Originally published on Forbes.com on October 3, 2017.

Being a leader takes great skill. You need to garner the respect of your peers and also lead in a responsible and effective manner. Some of the greatest leaders also take a moment to assess their skills and activity using a leadership audit.

The benefit of a leadership audit is the ability to discover areas where you need to improve and celebrate the areas where you are excelling. According to a report by MindTools, having the responsibilities of a leader doesn’t necessarily make you a good leader. But, leadership can be learned, and by asking the right questions, you can easily see the areas where you need to make changes to your style.

Below, 15 members of Forbes Coaches Council share the one question leaders should be asking themselves as part of their own leadership audit. Here is what they had to say:

All images courtesy of Forbes Councils members.

1. When Did I Last Look In The Mirror?

As leaders, let’s encourage a culture of accountability, creativity and innovation by continually looking in the mirror to develop solutions for moving forward, particularly if something didn’t go as planned. Rather than blaming or pointing fingers, we should reflect on how we’d like to be treated, roll up our sleeves, anticipate risks and leap forward to help. – Joanne MarkowGreenMason

2. Where Are My Blind Spots?

It’s no surprise that leaders are extraordinarily talented and experienced professionals in their respective fields. Even still, no leader can attest to knowing everything. Everyone has blind spots and knowledge gaps, and when discovered, they must be addressed. No matter their achievements or the laundry list of recent wins, leaders should be eager to uncover their weak areas and improve them. – Karima Mariama-Arthur, Esq.WordSmithRapport

3. Am I Being The Change I Want To See?

The famous quote by Gandhi, “Be the change that you wish to see in the world,” is very applicable for leaders. This first requires clarity on the impact you want to have as a leader, then ensures your actions and words role model that impact. If you are not successfully doing what you ask of others, you can’t expect them to follow with enthusiasm. – Bonnie DavisDestination Up

4. What Are My Reactive Triggers?

We all have reactive triggers. Knowing your reactive tendencies will allow you to shift to using these strengths in a creative and strategic way. Not asking this question keeps you reacting to day-to-day fires and situations and will dig a bigger and bigger hole. To step into strategic leadership, you must continually raise your personal awareness of how you react. Do you protect, comply or control? – Jenn LofgrenIncito Executive & Leadership Development

5. Who Do I Need To Get Feedback From?

The question leaders need to ask is not to themselves, but to every single person who works for them. The best leaders are those who have developed relationships where the answers they get are genuine and honest. “What am I doing well, and what’s in the way of my being the best possible leader I can be?” Getting feedback from others is far more important than any question you ask yourself. – David Butlein, Ph.D., BLUECASE Strategic Partners

6. What Don’t I Know That I Need To Know?

And who from my team can fill in the gap? This is a great way to grow people around you, as you’re paying attention to the fact that everyone knows something you don’t. It shows respect for their knowledge, gives you a sense of how they think and can support you, and how you can help them grow, as well. – Donna KarlinNo Ceiling, Just Sky™ Institute

7. How Well Do I Listen And Connect With Others?

As a leader, do you really listen to others? How do you know and how do you demonstrate that you really heard the other person? When we actively listen to another person, trust develops, the other person feels valued and important, and miscommunication, misunderstandings, and misinterpretations decrease. Listening slows down the conversation where each individual feels more connected. – Melinda Fouts, Ph.D.Success Starts With You

8. Have I Made An Impact?

As part of a leadership audit, one must ask oneself if they are making an impact in the people they are leading. Yes, you may start out with a goal or mission, but ultimately a check-in is required to see if your approach needs to be adjusted based on your impact, to support your initiatives or lack thereof. – Niya Allen-VatelResume Newbie

9. Am I Focused On My No. 1 Goal?

The key to leadership is to motivate others and oneself to doggedly pursue a specific goal. Often, in the heat of putting out fires and working on the business, instead of in the business, the pursuit of the primary goal (whether revenue, getting top talent, building a great product, etc.) gets pushed to the side. A “leadership audit” should recalibrate whether the pursuit is on track. – Yuri KrumanMaster The Talk Consulting

10. Am I Growing As A Leader?

We often reach a point in our leadership journey where we feel that we have found a groove and don’t step outside our comfort zone. Instead, audit your leadership knowledge, management skills, strategy and innovation. Ask for on-the-spot feedback and conduct a 360-degree assessment with your team. By continuously expanding, you drive your own performance and engagement, and that of your team’s. – Loren MargolisTraining & Leadership Success LLC

11. Is My Ax Sharpened?

The saying “sharpen your ax” comes from the parable of a woodcutter who chopped less wood because his ax was dull. Leaders get dull too. Without continuous learning and professional development, leaders can become less effective. So, while cultivating others, don’t forget to sharpen your own ax. You’ll then work smarter and not harder. Great leaders take the time to invest in themselves. – Tamiko CuellarPursue Your Purpose LLC

12. How Do Unconscious Biases Impact My Decisions?

Unconscious bias affects decisions. We’ve developed many kinds of biases to help us navigate the world with a minimum effort, but they can also hinder someone from considering different options when making decisions. Leaders should learn to accept that we are all biased before we can begin to take positive action to identify them and to mitigate bias with specific strategies. – Maria PastoreMaria Pastore Coaching

13. What Do I Get Paid To Do?

That’s the question I find many leaders are stumped by, or the answer they provide is a template response. What are you paid to do? Generate revenue, build products, engineer solutions? Nope. You get paid to be a leader. What that genuinely means varies notably based on the leader and organization. True clarity on what being a leader is remains one puzzle piece I find many people struggle to find. – Leila Bulling TowneThe Bulling Towne Group, LLC

14. What Fears Am I Not Facing?

Each leader has their own set of fears. Each context brings new permutations for activating those fears. Seasoning can often mean developing skills to work around fears rather than facing them directly. A leadership audit that includes surfacing fears, along with how and when they manifest, is the first step to diminishing their hold. The second is holding yourself accountable to new behaviors. – Maureen CunninghamUp Until Now Inc.

15. Am I Pushing Or Pulling?

Leaders often share their vision and then tell their reports how to execute. These leaders are “pushing information” out and expecting folks to “snap to it.” Evolved leaders work to pull information from their teams. When individuals are asked what their greatest aspirations are, not only does the goal become more compelling, but the team is all in, as they helped to create the vision. – Deborah GoldsteinDRIVEN Professionals