Leilani explores the unique strengths women bring to leadership and why a woman might make a phenomenal president. Drawing on real-world examples, research, and a touch of her own story, she fires up the case for fresh leadership at the highest level. Get ready for ten minutes of motivation and truth.
Chapter 1
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Hey yâall, welcome back to the couchâLeilani here, and today, Iâm fired up. We're diving into âWhy a Woman Could Lead America.â Now, before anybody tunes out and reaches for their pearls, hang with me for ten minutes. I promise, weâre just getting real about a question thatâs in the air, not trying to light the world on fire. Okay. Maybe a little spark.
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
So, what is it that women actually bring to the table when it comes to leadership? There's a ton of research out there, yâallâstudies, surveys, all the data nerd stuffâshowing that women often lead with empathy, inclusivity, and collaboration. I know, I know, people love to paint those as âsoft skills,â but look, softness builds bridges. Empathy brings people in. Thereâs a Harvard Business Review pieceâI might be off, I canât remember if it was from 2018 or 2019âbut it listed the top leadership competencies, and women outranked men in about 80% of them. Thatâs not a small edge, thatâs like running the table.
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Now, when we look around the world, you see these traits in action. Jacinda Ardern in New Zealand? That woman handled the pandemic with a kind of calm, clear openness people just trusted. People always say leadership is about making the âtough calls," but she somehow made it look human. Same for Ellen Johnson Sirleaf over in Liberiaâfirst elected female head of state in Africa. She guided her nation through Ebola, navigated civil unrest⊠and she did it with, like, a steady resolve. Not just barking orders, but listening.
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
I see bits of this every day in my own life. At Boss Women Network, some of the wildest breakthroughs Iâve seen havenât come from one person bulldozing aheadâthey come from collaboration. Real talk, I used to try to do everything alone, but the minute I opened up and really started leaning on my team of womenâletting them bring their ideas, challenge me, fill in my gapsâthatâs when things moved. Like, âOh, we need a new event format? Letâs put five heads together.â The magicâs not in one supersmart voice, itâs in the way we bring each other in.
Chapter 2
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
And speaking of bringing everybody in, thereâs something else: how women actually approach tough decisions. Thereâs this narrative, right, that leaders have to be ruthless and lone wolves and all thatâbut, can I just say, thatâs old news. Research shows women often come at problems with this holistic, almost 360-degree view. I mean, think about it: most of the women I know are running businesses, juggling family, running the group chat, doing church committees, mediating who gets the last biscuitâyou name it. You learn how to look at the big picture.
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Thereâs psychological research on thisâcanât recall the exact journal, but plenty out thereâshowing women tend to make more adaptive decisions, weigh long-term consequences, and focus on solutions that serve everybody, not just one slice of the pie. And when it comes to stuff like politics? Studies say women are more likely to think about future generations when they're at the helmâso itâs not just âhow do we survive this crisis,â but âhow does this affect our grandchildren?â
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
So, letâs sit with that for a second. Imagine a female president at the mic during a national emergency. Would the priorities look different? Maybe the table would be biggerâmore healthcare folks, more teachers, heck, maybe even the cafeteria worker chiming in. Thereâs something powerful about considering all the voices, and really thinking about, âWho does this decision leave out? Who havenât I called yet?â It's a shift.
Chapter 3
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Then thereâs the whole idea of power. For so long, we grew up on this âpower overâ thingâcommand, control, show no weakness, climb to the top and kick the ladder down. But time and time again, women leaders show up with âpower with.â Itâs like⊠come as you are, bring your people, letâs move together. Totally different energy.
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
And you see it in policies. I mean, just look around the worldâcountries with women presidents or prime ministers often get these groundbreaking initiatives: paid family leave, real investment in public health, matching childcare to work schedules. Itâs holistic progress, not a quick win. Even here in the States when women are behind the legislation, things like healthcare reform and family leave suddenly become priorities instead of afterthoughts.
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Yâall, I want to leave you with thisâwhen has a woman leader in your own life made a difference in a time of chaos? Doesnât have to be national news or anything. My own mother, in our hardest seasons, always held the line. She wasnât loud, but she was steady. Decisions got made, meals got cooked, feelings got heard⊠even when everything felt like it was falling apart. Thatâs power. Thatâs progressârooted in love, not just control.
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
So, as we wrap up todayâif you start looking at the world through this lens, wondering what the future might look like with a woman leading America, just remember: real change isnât just about swapping suits in the Oval Office. Itâs about rethinking how we measure power and progress, and who gets to write the rules. Mmm, yâall, I feel a part two coming on. Until next time, keep pouring into yourself, keep seeing the power in your circle, and rememberâsometimes, all you need is ten minutes on the couch. Talk soon.
About the podcast
"Leilaniâs Couch: Ten Minutes of Motivation" was born from Leilaniâs lifestyle shiftâto stop shrinking, start healing, and pour into herself while inspiring others. As a mom, real estate broker, producer, founder of Boss Women Network, and MBA holder, she brings quick, powerful episodes that realign and refuel. This isnât therapyâitâs real talk from a woman whoâs walked through fire and came out focused. Sometimes, all you need is ten minutes on the couch.