Hotels & Stays

Leadership Is a Team Sport: What Hospitality Can Learn from the World’s Greatest Athletes

Leadership Is a Team Sport: What Hospitality Can Learn from the World’s Greatest Athletes

As I prepare for my upcoming workshop at EHL Hospitality Business School during the HumanX  Summit in Lausanne, I find myself reflecting on a unique convergence: a year filled with some of the  world’s most iconic sporting moments. From the excitement building toward the FIFA World Cup  2026, to the elegance and endurance of the French Open, the tradition of The Masters GOLF  Tournament this very week, and the grit of cycling classics like Paris–Roubaix. We are surrounded by  powerful examples of exceptional performance, discipline, and leadership. 

Under these circumstances, I believe there is no better time to reflect on a simple but profound truth:  leadership and sport run in perfect parallel. In many ways, sport is the purest form of leadership. It  strips away complexity and leaves us with the essentials of performance, discipline, resilience,  teamwork, communication and the relentless pursuit of improvement. 

PEOPLE FIRST: The Foundation of Performance

I have always been a deep believer that every successful business starts with people. In hospitality,  we often speak about “hardware” and “software.” The hardware is our hotels, the buildings, the  design, the facilities. But the software, the people, is what truly defines success. 

You can have the most spectacular hotel in the world, but without the right people, it will never reach  its full potential. The same applies in sports. A football club may have the most impressive stadium,  but without committed and passionate players, success will remain elusive. 

As leaders, our role is clear: to make our people – our teams – better every single day. Not through  pressure alone, but through belief, coaching, and trust. Confidence is ultimately the fuel of  performance. When people believe in themselves and feel supported, they deliver exceptional  results. 

CONSISTENCY: The Discipline of Daily Training

In sport, there is no shortcut to excellence. The most important principle, whether in individual or  team sports, is consistency. Training every day, improving every day, showing up every day. 

The same discipline applies in leadership. Success is not built in moments of brilliance, but in the  daily routines, the small improvements, and the commitment to continuous progress. High performing hospitality organizations are not defined by occasional peaks, but by sustained  excellence. 

Consistency creates reliability. Reliability builds trust. Trust is the true currency of both sport and  leadership. These principles can be applied every day, in everything we do: daily briefings, informal  conversations, mentoring moments, meetings, and more.

RESILIENCE: The Defining Difference

The second key principle is resilience. Every athlete faces setbacks, losses, injuries, moments of  doubt. What differentiates world-class athletes from the rest is not talent alone, but their ability to  overcome adversity. 

The same is true in business. Challenging days are inevitable. Markets shift, as we are seeing this  now in today’s complex global travel landscape; strategies fail, teams struggle. But the best leaders,  and the strongest organizations, are those that develop resilience. 

EHL HumanX Summit

Connecting to broader industry conversations

This theme resonates with broader explorations in our sector. The EHL Food & Wellbeing Report, and discussions at the EHL HumanX Summit on the future of food and regenerative economies, remind us that hospitality can be a catalyst for systemic change. Land, culture, people, and business can interact in service of thriving communities and ecosystems.

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Resilience is not just about enduring difficulty; it is about learning from it, growing through it, and  coming back stronger. It is a mindset. It is a muscle that must be trained. For example, if we look  back and reflect on how severely COVID-19 impacted our industry, it also made many of us stronger,  because it forced us to think outside the box and find new ways to overcome the crisis. 

In my experience, the greatest difference between high performers and average performers is  precisely this: the ability to face challenges head-on and to persist with determination and clarity. 

TEAMWORK: Winning Together

Hospitality, like most sports, is fundamentally a team effort. No hotel succeeds because of a single  individual; it is the collective effort of every colleague, from front office to housekeeping, from F&B  service to culinary, from engineering and management to corporate headquarters and asset  managers, that creates exceptional guest experiences and delivers sustainable returns for all  stakeholders. 

The same principle applies in team sports. Even the most talented individuals cannot win alone.  Success depends on collaboration, alignment and mutual support. 

The key to great teamwork is open and honest communication. Trust and transparency are non negotiable. Teams must feel safe to speak openly, challenge ideas, and support one another. At the  same time, both leaders and teams must be willing to address problems and difficult issues openly  and directly. This requires trust, which in turn fosters a culture of openness and becomes the glue  that holds everything together. Weak leaders are easy to identify, as they avoid open and direct  communication. 

We have all seen examples in sports where individual superstars fail to reach their full potential  because they cannot integrate into a team. Talent alone is not enough. The ability to elevate others,  to make your teammates or colleagues better, is what defines true greatness. 

ATTITUDE: Passion and Hunger Over Resume

One of the most important lessons I have learned, both in sports and in leadership, is that a brilliant  resume is often overrated. 

What truly matters is passion, hunger, and the willingness to work smarter than others. The best  athletes are not always those with the most natural talent, but those with the deepest commitment 

and the strongest desire to succeed. They do not dwell on past achievements or speak about  previous successes; instead, they focus entirely on the next competition. 

In hiring, this is a critical distinction. We do not “find” people, we “select” them carefully. We build  teams by understanding strengths and weaknesses, by creating balance, and by prioritizing attitude  over credentials. 

A person with a strong resume but limited passion will rarely outperform someone with drive,  curiosity and determination. In sports, this is obvious. In business, we sometimes forget it. 

ENERGY MANAGEMENT: The Hidden Performance Driver

Another essential aspect of both sports and leadership is energy management. Great teams  celebrate their wins but they also understand the importance of recovery. Athletes know that  performance is not just about effort, but about balance. Without recovery, performance declines. 

In leadership, we often underestimate this. Energy does not come from constant activity alone; it  comes from the right combination of physical and mental habits: 

  • Quality sleep
  • Digital detox
  • Regular physical activity
  • Mental stimulation
  • Moments of reflection and inspiration
  • A culture of trust and appreciation

Interestingly, many of these practices require energy in the short term but generate energy in the long  term. This is a critical insight for leaders: sustained performance requires sustainable energy. 

SETTING: The Right Environment Matters

Not every player thrives in every team. In sports, we often see talented individuals struggle because  they are not in the right environment, wrong coach, wrong system, wrong culture. 

The same applies in business. Sometimes, a lack of performance is not about capability, but about  fit. The great thing about our hospitality industry and about institutions like EHL Hospitality Business  School is that it offers opportunities. 

Hospitality is one of the most open and dynamic industries in the world. It allows individuals from  diverse backgrounds, across genders and age groups, to succeed based on performance. 

This openness is a strength. It creates mobility, encourages growth and allows people to find the right  environment where they can thrive. 

PURPOSE: Following the Dream

Ultimately, both sports and leadership are about pursuing a dream. Athletes dedicate their lives to a  vision of success, accepting the sacrifices, discipline, and uncertainty that come with it.

In leadership, the same principle applies: when individuals are guided by a clear purpose and are  passionate about what they do, performance follows naturally. 

As leaders, our responsibility is to create environments where people can pursue that purpose;  where they feel valued, supported, and inspired. 

When this happens, everything begins to fall into place. 

FINAL REFLECTION

As we watch the world’s greatest athletes compete, we are not just witnessing sports. We are  witnessing leadership in its purest form. 

Discipline. Resilience. Teamwork. Passion. Energy. Purpose. 

These are not just sporting principles. They are leadership principles. 

And for those of us in hospitality, they offer a powerful reminder: we are not merely managing hotels.  We are leading teams, developing people, and building cultures of performance, while also being  accountable for delivering results. 

In the end, leadership is a team sport! 

And like in sport, the goal is simple: to get a little bit better every day and to win together.

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