Meraki Consulting

a new Approach to leadership

The Regenerative Leadership Model

A research-based framework for moving organizations from extraction to regeneration, building leadership capacity that sustains both performance & people.

The Regenerative Leadership Model

Sustainable Leadership Development

The Extraction Crisis

Organizations face a reckoning. The relentless pursuit of productivity (at the expense of people’s capacity to sustain it) has reached a breaking point. Burnout rates exceed 70% among leaders. Turnover hemorrhages institutional knowledge and costs organizations 150% of annual salary per departed employee. Innovation stalls when people operate in chronic deficit.

We’ve optimized for extraction, maximum output from minimum input, and the consequences show up everywhere: in engagement scores, retention data, healthcare costs, and the exhausted faces of leaders who know something fundamental must shift.

“Sustainable” leadership is not enough. Sustainability maintains what already exists; it doesn’t restore. What’s needed is a regenerative approach, one that actively rebuilds capacity rather than merely managing its decline.

A Framework Built on Evidence,

Designed for Transformation

The Regenerative Leadership Model provides a comprehensive, research-based framework for organizational transformation. Developed through synthesis of organizational psychology, systems thinking, complexity science, and regenerative economics, the model addresses four interconnected domains—Self, Relationship, Team, and System—while cultivating the meta-competency that enables all other development: Seed capacity.

Unlike wellness programs that address symptoms or sustainability initiatives that slow decline, this framework transforms the conditions that generate either extraction or regeneration. It moves beyond individual resilience to systemic redesign, beyond coping strategies to capacity building, beyond maintaining equilibrium to enabling emergence.

What makes this different:

Organizations don’t fail because leaders lack motivation or employees lack resilience. They fail because the structures, relationships, and meaning-making capacities that once served growth become constraints. The Regenerative Leadership Model provides:

  • Diagnostic precision – Assessment frameworks that distinguish depletion from surplus, dysfunction from health, across all organizational levels
  • Developmental pathways – Behavioral interventions are paired with practices that expand leaders’ capacity to hold complexity and navigate uncertainty
  • Systemic integration – Recognition that personal vitality, relationship health, team dynamics, and organizational design are inseparable
  • Implementation guidance – From minimal viable starting points to comprehensive transformation roadmaps, with case studies demonstrating application

Four Domains, One Coherent System

Regenerative leadership requires attention across four interconnected domains. Intervention in one domain without attending to others produces temporary relief at best, unintended consequences at worst.
SELF DOMAIN
Key focus areas:
  • Energy awareness and boundary-setting Mindfulness and metacognitive development Recovery practices and restoration rituals Developmental stage progression
  • Personal Resource Management & Seed capacity
    Leaders cannot give what they don't have. The Self domain addresses how leaders manage their own energy, attention, and developmental capacity. This is not self-care as an afterthought—it's strategic capacity building that recognizes leadership effectiveness depends on leaders' ability to stay present, regulate reactivity, and make meaning of complexity.
    TEAM DOMAIN
    Key focus areas:
  • Psychological safety at group level Collective pattern recognition Constructive disagreement practices Learning and adaptation rhythms
  • Collective dynamics and emergent intelligence
    High-performing teams don't just aggregate individual talent—they generate collective intelligence that exceeds what any member could produce alone. The Team domain addresses how groups develop shared awareness, navigate difference, and create conditions for emergence.
    RELATIONSHIP DOMAIN
    Key focus areas:
      Building and maintaining trust Psychological safety cultivation Constructive conflict navigation Repair and restoration practices
    Trust, psychological safety, and relational energy
    Leadership happens in relationship. The quality of connection between individuals—characterized by trust, psychological safety, and mutual resourcing—determines whether people bring their full capacity to work or withhold it for self-preservation.
    SYSTEM DOMAIN
    Key focus areas:
      Authority distribution and decision-making design Resource philosophy (extraction vs. investment) Feedback loops and learning systems Regenerative infrastructure
    Organizational design and structural conditions
    Individual and team interventions can't overcome extractive organizational design. The System domain examines how authority distribution, resource allocation, feedback loops, and cultural assumptions either generate capacity or deplete it—often invisibly.

    Continue the Conversation

    The Regenerative Leadership Model represents one expression of Meraki’s commitment to transforming extractive workplace cultures into regenerative ones. Explore additional resources and engagement opportunities:

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