As a leader, you feel responsible for your people’s job satisfaction and general well-being. Yet, despite your best intentions, something keeps going south or feeling wrong, leaving you wondering why can’t people just do as you say and take care of themselves.
“We tried our best – you know the rest.”
Breaking news: people do as we do – not as we say. So, the best intentions are not enough. You need to follow your own advice, along with being brutally honest with yourself about which advice actually matter to you, your employees, and your business results.
Here are three good-intention stories I hear leaders tell themselves, hurting the sustainability of their performance as individuals, teams, and businesses. And to focus on the constructive and practical dialogue, the stories are followed by some suggestions on how you can reframe them to ensure a long-term success.
Problem: You want your people to rest and recharge, yet there is always more work to be done. It might seem smart and caring of you to take on the extra tasks and work long hours for the sake of offloading your people, but by doing so you are digging yourself a hole. With your actions, you are showing your employees it’s not OK to rest because there is more to do. When you don’t give yourself permission to check out and rest, you take away the factual permission for your employees to do so even if your words say the opposite and your intentions are the purest ones.
Solution: Start taking proper rest yourself. Science is clear on that: small breaks often are huge contributors to one’s improved productivity, better health, and the sense of life satisfaction. So you’d better commit to taking those real breaks because all the employee eyeballs are on you as a leader, and you pave the others’ way to well-being and productivity.
Problem: It is not easy to keep up with the business needs, hire and retain the talent that your growth requires. And when you do succeed with that, you sabotage the success by letting your rockstars sit on the bench, watch the game from the field side, and rot losing their talents and hard-earned skills.
The result? People feel unhappy and unfulfilled, lose motivation, disengage, and start looking for a better work-life elsewhere. Why do you need all those great minds around you if you don’t let them shine? How about letting them do the job they were hired for, take initiatives, show their passion, learn and improve, all while you will have time and headspace for strategic work and leading your people instead of managing tasks?
Solution: Dig deep into where the lack of trust in your people is coming from. The surface reasons could be the lack of time for proper delegation and training in the task. Or your personality – “it’s just how I am, I want to personally make sure things get done properly”. Or your perfectionism – “they just don’t do it as well as I would do it myself”. Who said that your way is the best or the only right way? Who says that anything but perfect is not good enough? And how much can you do yourself before you drop or get so exhausted that your “perfect” becomes mediocre? Once you find the root cause for your thought patterns and behaviors, you will find the beauty in letting your people play and shine their brilliance, feeling better and creating space for you all to breathe as well.
Problem: You have successfully come this far with your career. You’ve set many goals, the next one higher, bolder, bigger than the previous one, and you have achieved them all. You know there is still more to achieve, yet new goals don’t give that tickling rush anymore. You run towards the goal in the hope to find joy or a sense of achievement there, but there is only a void behind the finish line. This rat race is tiring and disappointing for you, and as a result, the exhaustion and emotional numbness are spreading among your team.
Solution: find new driving forces that will help you set more sustainable goals and lead your team in a way that brings joy and a sense of purpose, instead of anxiety and a feeling of never being enough.
You are intelligent, ambitious, and resilient. Otherwise, you would not get to where you are right now. But you are not a machine, and neither are your people. So take that courageous step of slowing down and spending time for deep reflection and honest introspection. That will not kill your operations or success. Instead, it will guide you to the things that truly matter and will help you be the leader who makes everyone and everything around them thrive.
Guest blogger - Anna Liebel, Leadership and Team Development Consultant
Guest blogger - Anna Liebel, Leadership and Team Development Consultant
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