Standout Competencies of the Most Effective Health Care Leaders

April 6, 2026

What separates elite health care leaders from the rest — and how you can develop them

The Unique Demands of Health Care Leadership

Healthcare has never demanded more from its leaders than it does today. Workforce challenges have emerged as the top concern among health system executives, with more than 90% citing productivity improvement as a critical priority. With 55% of the healthcare workforce considering leaving their jobs within the next year, retention has become inseparable from leadership behavior.

Rising demand driven by aging populations, chronic disease, and higher patient acuity is pushing spending growth more rapidly than growth in GDP, while organizations simultaneously navigate financial, operational, and regulatory complexity.

Layered on top of this is the rapid emergence of AI, digital transformation, and escalating cybersecurity threats. Add to this the surge in mental health issues driven in part by pervasive social media use among our youth.

 In this environment, the gap between the most and least effective healthcare leaders has never been wider — or more consequential.

The Research: What the Data Tells Us

Over more than three decades, Zenger Folkman has assessed leadership effectiveness across thousands of healthcare leaders. In this study, we examined 2,764 leaders in Health Care and then selected 413 leaders who held top management positions, each evaluated by an average of 15 raters — including managers, peers, direct reports, and others — across 60 distinct leadership behaviors using our validated 360-degree assessment methodology.

We then segmented the population into quartiles, comparing the lowest-rated leaders against the highest-rated. The difference in overall effectiveness was striking — top-quartile leaders didn’t outscore their bottom-quartile counterparts by a modest margin. They operated at a categorically different level.

[FIGURE 1 — Overall Effectiveness Ratings by Quartile]

The Direct Link to Employee Engagement

The most tangible impact of leadership quality shows up in employee engagement. Our research revealed a stark gap:

  • Direct reports of bottom-quartile leaders scored at only the 28th percentile for engagement.
  • Direct reports of top-quartile leaders scored at the 78th percentile.

[FIGURE 2 — Direct Report Engagement by Leader Quartile]

That 50-percentile difference is not an abstract HR metric. Patients feel it immediately — in the quality of communication, the attentiveness of care, and the responsiveness to their concerns. Poor leadership is also expensive: organizations with high concentrations of bottom-quartile leaders face elevated turnover, higher error rates, lower satisfaction scores, and a culture that accelerates the workforce crisis the industry is already struggling to contain.

The 8 Standout Competencies of the Best Health Care Leaders

Seven competencies emerged with the greatest consistency in separating top-quartile leaders from the bottom. Critically, these are not innate traits — they are learnable, measurable behaviors.

  1. Communicates Powerfully and Prolifically The best healthcare leaders translate complex organizational objectives into clear priorities — and do so consistently, not just during crises. In an environment where miscommunication can have life-or-death consequences and staff operate across multiple shifts and settings, clarity and frequency of communication are foundational. Leaders who communicate powerfully ensure every team member understands not just what they are doing, but why it matters.
  2. Solves Problems and Analyzes Issues At its essence, excellent healthcare is problem solving. From staffing shortages to care coordination breakdowns, the healthcare environment generates complex, high-stakes challenges daily. The most effective leaders are trusted to use sound judgment under pressure — approaching problems analytically, considering consequences, and making decisions others have confidence in even when answers aren’t clear-cut.
  3. Establishes Stretch Goals Top leaders create an atmosphere of continual improvement, helping people reach for goals beyond what they originally believed possible. Healthcare organizations that settle for “good enough” put patients at risk. By setting high expectations and modeling the drive to meet them, these leaders build a culture where excellence becomes habitual rather than occasional.
  4. Inspires and Motivates Others to High Performance The best healthcare leaders know that sustainable performance comes from pull, not push. In an industry facing epidemic levels of burnout and compassion fatigue, the ability to re-energize staff is one of the most strategically valuable behaviors a leader can demonstrate. Leaders who inspire don’t just improve productivity — they rebuild purpose. In healthcare, reconnecting people to that purpose is often the difference between a team that thrives and one that quietly unravels.
  5. Collaboration and Teamwork A single patient encounter may involve physicians, nurses, pharmacists, therapists, and administrators — all requiring seamless coordination. The best leaders actively foster coordination across departments and functions. Where silos persist, care quality suffers and burnout accelerates. Leaders who build collaborative teams create psychological safety that allows staff to speak up when something isn’t right — a dynamic directly tied to patient safety outcomes.
  6. Displays High Integrity and Honesty In healthcare, trust is everything. The most effective leaders are rock-solid in their integrity — consistent role models who walk the talk and avoid the corrosive pattern of saying one thing and doing another. Authentic integrity creates a culture of accountability where staff are more likely to report errors and take genuine ownership of their performance. Leaders who lack it are a direct threat to patient safety and organizational culture.
  7. Champions Change Healthcare is an industry in perpetual transformation — new regulations, evolving care models, emerging technologies, and shifting patient expectations create a constant demand for adaptation. Yet change is often met with skepticism and resistance, particularly among staff already stretched thin. Top managers who champion change don’t simply announce new initiatives — they make the compelling case for why change is necessary, what success looks like, and how it connects to a purpose staff already care about. At the senior level, this competency is less about managing a project timeline and more about building the belief that the change is worth making in the first place — serving as the critical bridge between organizational strategy and frontline adoption.
  8. Develops Strategic Perspective Effective leaders maintain a clear view of both the organizational horizon and daily operational realities. They translate the organization’s broader vision into meaningful goals at the unit and individual level. In a rapidly changing environment — shifting reimbursement models, workforce disruption, evolving technology — leaders without strategic perspective leave teams reactive and disoriented. Those who cultivate it create alignment and direction that sustains performance through uncertainty.

Conclusion: Leadership Development Is the Strategic Investment Healthcare Can’t Afford to Ignore

The data is unambiguous: leadership quality is the single most controllable variable in healthcare performance. Technology, facilities, and marketing all matter — but none generate their full return without effective leaders directing the teams that serve patients every day.

What makes this finding both sobering and hopeful is that leadership skills are not fixed. Zenger Folkman’s three decades of research confirm that leaders can — and do — move from the bottom quartile to the top with the right development process. But that doesn’t happen through good intentions or annual reviews. It requires a deliberate, sustained commitment to leadership development treated as a core organizational priority.

That process begins with honest 360-degree assessment. Most leaders carry meaningful blind spots about their behavior and its impact on others. A rigorous 360 provides a mirror that reflects not the leader’s self-perception, but the actual experience of the people who work with them every day. Without that data, development is guesswork.

With it, development becomes focused and intentional — targeting the specific behaviors that will move the needle most on each leader’s effectiveness and their team’s engagement, rather than delivering broad, generic training that produces little lasting change.

The returns compound across every dimension of organizational performance: higher engagement drives better patient satisfaction; reduced turnover preserves institutional knowledge and lowers recruiting costs; aligned teams execute more consistently; and a genuine culture of development attracts stronger talent at every level — building competitive differentiation that cannot simply be purchased or replicated.

The seven competencies in this research are a practical, evidence-based blueprint for what the best healthcare leaders actually do. The question is not whether leadership development matters — the data answers that definitively. The question is whether your organization will treat it with the urgency it deserves.

-Joe Folkman, President of Zenger Folkman

Zenger Folkman is the industry leader in evidence-based leadership development. To learn how our 360-degree assessment and development process can elevate leadership effectiveness across your healthcare organization, contact us today.