Thursday, June 18, 2026

Empower your staff to help you by becoming intuitive and confident with personal leadership

As the aged care industry undertakes workforce planning strategies to engage, develop, and retain a thriving workforce, one powerhouse skill that often gets overlooked is developing personal leadership capabilities.

Last updated on 25 August 2023

SPONSORED – As the aged care industry undertakes workforce planning strategies to engage, develop, and retain a thriving workforce, one powerhouse skill that often gets overlooked is developing personal leadership capabilities.

Personal leadership is a game changer in the workplace, as it focuses on equipping individuals with the skills and confidence to take ownership of their outcomes, attitudes, and behaviours. It promotes self-awareness, independence, perseverance, and accountability, essential for success across any role.

Why is it that a scenario can play out within the workplace but each staff member will have varying degrees to how they handle and respond to that same situation? It’s due to their Locus of Control (LOC).

What is Locus of Control?

Global studies over decades have shown that Locus of Control (LOC) is a strong predictor of many life and work outcomes. ​

LOC is a theoretical construct, first developed in 1954 by psychologist Julian Rotter, and refers to the degree to which an individual feels a sense of agency regarding the outcomes and experiences within their life.

Like other constructs within personality psychology, one’s LOC can be influenced by several factors and falls on a spectrum internal and external LOC.

An internal LOC refers to a person’s confidence that they can influence outcomes in their life. The things that happen to them are greatly influenced by their own abilities, actions, or mistakes and they determine their future, create their own success, and find ways around obstacles – skills that are valuable in the aged care space.

A person with an external LOC believes they are less in control of their lives, and it is instead up to external forces such as chance, luck, circumstances, and opportunities that are responsible for the events that occur in their life.

They tend to feel that things happen to them, make excuses, blame circumstances, and can often feel defeated, all of which can negatively impact an organisation, particularly in their culture, retention strategy, productivity, and absenteeism.

By attributing outcomes to our own behaviour, rather than blaming others or circumstances, the journey to becoming a personal leader and the benefits that come along with it are incredibly valuable.

The good news is achieving an optimal level of Locus of Control and developing personal leadership skills can be trained, and Generation Thrive can help you with this and is backed by 25 years of exceptional outcomes.

The benefits of enhancing personal leadership capabilities include:

  • Staff taking responsibility for their actions and learning from mistakes, leading to increased self-determination, perseverance, and accountability
  • Enhanced independence and confidence in their decision-making
  • Improved learning skills, growth mindset and enhanced critical thinking
  • Greater job satisfaction and engagement
  • Reduced stress and feelings of burnout, leading to better physical and psychological health

Generation Thrive has designed a comprehensive, measurable and evidence-based online program, Thrive@Work, to empower individuals within teams to develop their personal leadership skills, address challenges and optimise their well-being and satisfaction across their personal and professional lives.   

Their approach combines an interactive and engaging online toolkit, one-on-one personal leadership coaching and group workshops that develop critical and transferable skills in personal leadership, social and emotional intelligence, soft skills, and well-being management.

Organisations that have partnered with Generation Thrive report that individuals across their workforce grow from the skills, habits, and attitudes taught that increase their accountability, performance and mindset for continuous improvement and learning.

After implementing personal leadership training, one partner organisation saw a 36% increase in psychological well-being, positively impacting their team’s self-acceptance, environmental mastery, positive relationships, personal growth, autonomy, and purpose in life. 
 
Personal leadership capability training should be a must for any upskilling, pipeline development or retention strategy plans. With 97% of Generation Thrive clients taking more accountability for their success, explore the impact Generation Thrive has made to help the aged care industry achieve its strategic goals, remain competitive and improve its bottom line.

For more information visit Generation Thrive website.

• aged care • aged care workforce • younger workers • Personal leadership • Locus of Control

Comments

JUN 11 – 17, 2026

• aged care sector A wealth of opportunity, a shortage of supply: Tim Lawless on aged care housing

Marion Piper Tim Lawless says Australia’s ageing population is creating unprecedented demand for retirement living – but delivering enough homes may be the sector’s greatest challenge.

• dementia ‘It takes a village within the village’: how retirement communities are rethinking dementia

Marion Piper HammondCare’s Marie Alford shares what retirement village operators should be doing now to support residents living with dementia – from wayfinding to wellbeing coordinators to community partnerships.

• aged care workforce Full, but can’t build fast enough: sector leaders deliver a frank view from the top

Marion Piper Full villages, growing waitlists, and residents who can’t access aged care. The sector’s top operators are navigating simultaneous pressure on every front — and the leaders who’ll survive it are the ones willing to have honest conversations now.

Get the good stuff, weekly.

Trends, tactics, no fluff every Wednesday.