Some people use the two words interchangeably. But the experience is in experience is significant.
We work with leaders.
We work for bosses.
Just by this, you might be able to get the gist of it.
I want to focus more on the experience we go through working with/for them.
So here is a GPT generated table listing the difference in action.
| Area | Boss (what they do) | Leader (what they do) |
|---|---|---|
| Direction setting | Tells people what to do | Sets direction and context, then aligns people |
| Decision making | Makes decisions alone | Involves others where relevant before deciding |
| Delegation | Assigns tasks | Matches work to strengths and develops people |
| Problem solving | Fixes issues themselves or escalates | Facilitates thinking and ownership in others |
| Communication | Gives instructions and updates | Creates clarity, meaning, and shared understanding |
| Feedback | Points out mistakes | Gives feedback that builds capability |
| Accountability | Tracks outputs and deadlines | Holds ownership while addressing root causes |
| Motivation | Uses pressure, deadlines, consequences | Builds buy-in, purpose, and intrinsic motivation |
| Performance management | Focuses on results only | Balances results with sustainability and growth |
| Handling mistakes | Identifies who is at fault | Examines what failed in the system/process |
| Team development | Focuses on immediate delivery | Invests in long-term growth of people |
| Control | Monitors and checks frequently | Trusts, then calibrates when needed |
| Meetings | Status updates, reporting | Alignment, decision-making, removing blockers |
| Change management | Announces and enforces change | Prepares, involves, and transitions people through change |
| Presence under stress | Tightens control, becomes directive | Creates clarity, steadiness, and prioritisation |
Table generated by AI.
Some bosses try to act like leaders and ask their questions differently, or they try to respond differently.
What do I mean by that? Take this example.
“Why is it not done?” “What’s getting in the way?”
It is not about the words they use. A boss and leader can both ask the same question but their intention and follow through can be vastly different.
In this example, a boss ask why is it not done, because a task is not done and he wants to know why. Period.
A leader ask why is it not done but will want to go deeper to understand how to solve root issues.
Let’s now explore the experiences.
Note: they are blanket experiences. It does depends on individual’s character and personality as well.
When you work with for a boss
- You feel less competent
- You stop learning to think and explore, you learn to “do”
- There is no time to pause to solve. You learn to fix.
- You feel powerless.
- You do not really know accountability. You know blame and fault.
- You need to prove. You need to show. (Because boss does not understand/care your process)
- It is hard to imagine your own growth and path
- You feel helpless. You stop voicing up different ways of working.
- Motivation comes from deadlines and not inertia
When you work with a leader
- You feel motivated to try things
- You are confident to explore
- You learn to think and see, bigger and deeper
- You grow and your perspective expands, without you knowing
- You want to improve
- You look forward to talking to your leader
- You feel valued
- You start taking ownership and be accountable
- You take initiative
Over time, the difference in experience determine the quality of work and people who stay.
And you do not get to decide if you are you a boss or leader. You can aim to be one, but your people’s experience decide which one are you.
If this made you pause and reflect on how you are showing up, it is good starting point.
If/when you want a deeper dive, reach out.