Leading Outside the OR Is a Different Job Entirely (Dr. Jeffrey Wolf)
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Most physicians are trained to lead by knowing the answer—until they step into roles where certainty becomes a liability.
- Dr. Jeffrey Wolf reflects on how his early identity as a confident surgeon shaped his initial approach to leadership.
- He shares the disorienting realization, during COVID incident command, that leading a complex health system required something entirely different than directing an operating room.
- Through observing seasoned operational leaders, he began to shift from command-and-control to deep listening and synthesis.
- Dr. Wolf explores how imposter syndrome—often seen as a weakness—became a surprising asset by forcing curiosity, humility, and attentiveness.
- He discusses the discipline of clean agreements, structured schedules, and strong administrative support as essential tools for sustainable leadership.
- The conversation highlights the tension of switching between being the expert clinician and the facilitator of collective intelligence.
Effective physician leadership isn’t about having the right answer—it’s about creating the conditions where the best answer can emerge.
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