The Mid-Year Leadership Audit
Mid-year isn’t a reset. It’s a reality check.
The strategy you set in January has either gained momentum or lost ground.
Your Q1 hires are either elevating the team or being carried.
The conversations you said you’d have, have either happened – or moved to next week – again.
By now, the outcomes of those choices are clear. The only question is whether you’re willing to face them.
New targets. Refreshed slides. The same leaders in the same roles.
They call it a review. It isn’t.
The shift to make
Mid-year is not a planning point. It’s a leadership audit.
- Surfaces what’s drifting – not only what’s clearly broken.
- Distinguishes who is driving performance and who is slowing it down.
- It recalibrates H2 based on what’s facts — not what was planned.
Done well, it gives you a clear second half. Done poorly, it gives you more of the same.
Five questions that decide your second half
Answer these honestly or H2 will answer them for you.
01. What have you quietly let slide?
Not what failed loudly – what quietly fell off the agenda.
The metric you stopped tracking. The standard you relaxed. The priority that became optional.
Quiet drift compounds. Small lapses today turn into bigger gaps tomorrow.
Call it out. Clearly.
02. Who is lifting? Who is flattening?
At the start of the year, most leadership teams look the same on paper. Six months in, the difference is clear.
Some leaders elevate performance around them. Others quietly dilute it, often without realising it.
Deep down you already know which is which. The real test is whether you’re willing to act on it.
03. Where is engagement starting to fade?
Engagement doesn’t collapse overnight – it pulls back gradually.
Effort narrows. Energy dips. Attention shifts elsewhere.
If you can’t name where your highest engagement risk sits right now, you’re not seeing it – your sensing it. The Fun Test turns that instinct into something you can measure.
04. Which conversation are you still putting off?
Every leader has one – the performance issue that keeps slipping another week. The expectation that was never clearly set. The recognition that was never given.
You’ve been carrying it since February.
What happens if you have the conversation this week? And what will it cost if you don’t?
05. What would your strongest people say is true?
If your best people described your leadership — honestly, privately, with no consequence — what would they say?
That version of you already exists. It’s the one your team experiences every day.
The value of audit comes from comparing their reality with the leadership you believe you’re showing.
What to do with the answers
An audit only matters if it changes what you do next.
Three decisions to make this week:
Stop one thing from slipping— lock it in next week’s calendar
Have one conversation you’ve been avoiding — within the next seven days
Get a clear read on your team — move from instinct to measurement
Most second halves fail because they’re built on assumption. An audit replaces assumption with what’s actually happening.
Getting a clear read
Seeing clearly first. Action follows. Most leaders skip that first step – so without a true view of your team, you’re operating on instinct.
That’s where most leaders stay. Talent+ | Fun Test was designed for this moment.
It reveals:
- Who is driving performance – and who isn’t
- Where engagement risk is already emerging
- What’s really shaping behaviour across the team
So your H2 decisions are grounded in reality — not assumption, not hope.
From clarity to action
Clarity alone doesn’t create change. What matters is how leaders respond to it – especially under pressure.
The audit reveals the truth. What follows is whether you act on it — clearly, directly, and without delay.
The bottom line
Half the year is already behind you.
Your strategy is either gaining momentum or losing ground. Your leaders are either elevating performance or holding it back. Your team is either engaged or beginning to disengage.
Mid-year doesn’t reset the plan – it shows you whether it’s working.
What you do with that insight will define the next six months.
Start with a clear, honest view of what’s really happening.
Then act on what you see.