The Willow Tree Leadership Style
"Management is really about this idea of be sturdy while being flexible. So I think about this metaphor a lot of the willow tree." — Julie Zhuo
What It Is
A metaphor for managing change: Leaders must remain rooted in their core purpose while being extremely flexible in their tactics, absorbing the storms of change without breaking.
When To Use
-
During pivots or restructures
-
Industry upheavals (e.g., AI disruption)
-
When team morale is shaky due to uncertainty
-
Any moment requiring both stability and adaptability
The Willow Tree Model
🌿 FLEXIBLE BRANCHES
(Tactics)
┌─────────────────┐
│ • Methods │
│ • Tools │
│ • Roadmaps │
│ • Processes │
└────────┬────────┘
│
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
│
┌────────┴────────┐
│ 🌳 STURDY ROOTS │
│ (Purpose) │
│ • Mission │
│ • Values │
│ • North Star │
└─────────────────┘
Core Principles
- Be Sturdy (Roots)
Have absolute conviction in your North Star, vision, and values. This provides stability for the team.
- Be Flexible (Branches)
Be willing to completely change your methods, tools, and roadmaps based on new information/tech.
- Manage the Emotional Climate
Acknowledge fear but reframe change as an opportunity to reinvent (like Marc Benioff's "This is good" mindset).
- Conviction Check
Ensure you truly believe in the mission; if you are just following orders without belief, you cannot be a "sturdy" leader.
How To Apply
STEP 1: Define Your Roots └── What is the unchanging purpose? └── What values are non-negotiable?
STEP 2: Identify Your Branches └── Which tactics/tools are just current methods? └── What should change if circumstances change?
STEP 3: Communicate Both └── "Our mission is X (stable)" └── "Our approach to Y is changing (flexible)"
STEP 4: Model Emotional Resilience └── Acknowledge uncertainty openly └── Reframe challenges as opportunities └── Stay calm while branches sway
Common Mistakes
❌ Being rigid in tactics (refusing to change processes)
❌ Being weak in vision (changing the goal every time the wind blows)
❌ Hiding uncertainty from the team instead of addressing it
Real-World Example
Julie advises new managers who disagree with a CEO's directive to not just "follow orders" (weak roots), but to engage in dialogue to find the specific hypothesis they can agree to test (flexibility).
Source: Julie Zhuo, Lenny's Podcast