An interview with Denise Musselwhite,
CEO/Founder, Tech & Thrive
This episode of the Independent School Moonshot Podcast was originally released in August 2024 and is sponsored by Blackbaud.
Blackbaud helps independent schools unify admissions, advancement, academics, and finance so leaders spend less time chasing data and more time leading. Visit blackbaud.com to learn more.
What does it really take to grow into leadership in independent schools?
Denise Musselwhite, former CIO at Trinity Prep and founder of Tech and Thrive, explores the traits, habits, and strategies that help aspiring leaders move forward with clarity and confidence.
Drawing on her journey to senior leadership, she shares practical ways leaders can identify gaps, practice new skills, and avoid being “boxed in” by their current roles.
This conversation digs into self-awareness, the role of coaching and assessment, and why schools must rethink how they evaluate and nurture talent.
Denise challenges leaders to embrace self-advocacy, leverage uniqueness as a strength, and create opportunities inside and outside their schools. Independent school leaders at all levels will find both inspiration and concrete tools to sharpen their leadership path.
Self-awareness is foundational — leaders must identify their value proposition and acknowledge experience gaps early on.
Data-informed coaching accelerates growth — assessments like the CDR provide leaders with a clear mirror of their strengths, motivations, and derailers.
Don’t wait for opportunities — aspiring leaders should create them by volunteering, taking on projects, or engaging in external leadership roles.
Schools must evolve evaluations — teaching assessments don’t measure leadership; schools need competency models that reflect leadership qualities.
Uniqueness is a superpower — leaders who embrace rather than hide their distinct background and strengths often unlock their most significant impact.
Conduct a self-inventory — map your strengths, motivations, and areas for improvement, either using an assessment tool or engaging in structured reflection.
Practice outside your comfort zone — take on roles that stretch interpersonal and vision-setting skills, especially if you come from non-academic tracks.
Reimagine meetings — streamline agendas to include roadblocks, celebrations, and blue-sky thinking, making space for innovation.
Advocate for leadership competencies — if your school doesn’t define them, suggest creating a competency model to clarify expectations.
Reframe self-promotion as advocacy — share your story and strengths openly, recognizing the impact your example may have on others.
Each week, we dive into how schools are rethinking their business model, tackling big challenges, and building for the future.
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