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Saturday, May 16, 2026

🙌 Thrive as a Leader: Managing More Direct Reports Without Burning Out 🔥

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In today's VUCA world, you might notice your company trimming down management layers and handing you more direct reports than ever before. This shift—well underway before 2026—is all about staying agile and saving money, especially when things get uncertain. These days, the average manager like you could be leading ten to fifteen people, not just five like back in 2017. Apparently “do more with less” finally decided to RSVP to your calendar.

That’s a big change, and it brings a whole new set of challenges. Your team may feel like they don’t get as much of your time, and you’ll probably find your own workload and complexity ramping up. With fewer managers around, your leadership really matters—so it’s more important than ever to be sharp, flexible, and ready to guide bigger, more varied teams.

This isn’t just about today’s to-dos, either. Leaner management means you need to communicate clearly, delegate smartly, and make confident decisions to keep things running smoothly and spirits high. You’ll want to level up your people skills and time management, while encouraging your team to become more independent, accountable, and resilient.

When your team grows but your support stays the same, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. But you can flip the script. Here’s how you and your team can thrive instead of burning out:

·   Reset how you work—together. Don’t try to run a big team the same way you did a small one. Revisit your availability, rethink your part in decisions, and help your crew set new routines. Work together to set fresh expectations and create team rules for how you’ll communicate, collaborate, and handle disagreements.

·   Prioritize visibly. You can’t do everything, and that’s okay. Zero in on what matters most and keep your team in the loop. A quick, regular update on top priorities helps everyone pull in the same direction and keeps things simple.

·   Delegate with clarity. Scaling up isn’t about piling on more work—it’s about lifting others up. Spot those who can step up, and make it clear what’s theirs to run with, what should come back to you, and where they have the freedom to decide.

·   Design a better communication and coaching cadence. This is essential when managing larger teams in a leaner workplace. By establishing regular check-ins and feedback sessions, you create a rhythm that keeps everyone aligned and supported. Consistent communication not only clarifies goals and expectations but also builds trust and ensures challenges are addressed early, allowing your team to stay focused and motivated.

Similarly, a thoughtful coaching cadence helps team members grow in their roles and encourages ongoing development. When you make coaching a routine part of your leadership, you empower individuals to take ownership of their work and foster a culture of continuous improvement. This structure provides stability in times of change, helping your team adapt and thrive even as demands increase.

·   Simplify the system. Growth often means clutter. Take a fresh look at your team’s tools, meetings, and processes. Cut out anything that bogs you down, and keep things as simple as you can.

·   Protect your energy. Your mood sets the vibe for the team. Make time for a weekly check-in to see how you’re doing and tweak your approach before stress takes over.

Check out these related posts:

The Problem with an Always Urgent Culture (How to Prioritize Your Team's Work)  (5 min read)

5 Ways to lead a Team that’s Understaffed and Overworked (5 min read)

Defining a Coaching Cadence is a Force Multiplier that Will Supercharge Performance  (5 min read)

Delegating to Build the Capacity of Your Team to Achieve Greater Results  (3 min read)

Leading a larger team in a leaner organization is not about becoming a superhero with a color-coded calendar and limitless patience. It is about building habits, systems, and trust that let everyone do their best work without depending on you for every small decision. When you lead with clarity, consistency, and a little grace for yourself, you create a team that can handle complexity without turning every Tuesday into a fire drill.

At the end of the day, having fewer—but better—leaders can make organizations way stronger. If you keep learning and invest in your own growth, you’ll help create a culture where everyone can adapt and succeed. It’s all about staying flexible, supporting each other, and chasing excellence together. You’ve got this!

Stay inspired, lead boldly! 


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile: 323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services, third-party maintenance providers, real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.
 

 

Sunday, May 3, 2026

True Empowerment Requires Hands-On Training and Coaching—Not Managerial Absence

 

 

 

 

 


In many workplaces, “empowerment” has become shorthand for leaving people alone. Apparently, empowerment means getting a map, a pat on the back, and a “Good luck!” before being dropped into the office of field wilderness.

Managers are rightfully told not to micromanage. Employees are encouraged to take ownership. Teams are urged to be flexible, collaborative, and self-directed. But in practice, many managers interpret empowerment as a hands-off approach: give people the job, trust them to figure it out, and step in only when something goes wrong.

That is not empowerment. That is sink-or-swim management.

Real empowerment requires the opposite of neglect. It requires strong training tools, clear delivery, and ongoing coaching. If employees are expected to use judgment, make good decisions, and deliver consistent results, then managers must equip them with the standards, practices, and feedback they need to succeed.

False empowerment creates Inconsistency

False empowerment usually begins with good intentions. Managers do not want to be overbearing. They want to show respect. They want employees to feel trusted. They may say, “Everyone has their own style,” or “I don’t want to tell people exactly how to do everything.”

But when standards are unclear, employees do not experience freedom. They experience ambiguity.

They are left to guess: What are the real priorities? Which steps are required? Where is there room for personal judgment? What does success look like? When should I ask for help?

In that environment, inconsistency spreads quickly. Some employees invent their own methods. Some rely on outdated habits. Some follow the process only when the manager is watching. Others become frustrated because they are doing the work correctly, while coworkers are allowed to operate outside the system.

Training tools and coaching turn expectations into action

The best training tools are often simple: a checklist, job aid, standard operating procedure, daily huddle agenda, priority reminder, coaching script, or follow-up tracker.

These tools do not replace management. They make management easier to deliver consistently.

If a process is not being followed, the manager should not rely on hints, frustration, or occasional correction. A better approach is to gather the team, restate the process, explain why it matters, walk through the checklist, answer questions, and ask for commitment. Then follow up individually: “Do you understand what is required? Let’s do it together. Now you show me. Can I count on you to do it this way?” The goal is not to overwhelm employees with documentation. The goal is to make the right way easier to understand, practice, and repeat.

Delivery matters as much as the tool

Even the best training tool fails if it is delivered poorly.

A checklist handed out once and never reinforced is just paper. A team huddle with no clear purpose becomes noise. A standard that is only mentioned after someone violates it becomes a source of resentment.

Managers should deliver training as part of an ongoing coaching relationship. That means talking about the work before things go right, wrong, or average. It means making feedback normal, not exceptional.

When improvement is needed in the moment, the manager’s first job is to protect the work result: “Let me help you with that.” The deeper coaching can happen later: “Let’s follow up after the rush and walk through the process again.” This keeps correction focused on the work rather than turning it into embarrassment or blame.

Real empowerment requires accountability and ownership

Clear expectations are not the enemy of empowerment. They are the foundation of it.

Employees cannot take ownership of a standard they do not understand. They cannot improve a process they have not been taught. They cannot be held fairly accountable for expectations that were never made explicit.

Real empowerment says: “Here are the priorities. Here are the ground rules. Here is how we do this. Here is where your judgment matters. Here is how we will measure success. Here is how I will support you.” That clarity gives employees a stronger platform for independence.

It also protects high performers. Strong employees usually do not want a weak manager who lets everyone do whatever they want. They want a manager who knows what good performance looks like, recognizes extra effort, clears obstacles, and ensures that low performance does not become acceptable.

Make success repeatable

Training tools and delivery are not just for onboarding or formal instruction. They are part of everyday management.

Managers should ask: What standards need to be made clearer? What repeatable tasks need a checklist or job aid? What expectations should be reinforced in team huddles? Which employees need more practice or demonstration? Where are managers relying on assumptions instead of follow-up?

False empowerment leaves people alone and hopes they figure it out. Real empowerment gives people the tools, coaching, and accountability to do the work well.

Situational Leadership: Different Strokes for Different Folks

Empowerment isn’t one-size-fits-all—it’s about recognizing that each employee needs a different blend of directive and supportive behaviors, depending on their development level. For some, clear instructions and close guidance are essential, while others thrive with more autonomy and encouragement. The manager’s role is to assess where each team member stands and adapt their leadership style accordingly, making sure support and direction are tailored to individual needs.

True empowerment means giving people the right kind of leadership at the right moment: providing direction when they’re learning, offering encouragement as they grow, and stepping back when they’re ready to take ownership. By flexing leadership styles, managers help employees build confidence, learn new skills, and ultimately achieve greater independence and success.

Summary: The manager’s role is to make success repeatable

Training tools, coaching and delivery are not just for onboarding or formal instruction. They are part of everyday management.

Managers should ask:

  • What standards need to be made clearer?
  • What tasks need a checklist or job aid?
  • What expectations should be reinforced in team huddles?
  • Which employees need more practice or demonstration?
  • Where are managers relying on assumptions instead of follow-up?
  • What conversations need to happen before problems escalate?

So, next time you see your team wandering around like lost penguins, remember: don’t just toss them a manual and wish them luck. Real empowerment is about making sure everyone has what they need to waddle confidently toward success—preferably with fewer stumbles and more high-fives. With the right support, coaching, and a sprinkle of good humor, managers can turn "figuring it out" into "crushing it daily." Now go forth and empower your team (and maybe your penguins) They will thank you!

Stay inspired, lead boldly!


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

 Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile: 323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services, third-party maintenance providers, real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.