Leadership and change management are central to the successful execution of strategy in non-profit organizations. While strategic planning provides direction, it is leadership capacity and structured change processes that ensure intentions become measurable outcomes. This article examines leadership styles—transformational, servant, participative, transactional, and situational—and their relevance to motivation, trust, and accountability in mission-driven contexts. It further outlines practical change management steps derived from Kotter’s model, highlighting communication, empowerment, and cultural anchoring as key enablers. Through global case illustrations, including Indra Nooyi’s participative leadership at PepsiCo, Toyota’s communication practices, and the execution-oriented cultures of Google and Zappos, the analysis demonstrates how leadership and change processes interact to sustain performance. For academics, it situates leadership–execution linkages within the non-profit domain; for practitioners, it offers concrete guidance for fostering adaptive, execution-oriented cultures capable of navigating uncertainty and delivering lasting social impact.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.