Acting in Alignment

What it means to translate values into decisions—especially when doing so carries risk.

Alignment is often treated as an outcome—something an organization achieves and maintains. In practice, it is an ongoing discipline. It is the work of ensuring that what an institution says it values is reflected in how it makes decisions, especially when those decisions are difficult.

This becomes most visible in moments of tension.

When priorities compete or perspectives differ, institutions are faced with choices that require more than clarity of mission. They require clarity of commitment. It is one thing to articulate values. It is another to apply them when doing so carries risk—whether reputational, financial, or relational.

In these moments, alignment is tested.

Leaders must decide not only what is possible, but what is consistent with who the institution intends to be. This often involves tradeoffs. Acting in alignment does not mean decisions are easy or universally accepted. It means they are grounded in a clear understanding of what matters. Over time, this consistency builds trust.

Alignment is not agreement. It is coherence—built through repeated, intentional choices.

Select Reading
A few works that have shaped how I think about values, leadership, and follow-through:

  • Simon Sinek, Start With Why

  • Monica Sharma, Radical Transformational Leadership

  • Dolly Chugh, The Person You Mean to Be

  • Resmaa Menakem, My Grandmother’s Hands

Dina Bailey

Dina Bailey has over 15 years of experience in formal and informal learning. Since 2008, she has focused on collaborating with museums, cultural organizations, and nonprofits. She has a proven record of fostering organizational growth and strengthening institutional infrastructure while resolving multiple and complex issues.


Dina is a national thought leader with extensive experience in developing inclusive solutions in collaboration with volunteers, staff, boards, and stakeholders. She is a recognized trainer, author, and speaker on the trends, challenges, and opportunities facing organizations in transition. A skilled facilitator, Dina has developed exceptional approaches that lead to both a breadth and depth of inclusive action. She has developed tools that increase the likelihood of successfully transitioning from theory to practice.

http://www.mountaintopvisionllc.com
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The Risk of Drift

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When Clarity Feels Out of Reach