High‑Level Exec Practices: “If Nvidia’s CEO Doesn’t Do Weekly 1:1s, Why Should I?”

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Why Meeting Rhythms Should Reflect Role, Scope, and Team Needs

A common refrain in management circles goes something like this:

“If Nvidia’s CEO doesn’t do weekly 1:1s, why should I?”

It’s a fair question—and it opens up a broader conversation about leadership, communication rhythms, and context. The truth is, leadership styles evolve with scope. What works for a CEO running a 30,000-person company won’t be the same for a frontline engineering manager or a startup founder with a 10-person team.

Let’s unpack what this mindset gets right—and what it overlooks.


1. Leadership Practices Scale with Scope

Jensen Huang (Nvidia’s CEO) likely doesn’t do weekly 1:1s with direct reports. Why?

  • He’s managing a massive, complex organization

  • His direct reports are seasoned executives

  • Communication is structured through layers of trusted leaders

At the C-suite level, the information flow is different. The focus shifts from tactical problem-solving to strategic alignment, culture, capital allocation, and vision. That doesn’t mean communication disappears—it just looks different: structured reviews, strategic off-sites, investor calls, and exec team huddles.

If you're managing individual contributors or team leads, your responsibilities are closer to coaching, feedback, and execution—where frequent 1:1s are often more valuable.


2. Senior People Need Less, Not None

As team members become more senior, they typically need:

  • Less frequent hands-on guidance

  • More autonomy

  • Strategic check-ins instead of tactical syncs

But they still benefit from 1:1s. The format may shift:

  • Monthly or ad-hoc check-ins for senior leaders

  • Agenda driven by the direct report

  • Focused more on strategic blockers, alignment, and priorities

The point isn’t to eliminate communication—it’s to match it to the level of the role.


3. Don’t Copy Practices Without Context

High-profile leaders often operate with deeply embedded communication structures around them. CEOs don’t need weekly 1:1s with every person because:

  • Their lieutenants run tightly aligned teams

  • They’ve built systems of trust and visibility over years

  • They get feedback from multiple high-leverage sources

If you’re earlier in your leadership journey or building a team from scratch, you are that system. Until that structure exists, weekly 1:1s often are the system.


4. Use 1:1s Strategically, Not Rigidly

It’s not about frequency for its own sake. The real question is:

“What does my team need from me right now?”

Maybe a new team member needs weekly coaching. Maybe a senior designer needs 20 minutes every other week to align on priorities. Maybe a burned-out engineer just needs space to vent. Flexibility matters more than mimicry.


5. What to Learn from Executives Like Huang

Rather than copying a CEO’s meeting habits, focus on why they make the choices they do:

  • Delegate effectively

  • Empower trusted leaders

  • Focus meetings on decisions, not status

  • Build high-trust cultures so communication flows organically

These are the underlying skills that allow leaders to reduce meeting frequency without sacrificing alignment.


Final Thoughts

Just because a CEO at a Fortune 500 company doesn’t run weekly 1:1s doesn’t mean you shouldn’t. Leadership practices aren’t one-size-fits-all—they’re contextual. Use weekly 1:1s where they add value. Reduce them when they don’t. And always tailor your approach to the needs of your people, not someone else’s calendar.

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