Leadership in the Liminal Space: Designing the “In-Between”

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Leadership in the Liminal Space: Designing the “In-Between”

When strategy shifts, org charts change, or culture strains under growth, leaders often assume they need more answers. More often, they need better design—identity, clarity, and the visible moves that shape how work happens.

The liminal space isn’t a problem—it’s a threshold

Years ago, I worked for an interior design firm called Liminality. The name fit the craft: interior decoration is what you see, but interior design is what makes a space work. It shapes how people move through it, how choices are cued, how energy flows, and what becomes possible inside the structure.

That’s why the idea of liminal seasons resonates in leadership. Liminal is the “in-between”: no longer who you were, not yet who you’re becoming. For executives, teams, and organizations, it can feel disorienting—familiar rules stop working before new ones are fully formed.

What liminal leadership looks like in organizations

Most leaders don’t call it “liminal.” They describe it as:

  • a strategy shift where the operating rhythms haven’t caught up
  • a reorg, merger, or leadership transition where roles are changing faster than trust growth that outpaces culture (and managers are asked to carry what systems should)
  • the move from “top performer” to “enterprise leader,” where influence matters as much as execution

These seasons are deeply creative—and high leverage. They’re where identity clarifies, culture is shaped, and the next version of leadership is built. They’re also where drift, misalignment, and quiet reversion to old habits can unravel a strategy.

In moments like this, the temptation is to wait for more certainty—or push harder on tactics that used to work. But liminal seasons call for something simpler and steadier: a few orienting moves that keep you aligned while the new shape is still forming.

A simple 3-step field guide: a map for the “in-between”

When you’re in between, the goal isn’t to “get back” to what was. It’s to navigate toward what’s next—on purpose. This field guide won’t remove the fog, but it will tell you where you are, what stays true, and what to do next so you don’t drift back into old patterns.

1. Mark your starting point (the identity shift)

Name what you’re releasing—hero mode, consensus-by-default, being the bottleneck, or carrying what no longer belongs to you.
Example: “I will stop rescuing and start building decision-making capacity in my directors.”

2. Set your landmarks (clarity)

Define what will hold steady: decision rights, priorities, leadership expectations, boundaries, and the standards that anchor your team.
Example: “We will be explicit about who decides, how fast, and what ‘good’ looks like—before we meet.”

3. Walk the route out loud (practice it in public)

Choose one visible leadership move and repeat it for 30 days—a decision cadence, a meeting close with owners/dates, a stop-doing list, or a weekly
alignment moment.
Example: “Every Friday: 15 minutes to align on the top three outcomes, owners, and tradeoffs.”

To make this stick beyond individual effort, translate the three moves into the way the organization runs.

Turning the field guide into a system

Liminal seasons can look like “leadership gaps,” but they’re often system gaps.
Support executives faster by translating identity, clarity, and practice into repeatable
mechanisms—so the organization doesn’t rely on heroic individuals.

  • Identity: update leadership expectations/competencies for the next stage (and name what must be unlearned).
  • Clarity: hardwire decision rights, escalation paths, and prioritization into operating rhythms.
  • Practice: coach leaders on a small set of visible moves (rituals, meeting closes, feedback loops) and measure adoption.

How Decalō Leaders supports leaders through liminal seasons

At Decalō Leaders, this is the work: partnering with leaders to design the interior architecture that makes strategy real—leadership identity, decision clarity, and the visible moves that shape culture at scale. We help executives and people leaders name what’s changing, decide what stays true, and embed new ways of working into everyday rhythms.

Closing reflection

If you’re in a liminal season, you’re not lost—you’re in a redesign. The question is whether the redesign happens by default (through pressure, drift, and reactivity) or by intention (through identity, clarity, and practice).

What’s one thing you’re redesigning in your leadership right now?

Here’s the short version of the field guide: clarify who you’re becoming (identity), establish what stays true (clarity), and repeat one visible move long enough for others to follow (practice). In liminal seasons, that combination keeps you from drifting—and helps you design the next chapter with intention.

If you want to lead well in the “in-between,” don’t wait for certainty—use a field guide. Mark the shift, set the landmarks, and practice one visible move long enough for your team to feel the new normal. Liminal seasons reward leaders who navigate on purpose; they turn transition into traction.