Move beyond success to significance – Rev. Sam Adeyemi tells leaders at JLC 2025
Rev. Sam Adeyemi, the renowned leadership coach and Senior Pastor of Daystar Christian Centre, has challenged leaders to rethink their definition of success, urging them to pursue significance that leaves a lasting imprint on people and society.
Speaking at the Jospong Leadership Conference 2026 on the theme “Building Tomorrow’s Leaders Today,” Rev. Adeyemi delivered a thought-provoking presentation titled “Preparing the Rising Generation for the Journey Ahead.” His message was clear: success on its own is not enough.
According to him, success often marks only the beginning of a deeper responsibility. Drawing from Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, he explained that once basic and material goals are achieved, human aspirations naturally shift toward more intangible needs such as recognition, purpose, and significance. At that stage, fulfilment no longer comes from what one acquires, but from the meaning one creates and the lives one influences.
Rev. Adeyemi noted that true achievement is driven by motivation, clarity of purpose, and the ability to attach meaning to one’s work. While success may bring power, position, performance, and personal gain, he stressed that significance delivers purpose, people, impact, and legacy.
“Success is self leadership,” he explained, “but significance is people leadership.”
He encouraged leaders to see success not as a destination, but as a stepping stone toward making meaningful impact.
For those who desire to be remembered for something greater than titles and accomplishments, he said the journey must move deliberately from success to significance.
He cautioned leaders against becoming consumed by personal achievements at the expense of developing others.
In his words, people may forget what leaders demanded from them, but they will always remember what leaders developed in them.
Leadership, he emphasised, must be centred on people rather than personal ambition.
Rev. Adeyemi also warned that chasing success alone could limit a leader’s influence and relevance within the spaces they lead. Choosing significance, he argued, expands leadership beyond the self and anchors it in service, growth, and legacy.
In what he described as a “mentor moment,” Rev. Adeyemi urged leaders to intentionally mentor the next generation.
He encouraged them to back young people, open doors for them, speak confidence into their lives, and create environments where they can thrive.
“People are the point,” he stressed. “Results matter, but people multiply results.”
Dr. Adeyemi’s address resonated very strongly with participants, reinforcing the conference’s focus on leadership that prepares others for the future.
As the JLC 2025 continues to shape conversations around leadership development, Rev. Adeyemi’s message served as a timely reminder that the true measure of leadership lies not in personal success, but in the significance one leaves behind.
Source: classfmonline.com
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