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Blog Corner

Let's explore insights on Leadership, Decision making and Performance - explored through the lens of Neuroscience and real executive experience.
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Why You Remember Every Criticism and Forget Every Win
You just led a town hall. Two hundred people. It went well. Ninety-seven people gave you positive feedback. Two people said something critical. One was mildly snarky in the Q&A. That night, which ones are you still thinking about? If you’re honest, it’s not the ninety-seven. You’re replaying the snarky comment. You’re reconstructing the exact tone. You’re wondering what it means about how people really see you. The wins from the day have already faded. The one moment of f
Aakanksha Joshi
Apr 126 min read


The Hidden Tax Your Body Is Paying for Your Leadership Style
Nobody talks about this one. But it’s the reason some leaders stay razor sharp at 55 and others start quietly fading at 42. And it has absolutely nothing to do with talent, experience, or how hard they work. Let me ask you something honest. When was the last time you were truly, completely off? Not glancing at your phone at dinner. Not mentally rehearsing tomorrow’s agenda while pretending to watch a movie. Not waking up at 3am with a decision sitting on your chest like a
Aakanksha Joshi
Apr 126 min read


Why Your Brain Shuts Down Exactly When You Need It Most
You've been there. The meeting that matters most. The client who's questioning you. The boardroom where every eye is on you. And suddenly — out of nowhere — your brain goes quiet. Not calm. Quiet. Like a phone with full signal that simply won't make a call. You know the answer. You've lived inside this work for months. But in that moment, it's like the file is right there on your desk and you simply cannot open it. Your mouth opens and what comes out is vague, slightly defe
Aakanksha Joshi
Apr 125 min read


Why Executive Coaching in India Needs a Neuroscience Revolution
India’s executive coaching market is growing rapidly. Organisations are investing in coaching for senior leaders, HR departments are building coaching cultures, and the ICF reports India as one of the fastest-growing coaching markets globally. But most executive coaching in India still operates on models that neuroscience has moved beyond. The dominant approach remains behavioural — identify the pattern, set goals, build accountability, check progress. This works for skill d
Aakanksha Joshi
Apr 112 min read


Why the Highest-Performing Leaders Hit a Ceiling — and What Neuroscience Says About Breaking Through
There is a particular kind of frustration that only high performers understand. You have done everything right. You have built the skills, delivered results, earned the seat. And yet somewhere between the title and the impact you expected to have, something has stalled. Not dramatically. Not in any way that shows up in your performance review. But internally, the cost of maintaining output has increased while the returns have flattened. The instinct is to work harder, sharpe
Aakanksha Joshi
Apr 114 min read


Why Decision Fatigue Is a Nervous System Problem, Not a Willpower Problem
Why Decision Fatigue Is a Nervous System Problem, Not a Willpower Problem Every senior leader knows the feeling. It is 4 PM, you have been in back-to-back meetings since morning, and now the most consequential decision of the day sits in front of you. You read the brief again. The words register, but nothing clicks. You defer it. You tell yourself you will look at it fresh tomorrow. The conventional explanation is decision fatigue — a concept popularised by Roy Baumeister'
Aakanksha Joshi
Apr 114 min read


What Happens in the Brain When Leaders Navigate Uncertainty — and Why Most Get It Wrong
Uncertainty is the defining condition of modern leadership. Markets shift, teams restructure, competitors emerge, regulations change. The leaders who thrive are not those with better information or sharper strategy. They are those whose brain can maintain cognitive clarity when certainty disappears. The Brain’s Intolerance of Ambiguity The human brain is fundamentally a prediction machine. Arne Ohman’s research and the broader literature on uncertainty processing show tha
Aakanksha Joshi
Jan 103 min read


How Your Brain Constructs Confidence — and Why Most Leaders Build It Wrong
Most leaders are operating on a "bank account" model of confidence: they believe they must deposit enough wins, awards, and external validation to eventually withdraw a sense of certainty. We are taught that confidence is either a personality trait you’re born with, or a mask you must "fake" until it becomes real. But if you have ever reached the peak of a major achievement only to feel like an imposter five minutes later, you know this model is broken. Neuroscience suggests
Aakanksha Joshi
Jan 104 min read
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