Peer leader: be the one who delivers
Where you are
You have run at least one entire cycle of an activity, end to end. That is what peer leader means here: not a title, a track record. This rung is about running cycles brilliantly: so well that people trust you with more.
What mastery means here
The craft underneath "I can run this". Anyone can get lucky once. Mastery at this rung means your runs are repeatable: planned on a page, delivered calm, debriefed honestly, and better each time. That track record is what you will stand on when bigger doors open.
The craft
1. The standard
A brilliant cycle looks like this:
- Planned on one page, shown to someone, improved.
- Delivered steady, wobbles handled, nobody left guessing.
- Debriefed within a week, lessons written down.
- The people involved better off, thanked, and told what happened.
Hit that run after run and it is not luck. It is you.
2. Planning craft
Beyond the one-page minimum (five questions: what, who, what we need, what could go wrong, who does what):
- Plan backwards from the moment it starts. "Doors open at two" tells you when the kit arrives, which tells you when you leave, which tells you when you pack.
- Plan B is a decision, not a hope. Two most likely failures, one ready answer each.
- Kit list, written, ticked twice: once the night before, once before you leave.
3. Delivery under wobble
- Arrive early. Most disasters are lateness with nowhere to hide.
- Own the first five minutes: welcome, what is happening, who to ask. A room that knows the shape relaxes.
- When plan A dies, choose fast and tell everyone. A calm wrong-ish call beats a perfect one that comes too late.
- Ask for help early. At this rung, asking early is the craft.
4. The debrief habit
Every cycle. No exceptions. Especially the ones that went badly: that is when it pays most.
Twenty minutes, four questions: what happened, what worked, what would I change, what next. Then two habits that separate masters from once-luckies:
- The five-line write-up. Short enough that people actually read it.
- The cycle log. One line per run: date, what it was, what you learned. Your record of runs is your evidence when you ask for bigger things. A log is hard to argue with.
5. The relational minimum
Cycles are run with people, not just plans.
- One-to-ones as a habit, not an emergency. Twenty minutes, one person, mostly listening. Do them when nothing is wrong.
- Asks that respect people: specific, personal, honest. "Can you bring the drinks and help set up at ten?"
- Thank properly: specific, soon, public where kind. "Thanks" is nice. "You calmed the whole room when the music died" is fuel.
6. Look after the engine (you)
Energy is part of the plan.
- Do not book what you cannot recover from. A run that flattens you for a fortnight was oversized: right-size the next one.
- Share the load early, not heroically late.
- Have one person you debrief feelings with, not just facts. Running things has feelings in it. That is normal, and saying so early is a skill, not a weakness.
- If it stops being any fun at all for weeks, say so to your coach and ask to change the load. People who say so early tend to stay in; people who go quiet tend to drift out.
7. The judgement calls (failure modes of this rung)
- Hero mode. Doing every job yourself. Feels noble; caps everything at the size of you.
- Polishing instead of asking. Another hour on the plan is easier than one ask of one person. The ask moves more.
- Skipping the debrief after a bad run. The worst run of your year is the best lesson in it, if you write it down.
- Saying yes to the second cycle before debriefing the first. Momentum without learning is just repetition.
- Keeping the cycle forever. Masters hand cycles on. If you have run it three times and nobody else could run it tomorrow, that is the next door: develop someone.
8. AI as leverage at this rung
How a peer leader stays answerable while using AI:
- Hand to AI, then check (delegate): first drafts, rotas, kit lists, poster text, research legwork, tidying your write-up. Bounded jobs you can check quickly. It is fast at these; you still check, because it is confidently wrong in ways that look right.
- Think with AI, you judge (collaborate): options for a hard conversation; questions for your debrief; reading what your group might need next. Let it widen your options. The judging is yours.
- Never hand over (own): the cycle you run, the trusted relationships, and the personal ask. AI may prep any of them. It performs none of them. The ask works because it is you asking.
The discipline, in one line: attempt it first, use AI for hints, verify what it gives you. Leaning on AI as a crutch measurably weakens what you can do without it; used as a hinting tutor, that harm disappears. And your own feeling of whether it helped is unreliable: check results, not vibes.
The honest hedge, carried word for word: durability of human skills is conditional on AI augmenting rather than automating the work. No skill is immune, and this page will never tell you one is.
Practise this week
Fill in the blanks with real names and real days: a plan written in this shape is far more likely to happen than a good intention.
- Book the debrief before the run. Today I will put my next cycle's debrief in the diary for (space to write in) (within a week of the run) and invite (space to write in), who will be there on the day.
- One one-to-one. On (space to write in), I will spend twenty minutes with (space to write in), the person in my group I know least, and mostly listen.
- Start the cycle log. By (space to write in), I will write five lines on my last run ("here is what I ran and what I learned") and show them to (space to write in) (my coach).
Pass it on
Coaching a new peer leader? Send them this page after their first cycle lands, with one line: the specific thing you saw them do well. Before the first cycle, send the climbing page (C2) instead: this one is for someone who has a run behind them and wants the craft.
The evidence
Grades: A = strong controlled studies · B = good studies with limits · C = practitioner craft and history · D = opinion. AI claims are dated: this page's AI section is written as of July 2026 and is reviewed on a set cycle (fast-moving claims by January 2027, the rest by July 2027); anything past its review date comes down.
- "Has run one entire cycle, end to end" is this map's definition of the rung (set by the map's author, stated openly). Solo or with others counts; the marker is the completed cycle, not team size.
- Plan → deliver → debrief as repeatable craft is practitioner doctrine, refined over decades of organising practice. [C]
- One-to-one skills respond well to training but fade in months without coached practice. That is why this rung comes with a coach, and why the habit beats the workshop. [B: controlled studies with follow-up]
- Content alone is the weakest way to build any of this. Skills move through practice, feedback and a real group. This page arms the practice; it is not the practice. [B: training research across fields]
- Fill-in "when X, I will Y with Z" plans turn intentions into action far better than encouragement alone. [A: 94 controlled tests, more than 8,000 people]
- AI section: working inside vs outside AI's jagged competence edge changes results sharply [A, as of 2023; the edge itself keeps moving]. Crutch-style AI use cut unaided performance by about 17% in a large student trial; a hints-not-answers setup erased the harm [A]. People misjudge whether AI helped them: measured results and felt results diverge [B]. The durable human ground is being the person answerable: a legal and institutional fact, not a capability bet [C].
- Honest boundary: no page makes you a better peer leader. Runs do. This one exists to make your next run sharper.
Where next
Three doors from this rung:
- Move up → from running cycles to building the machine (C3, /climb/up/3-4)
- Develop someone → hand a volunteer a whole cycle (K2, /climb/coach/2-3) · hand a participant their first responsibility (K1, /climb/coach/1-2)
- The best training → the graded shelves for getting here (on C2) and for the next step (on C3)