As Christmas approaches, I always feel a natural pull to slow down.
To pause.
To reflect.
To take stock of what this year has really held.
And if Iโm honest, 2025 hasnโt been an easy one for me. Things havenโt gone to plan. Iโve experienced loss, including the loss of two of my horses, and there were moments where I couldnโt see the gift in what was happening.
But Iโve learned this through life, leadership, and the herd.
There is always a gift.
Sometimes we just need time, space, and perspective to see it.
Which is why I wanted to record this episode of Impactful Teamwork on gratitude and appreciation. Not as a fluffy, end-of-year ritual, but as a smart, strategic leadership practice that restores energy, trust, and momentum.
Gratitude Is Not Soft. Itโs Smart.
Letโs clear something up.
Gratitude is not:
- Weak
- Woolly
- Or a โnice to haveโ
Itโs a high-impact lever.
Research shows that people who practise daily gratitude experience significantly lower cortisol levels, meaning theyโre calmer, clearer, and more resilient. And studies have shown that simply saying โthank youโ can increase performance by up to 50%.
Thatโs not sentiment.
Thatโs strategy.
So if your team feels flat, disconnected, or quietly disengaged, itโs rarely a performance problem.
Itโs an appreciation problem.
Why Leaders Underestimate Appreciation
Most leaders I work with believe one of three things:
- โI say thank you, that should be enoughโ
- โTheyโre paid to do the jobโ
- โWeโll celebrate once we hit the targetโ
And yet, celebration is one of the most underused tools in business.
I see this all the time when people work with my horses. I ask them to acknowledge success, effort, or progress and they visibly squirm. Theyโre uncomfortable receiving appreciation, giving it, or celebrating it.
And yet in a horse herd, safety and cohesion are reinforced constantly.
Not annually.
Not via bonuses.
But through moment-by-moment acknowledgement, attunement, and presence.
Gratitude isnโt an end-of-year reward.
Itโs a daily regulation mechanism.
Appreciation Builds Trust, Energy, and Momentum
When gratitude becomes part of how you lead, something powerful happens.
People feel:
- Seen
- Valued
- Safe
And when people feel safe, their performance improves.
Energy lifts.
Trust deepens.
Ownership increases.
Iโve seen this repeatedly, whether Iโm leading teams in corporate environments, running hospitality teams at racecourses, or working with younger generations.
What still shocks me is how many people react as though theyโve never been properly appreciated before.
That should stop us in our tracks as leaders.
The Iceberg of Gratitude
Most people think gratitude is about big things.
A promotion.
A house.
A milestone achievement.
But thatโs just the tip of the iceberg.
Underneath are the small, everyday moments that truly regulate our nervous systems and reconnect us to joy.
- A laugh with a friend
- A book you couldnโt put down
- Sunshine on your back
- A quiet moment of peace
- Yes, even chocolate ๐ซ
When we train ourselves to notice whatโs beneath the surface, gratitude sinks deeper into our lives and leadership.
And thatโs where its real power lives.
Gratitude Regulates Energy Before It Motivates Behaviour
This is the bit most leaders miss.
Gratitude doesnโt just motivate people.
It regulates energy first.
In moments of pressure, uncertainty, or change, appreciation:
- Calms the body
- Lowers stress
- Improves decision-making
- Strengthens relationships
And when leaders are calmer and clearer, teams respond with more trust, creativity, and effort.
Thatโs why I see gratitude as one of the most underrated tools in any reinvention kit.
The Uncomfortable Truth About Leadership
Here it is.
Most leaders are excellent at spotting:
- Gaps
- Risks
- Problems
- What isnโt working
They are far less skilled at naming contribution.
And hereโs the cost.
What you donโt name, you drain.
What you appreciate, you multiply.
If you want more ownership, energy, and accountability in your team, start by recognising it when it shows up.
Action Point: The Appreciation Inventory
Pause for a moment and reflect.
- Who on your team consistently gives energy but rarely gets acknowledged?
- Whose effort do you rely on without explicitly recognising it?
- When was the last time you named how someoneโs contribution mattered?
This isnโt about praise.
Itโs about precision.
General feedback feels nice.
Specific appreciation changes behaviour.
Appreciation vs Praise (They Are Not the Same)
Praise sounds like:
- โGreat jobโ
- โWell doneโ
- โThanks everyoneโ
Appreciation sounds like:
- โThe way you handled that client protected the whole teamโ
- โYour calm in that meeting stabilised everythingโ
- โYou took pressure off me without being asked, and that matteredโ
If appreciation isnโt specific, it wonโt regulate trust.
Action Point: The 24-Hour Appreciation Reset
Hereโs your challenge.
In the next 24 hours:
- Appreciate one person
- Out loud
- In real time
- For the impact, not just the effort
Use this simple structure:
- What I saw
- Why it mattered
- The impact it had
Then notice what shifts, in them and in you.
What Becomes Possible When Appreciation Is Normalised
When appreciation becomes part of how you lead:
- Energy lifts without force
- Trust deepens without workshops
- People step up without being chased
Teams move:
- From compliance to contribution
- From effort to ownership
- From burnout to sustainable momentum
This is Teamship in action.
A Final Reflection
Before your next meeting, ask yourself:
Who in my world needs to be seen today, not managed?
Recognition doesnโt require a system.
It requires presence.
One sincere sentence can regulate a nervous system more effectively than any productivity hack.
As we close out this year, I want to say thank you. To you for listening, to my clients for trusting me, and to my horses, past and present, for teaching me more about leadership than any boardroom ever could.
Leadership isnโt about driving people harder.
Itโs about creating the conditions where people want to give their best.
And gratitude is where that begins.
Show Notes
00:00 Introduction and Welcome
01:54 The Power of Gratitude
03:35 Gratitude in Leadership
09:42 Practical Tips for Showing Appreciation
14:42 Final Thoughts and Gratitude





