Every January, leaders sit down with fresh goals, bold initiatives and new strategic plans. But there is one question that many overlook — one that should stand at the top of every leader’s planning agenda:
“Will you stay out of jail this year?”
It’s a provocative question, but also an essential one. Not because most CEOs are at any real risk of incarceration, but because every leader is at risk of something far more subtle and more common: “ethical drift.” And in today’s pressured, high-velocity business environment, drift happens faster than we think.
When Purpose Isn’t Enough
Over the past several decades, our business landscape has produced more than its share of high-profile failures — Enron, Tyco, WorldCom, Bernie Madoff, Theranos, FTX. These organizations all had strong missions. Some even had world-changing visions. Others had extraordinary talent and large war chests.
What they lacked was not intelligence, ambition or innovative capacity.
They lacked governing values.
And the collapse of values in each case wasn’t an isolated executive failure — it became contagious. Teams that once prided themselves on their integrity slowly succumbed to performance pressure, rationalization and misplaced loyalty. Before long, entire organizations found themselves in what I call the “Business Hall of Shame.”
Most leaders assume these stories remain distant because they would never commit fraud. Yet ethical failures rarely begin with dramatic crimes. They begin with small compromises:
• “Just this quarter.”
• “Just this customer.”
• “Just this exception.”
Over time, exceptions become habits, habits become culture and culture becomes destiny.
The antidote is simple — but not easy: governing values that actually govern.
Embedding Values into Leadership: The PACER Approach
Values cannot simply be articulated; they must be operationalized. In my Align & Execute framework, I use the “PACER Learning Model” to help leaders transform values from decorative statements into daily behaviors:
P-Principles: Articulate your non-negotiables. Not eight or 10 vague platitudes but instead three to five clear principles that will shape every decision your team makes.
A-Application: Translate principles into expected behaviors. How does “integrity” show up? What does “courage” look like in decision-making? What behaviors are out of bounds?
C-Commitment: Leaders must model the values first. People don’t commit to what leaders say — they commit to what leaders do. Values scale only when leaders consistently embody them.
E-Experience: Build systems, rituals, incentives and meeting rhythms that reinforce values. If your key performance indicators (KPIs) don’t reflect your values, the organization will follow the metrics, not the mission.
R-Review: Values require vigilance. Quarterly reflection preserves alignment:
• What decisions reflected our values?
• Where did we drift?
• What must we revise before drift becomes culture?
The PACER Learning Model helps prevent values from becoming corporate artwork. It embeds them in performance, culture and leadership behavior.
The “Infectious Conscience” Challenge
Unethical behavior spreads quickly, but so does ethical behavior.
Research from positive organizational scholarship shows that organizations tend to follow what University of Michigan Professor Kim Cameron calls “heliotropic leadership”: They bend toward the positive, just as plants bend toward light. When leaders embody courage, transparency and accountability, the effect cascades through a team.
Author Liz Wiseman’s “Multipliers” research reinforces this truth: Leaders who model high-integrity behaviors multiply the intelligence, creativity and ownership of their people. Those who cut ethical corners diminish their teams in far-reaching ways.
Your values don’t just keep you out of trouble; they shape the direction, energy and conscience of everyone you lead.
A Leadership Architect’s Blueprint for 2026
Here is a practical approach for leaders who want to build values-based organizations this year — not just in theory, but in real execution:
1. Simplify Your Values: Identify the three to five principles that matter most. Remove the fluff. Ambiguity is the enemy of integrity.
2. Translate Them into Behaviors: Define what each value looks like in practice. People cannot live what they do not understand.
3. Align Goals and KPIs with Values: If your metrics contradict your values, your metrics will win every time.
4. Reward Value-Driven Behavior: Celebrate it publicly. Tie it to performance reviews. Make it part of hiring, promotion and dismissal decisions.
5. Review Frequently and Transparently: Integrity grows in light, not in shadow. Create rhythms that keep values visible and accountable.
6. Lead the Way: Values are contagious, but only if leaders demonstrate them. You cannot delegate the moral fabric of your organization.
The New Year’s Challenge for Leaders
As we enter 2026, I offer this challenge:
• Lead as if your decisions will be printed on the front page of tomorrow’s newspaper.
• Lead as if your children will read your emails one day.
• Lead as if your values — not your ambitions — define your legacy.
Because they will.
In a world where opportunity moves fast and pressures run high, values are not constraints. They are guardrails.
They keep leaders — and organizations — moving forward safely, sustainably and honorably.
Let 2026 be the year your values don’t just hang on the wall but show up in the way you “Align & Execute.”
Richard Tyson is the founder of CEObuilder and author of Align & Execute: It’s All About the Money, But It’s Not! He helps leaders align purpose, people and performance through his PACER leadership models and “The Leadership Architect” framework.