice, and Tribal Leadership covers the culture layer Multipliers leaves out. See our best books to build wealth roundup for the full list.
Leaders fall somewhere on a continuum from Multipliers — who enhance the intelligence of everybody around them — to Diminishers, who reduce it. The difference manifests as roughly double the capability from the same people. The book illustrates the specific behaviors that move you toward the Multiplier end.
Yes, if you supervise anybody. The Accidental Diminisher self-assessment is perhaps the best part of the book and doesn’t appear in the free summaries. If you haven’t supervised anybody yet, begin with a personal-effectiveness book and return once you’ve got a team.
In your next meeting, count how many times you answer a question versus ask one. That ratio is your Multiplier score in miniature — and it’s the fastest thing in the book to change.
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