Article: The risk of indifference: leadership’s quietest failure Written by Gideon Schulman CMgr FCMI Tuesday 02 December 2025 Share Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share via email Indifference is contagious, spreading through both systems and individuals. That’s why it must be noticed and interrupted early I didn’t decide one day to become indifferent. It crept in. A shrug here, a silence there. And by the time I saw it, the damage had already taken root. Elie Wiesel once warned: “The opposite of love is not hate, it’s indifference.” That phrase haunts me. Especially now, in leadership. Because indifference is not dramatic. It doesn’t announce itself with sirens. It seeps in quietly. And its consequences run deep. What indifference looks like in leadership Indifference doesn’t always look cruel. Sometimes it can mean: ignoring a concern because it’s ‘not urgent’ letting a toxic high performer off the hook skimming over someone’s exhaustion avoiding uncomfortable feedback choosing tasks over people We rationalise it. We’re busy. We’re being strategic. We’ll ‘come back to it’. But people notice. Over time, these moments tell a story – of what we care about and what we don’t. In one project I led, multiple people quietly flagged a supplier concern. I nodded, moved on. I assumed it would settle. Months later, that same issue became a full-blown reputational problem. I hadn’t acted maliciously, just indifferently. And it cost us. How indifference creeps in Leaders rarely become indifferent overnight. Indifference creeps in when we’re: overwhelmed – and start triaging empathy exhausted – and become numb to nuance afraid – and avoid conflict or truth senior – and drift from day-to-day realities These aren’t excuses, but they are warnings. If we’re not alert, indifference becomes the default. The cost of indifference Indifference corrodes trust. It sends the message that small things and small people don’t matter. It can: erode culture – people stop raising concerns or ideas breed disengagement – colleagues disconnect emotionally normalise silence – minor injustices become background noise damage credibility – once you notice, it may be too late to restore trust Conversely, even a brief moment of attentiveness – asking a question, noticing discomfort, stepping in – can build loyalty for years. Keep reading: how to resist indifference Login or register below for Free Instant Access Login If you are already registered as a CMI Friend, Subscriber or Member, just login to view this article. Confirm your registration Login below to confirm your details and access this article. Sign in with email Email remember me remember Forget? Please confirm that you want to switch off the "Sign in with email" remember me feature. Yes No Register for Free Access Not yet a Member, Subscriber or Friend? Register as a CMI Friend for free, and get access to this and many other exclusive resources, as well as weekly updates straight to your inbox. You have successfully registered As a CMI Friend, you now have access to whole range of CMI Friendship benefits. Please login to the left to confirm your registration and access the article. Article Our extensive range of articles are designed to keep you in the loop with all the latest management and leadership best practice, research and news. Members See More CMI Members have access to thousands of online learning and CPD resources. Learn more about our membership benefits Join The Community CMI offers a variety of flexible membership solutions, tailored to your needs. Find out more and get involved in the CMI community today.