In today’s executive job market, decision-makers weigh signal, presence, and perceived risk—but one critical factor is still widely misread: disability. Many organizations assume physical fragility equates to executive fragility, overlooking proven leadership experience. For leaders like Cara E. Yar Khan, this misperception has real consequences, from hiring bias to limited career advancement. Yet her track record shows that performance and impact are not determined by physical appearance, but by judgment, strategy, and operational discipline.
Cara has led global initiatives for the White House, UNICEF, and G7-backed investment funds, managing multi-million-dollar programs and complex international partnerships. Despite these achievements, committees often question her capacity based on her wheelchair use and progressive muscle-wasting condition. “Physical fragility gets treated as executive fragility,” she explains. Once that assumption enters a hiring process, competence, readiness, and leadership style are all misinterpreted, creating what she calls the “fragility penalty”—an institutional bias embedded in process and perception.
In one UNICEF assignment, her organization codified discomfort into a formal procedure: all 36 drivers were asked if they felt “comfortable” transporting her, and only three agreed. While the issue eventually resolved, it highlights how bias can masquerade as risk management. In executive hiring, similar mechanisms appear subtly—through language about “fit,” travel demands, bandwidth, and pace. The result is often the same: capable disabled leaders are sidelined before their expertise is even assessed.
Facing persistent bias, disabled executives often resort to masking exhaustion or limitations to avoid jeopardizing opportunities. Cara describes this as “performing ‘I’ve got this’ even when the reality is more complicated.” Masking protects careers but comes at a cost: burnout, distorted performance evaluation, and narrowed leadership pipelines. Organizations that reward concealment over accuracy risk losing talent and misjudging potential.
Disabled leaders thrive when organizations focus on measurable outcomes, not optics. Cara emphasizes the need for operational support—assistants, adaptive tech, and accessible travel—viewed as infrastructure, not charity. Properly structured, these accommodations enhance performance, reduce errors, and ensure leaders operate at full capacity. Treating accommodations as essential infrastructure reframes disability as a solvable operational challenge rather than a perceived liability.
Organizations can dismantle the fragility penalty by adopting evidence-based metrics: decision quality, execution cadence, stakeholder management, and measurable outcomes. Interview processes should be accessible by default, and accommodations should be planned like any other executive support. Leaders should interrogate their own assumptions: “What evidence would we demand if her body looked different?” This approach prioritizes capability over appearance and builds a stronger, more diverse executive pipeline.
The focus must shift from physical perception to leadership ability. Cara stresses that disabled executives are not asking for lowered expectations—they seek accurate evaluation of judgment, results, and system-building capacity. When organizations fail to separate physical condition from executive performance, they restrict talent and invite avoidable organizational risk.
Bias against disabled leaders is not just a fairness issue; it’s a strategic disadvantage. Narrowing the leadership pool based on optics undermines institutional capacity in a market where judgment, execution, and strategic thinking are scarce. Inclusive evaluation allows companies to retain top talent, reduce burnout, and strengthen leadership pipelines while embracing operational innovation and performance infrastructure.
Reframing executive hiring as a governance issue rather than a personal narrative is critical. Disabled leaders like Cara E. Yar Khan demonstrate that physical constraints do not limit strategic capability. By measuring the right metrics, investing in performance infrastructure, and designing accessible processes, organizations can recognize talent accurately, expand their leadership pool, and avoid the costly mistakes of misjudged risk.
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