In this episode of The Ross Simmonds Show, Ross dives into one of the most common yet damaging habits of leaders: micromanagement. While founders and leaders often express the desire for team members who “act like owners,” their own behavior can stifle that very ownership. Ross explores the concept of the "Ownership Window," offering a strategic framework for when leaders should be hands-on and when to step back. He breaks down the fine line between leadership and control, examines the stages of team empowerment, and provides actionable insights for creating a company culture rooted in autonomy, accountability, and trust.
Key Takeaways and Insights:
1. The Ownership Paradox
- Leaders say they want ownership but often undermine it with controlling behaviors.
- A lack of delegation leads to decision bottlenecks and ruins team morale.
2. The Downside of Micromanagement
- Suck energy out of teams.
- Kill trust, decision-making, and momentum.
- Be mistaken for productivity from the leader’s perspective.
3. The “Ownership Window” Framework
- New Hire or New System (High Support Needed): Provide clarity, oversight, and a tight feedback loop. Avoid guesswork by implementing SOPs, training, and checkpoints.
- New Initiative (Strategic Oversight Needed): Leaders act more as advisors than operators. Maintain checkpoints without hovering.
- Proven Leader (High Trust & Autonomy): Align on outcomes, then step back. Focus on results, not the method of execution.
4. Coaching vs. Controlling
- Coaching is intentional and supportive.
- Controlling is reactive and born out of ego or fear.
- Leadership requires adjusting engagement based on team maturity and context.
5. Redefining Ownership in Leadership
- Clear expectations of what great looks like.
- Accountability for outcomes, not just tasks.
- Autonomy to decide how work gets done.
— 👋🏾 Let's stay connected —
╰ Subscribe to my channel: @RossSimmondsTV
╰ Instagram: @thecoolestcool
╰ Twitter / X: @thecoolestcool
╰ LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/rosssimmonds