Fostering Relationships: The Biggest Team Mistake Leaders Make
The biggest team mistake leaders make is not delegating work properly. This poor leadership tactic is also known as micro-managing or helicoptering. It ranks as the largest team mistake for these seven reasons:
- It has a large negative impact on quality of work, team culture and individual motivation.
- It is very common. Letting go and letting the team is not easy for many leaders. It requires a complex series of personal, strategic, team and repetitive efforts.
- The reason we have teams is because there is too much work for one person to do or because the work requires specialized talents. A leader trying to do all the work on their own goes directly against the reason the team exists in the first place.
- Team members need to feel valuable and needed. When their leader doesn't delegate work properly it robs them of this basic desire.
- Since a young age we have wanted autonomy; to feel like we can "do it on our own." This is a driving force of leaders being dictators. This is also why leaders must let go and not micro-manage the team. Your team needs you to train well, correct when needed, but let them do the work on their own.
- The best ideas and highest quality work never materialize because the dictator leader is holding everyone and everything back due to their need for control.
- Not trusting team members.
- Not understanding that the enemy of excellence is perfection.
- Not letting team members try/fail/learn/re-try.
- Hold an inflated sense of self-esteem.
- Think that just because you can do something means you should do it (instead of letting your team do it.)
- Have been burned in the past and are super-imposing past mistakes of others on current team members.
- Haven't invested the time or resources to fully train the team.
- Are blind to the negative impact of their behaviors (because many of them are unseen, at least initially.)
Labels: Fostering Relationships


