Sometimes the best thing you can do for your team... is just get out of their way.

Last month, my leadership team flew into New York.

Monday night, they gathered at Pete's Tavern—a classic spot and particularly fun for the holidays. It's the kind of place where the first round turns into three and the stories get better with each one.

This gathering happens twice a year. Different cities, same Monday night ritual.

And every time, I don’t go.

I want to. Genuinely. I love this team. (Even more genuinely.)
There's a small voice in my head whispering FOMO while I’m ordering room service alone or doing one more pre-meeting run-through from the home office.

But I also know what it’s like to have “the boss” around.

New research from HBR backs this up: spending time with your boss creates more negative emotions than commuting.
More than household chores.
More than almost anything else in a normal workday.

Not because you’re terrible. (At least I hope I’m not!)
But because power creates discomfort—even when the relationship is great.(Okay.. Phew!)

Here’s what else the research shows: companies that foster real friendships among colleagues significantly outperform their peers.

But leaders can’t manufacture that connection by hovering. Or being “one of the crew.”

Your team needs space to be themselves. To laugh without an audience. To vent, connect, and bond without performing for you.

So twice a year, the location is chosen. The tab is covered. And the boss stays in his room.

It’s not easy. But it’s necessary.

Sometimes the best thing you can do for your team... is just get out of their way.

Previous
Previous

Buffet Bites #6 — Humor: The Leadership Skill That Surely Sounds Unserious (And don't call me Shirley)

Next
Next

Issue #5: Most People Quit at 31°F