Posts Tagged ‘gaslighting’

How to Drive Results Without Micromanaging: Stop Gaslighting Your Team Without Realizing It

Monday, July 7th, 2025

What Is Workplace Gaslighting and Why It’s More Common Than You Think?

Gaslighting isn’t just something that happens in toxic relationships. It happens at work too. Especially in leadership. And most of the time, it’s not even on purpose. Too many times, leaders don’t believe they can drive results without micromanaging, but trust me, they can (and so can you).

Micromanaging creates the same effect as gaslighting. It makes people question their value. Their work. Even their memory. A team member double-checking your tone before every email? That’s a sign. Someone holding back ideas during meetings? Another sign.

When leaders correct small details constantly, contradict past decisions, or redo someone’s work without asking, people stop trusting their instincts. It builds silence. And silence kills performance.

This becomes even more dangerous in high-growth environments. As businesses scale, the demand for results increases. But if trust isn’t growing alongside output, people feel more pressure and less safety. When employees feel like they’re always one correction away from being wrong, they stop speaking up. Over time, a team that once took initiative starts waiting for orders. Not because they lack ideas, but because they no longer feel safe to share them.

The Hidden Side of Micromanagement

Micromanagement feels like control. But it usually comes from fear. Fear of failure. Fear of being judged. Fear of letting go. It doesn’t feel like gaslighting to the person doing it. But to the team, it does.

Many leaders don’t see their own micromanaging. They think they’re helping. They think their experience is saving time. But it’s often just undermining someone else’s learning. When you always step in, your team stops stepping up. And when that becomes the culture, it’s hard to reverse.

Emotional Gaslighting vs. Performance Coaching

Real coaching builds someone up. Gaslighting makes them shrink. The difference is in how feedback is given, how often it changes, and whether it’s meant to help or to correct.

True coaching encourages ownership. It gives people space to fail and room to grow. Gaslighting, even when unintentional, creates confusion. It leaves people unsure of where they stand, or what success even means.

Common Signs You’re Unintentionally Undermining Your Team

  • You ask for updates multiple times a day.
  • You correct minor decisions without explaining why.
  • You give new directions without acknowledging previous instructions.
  • Your team hesitates to take ownership.
  • People are quiet in meetings but complain afterward.

Cognitive Dissonance in Leadership: Why Good Intentions Can Backfire

You can believe in your team and still micromanage them. That’s where cognitive dissonance kicks in. You say you trust them, but your actions show something else.

Most leaders don’t see it happening. They think they’re just helping. Protecting. Supporting. But when your words and actions don’t match, people notice.

This gap is hard to close unless you’re paying attention. Teams notice inconsistencies fast. If you praise autonomy but correct every step, people hear the correction louder than the praise. And that tension grows. Fast.

When leaders stay stuck in good intentions without reflecting on their behavior, team morale suffers. People start performing to avoid conflict, not to contribute ideas. And eventually, even your high performers pull back. Not because they want to, but because they’re protecting themselves.

The Disconnect Between Values and Actions

You value growth, but you take back control when results get shaky.

You say “fail fast,” but you correct every misstep.

You believe in delegation, but you review every email.

It’s not that you don’t mean it. But pressure reveals habits, not beliefs. The higher the stakes, the more you revert to what feels safe. And usually, that means more control.

“I Trust My Team… But Not With This Task” – What That Really Means

That phrase hides fear. And fear leads to control. If you don’t trust your team with one task, how can they trust you with feedback, new ideas, or their best effort?

It’s not about being perfect. It’s about being real. Teams can handle mistakes. They can’t handle inconsistency. If trust is selective, it’s not trust.

How Integrity Creates Autonomy and Accountability

Integrity means consistency. When you say you value autonomy, your actions have to follow. Otherwise, the culture breaks.

Leadership integrity isn’t about being perfect. It’s about being clear. About showing up the same way every time. Especially when it’s hard.

When people know what to expect from you, they relax. They work better. They take more risks. They own their work. But if your reaction changes every time the pressure changes, they stop guessing. They start hiding.

Leading With Clarity Instead of Control

Clarity creates confidence. Tell your team what success looks like. Be specific. Then let them get there their way.

Control slows them down. It turns work into a checklist. It removes creativity. It trains them to wait for permission instead of building trust with judgment.

If people can’t tell what you expect, they’ll default to over-explaining or under-performing. That’s not a performance issue. That’s a leadership signal.

Integrity as an Operating System, Not a Buzzword

Integrity isn’t a value on the wall. It’s how you reply to a late deadline. How you talk during 1-on-1s. Whether your feedback is consistent. Whether your actions match your standards.

Real integrity shows up in stress, not just strategy. It’s when you hold the line without crushing the person. It’s when you tell someone no, and they still feel safe coming back tomorrow.

3 Real-World Coaching Examples That Build Trust, Not Fear

  • A leader sets clear weekly outcomes but lets the team choose how they get there.
  • During a crisis, the manager asks for solutions instead of giving commands.
  • A founder admits when they were wrong. Publicly. And adjusts.

These are simple. But they go a long way. Teams remember how you act when things go sideways.

Feeling Like a Fraud? Imposter Syndrome Drives Over-Management

Micromanaging doesn’t always come from ego. Sometimes it comes from insecurity. The more responsibility a leader takes on, the more they feel they might be found out.

That’s imposter syndrome. And it’s common. Especially for high performers who built the business with their own hands. It sneaks in as the team grows, and suddenly, you’re not the only expert anymore.

You feel pressure to always know the answer. You start to second-guess what others think of your decisions. So you double-check everything. You stay involved. And your team starts to feel suffocated.

Why High Performers Struggle to Let Go

If you’ve built something from scratch, it’s hard to watch others take over. If you’ve been praised for being the “fixer,” it’s hard to sit back. You’re used to being the one who solves problems. So letting go feels like giving up.

But leadership changes. What worked in startup mode doesn’t work in scale-up mode. You don’t need to know every detail anymore. You need to trust that your team does.

Overcompensation vs. Confidence in Delegation

Overcompensation sounds like: “I just want it done right.”

Confidence sounds like: “I trust your way, even if it’s not mine.”

It doesn’t mean ignoring mistakes. It means letting people make them. And being clear about how to fix them after.

Rebuilding Confidence Through Measured Coaching Frameworks

You can use tools to delegate better:

  • Decision Trees: Set clear paths for action.
  • Outcome Agreements: Define what done looks like.
  • Feedback Windows: Schedule fixed times for review instead of random check-ins.
  • Peer Review Systems: Encourage the team to coach each other before it all rolls up to you.

5 Things I’d Do Differently If I Had to Learn Leadership Again

Delegate Earlier and Smarter

I waited too long. I kept holding on, thinking I could do it faster. But I just got in the way.

Early delegation builds trust. It forces clarity. It gives people a chance to rise. If you wait until you’re burnt out to delegate, you’re not delegating—you’re offloading.

Build In Trust Loops, Not Just Checkpoints

Checkpoints track tasks. Trust loops build ownership. Ask your team how they’d solve it before giving your take.

Make room for surprises. Let people bring their full self to the solution. The process matters as much as the product.

Make Space for Failure

Not everything needs your fix. Mistakes teach more than lectures.

Failure with feedback builds skill. No feedback just builds resentment. If your team knows they won’t get punished for trying, they’ll keep trying.

Give Feedback That Builds, Not Breaks

Correction doesn’t have to feel like criticism. Focus on effort and progress, not just results.

Be specific. Say what worked, not just what didn’t. Don’t make feedback a guessing game.

Create Culture on Purpose

If you don’t name it, people will guess it. Your actions set the tone. Make sure they match your words.

Culture isn’t perks. It’s behavior. It’s how meetings start. How problems get solved. How you handle mistakes. That’s what people remember.

Daily Practices That Shift Mindset From Micromanager to Mentor

  • Ask questions before giving answers.
  • Delay your judgment by 30 seconds.
  • Thank people for their ideas before you improve them.
  • Show your process out loud so others can learn from it.

Why Framework-Based Coaching Breaks Under Pressure

When pressure hits, frameworks often fail. They’re built for order. But business isn’t always orderly. People bring emotion, stress, history. You can’t solve that with a worksheet.

Frameworks help. But they can’t lead (like EOS and other systems).

When everything feels like it’s on fire, checklists aren’t enough. Your team needs guidance, not instructions. That’s the difference between coaching and managing.

Systems Don’t Solve Emotional Disconnection

You can run weekly standups and still lose your team. You can set KPIs and still kill creativity. If your people don’t feel heard, no system will save it.

Systems support strategy. They don’t replace relationships.

What High-Growth Businesses Need Is Human Strategy, Not Scripts

As your company grows, complexity grows too. That means more uncertainty. More emotional friction. Your coaching must adapt.

People need clarity more than structure. They need permission to be honest. That means leadership has to be human, not mechanical.

Business Coaching Helps the Small Business Owner – Done the Right Way

Good coaching isn’t about systems. It’s about clarity, trust, honesty and most importantly results. It works because it drives real ROI.

And if your business is growing but you feel lonelier than ever, it’s probably because your leadership habits haven’t caught up yet. That’s okay. But it’s time to catch up and Accountability Now can help.

10 Signs You Might Be a Gaslighting Boss

Friday, May 23rd, 2025

Some bosses don’t know they’re gaslighting. They think they’re managing. Leading. Giving feedback. But what they’re really doing is controlling. If you’re in a leadership role and your team is walking on eggshells, something might be off.

Gaslighting is a word that gets thrown around a lot. But in the workplace, it has a specific meaning. It’s when a boss or leader makes others question their own judgment, memory, or abilities. And it’s a big problem.

Let’s talk about what it looks like. Then, how to lead differently—with honesty and integrity.

What Is Gaslighting in Leadership?Hand-drawn cartoon of a boss angrily pointing at an employee while another looks distressed in an office setting

Gaslighting at work usually starts with small things. A boss denies saying something. Or they blame someone for a mistake they didn’t make. Over time, it adds up. The team feels confused. Disoriented. They stop trusting themselves—and their leader.

This isn’t just about bad communication. Gaslighting is about power. It’s about making someone feel less capable, so the person in charge can feel more in control.

Why Integrity Matters More Than Ever in Modern Leadership

Good leadership is built on trust. If your team doesn’t trust you, they won’t follow you. They’ll follow orders, maybe. But not with energy or belief.

Integrity means being honest. It means owning your mistakes. It means treating your people like adults, not pawns.

Gaslighting breaks that. It tells people their experiences aren’t real. That they’re too sensitive. That they’re not good enough. Even if that’s not what you meant, it’s what they hear. And it chips away at everything you’re trying to build.

10 Signs You Might Be a Gaslighting Boss

If you see yourself in some of these signs, don’t panic. Awareness is the first step. But ignoring it? That’s how toxic culture grows.

1. You Deny Conversations You Clearly Had

If someone brings up a past conversation, and your first response is, “I never said that,” check yourself. It’s possible you forgot. But if this happens often, your team may start to feel like they can’t rely on their own memory.

2. You Dismiss Concerns as “Drama” or “Oversensitivity”

When someone brings you a real issue, do you brush it off? Do you say things like “You’re overthinking it” or “That’s not a big deal”? This isn’t just poor listening. It’s gaslighting. It makes people feel small and unheard.

3. You Change Expectations Without Warning

If the target keeps moving, your team will never feel safe. You asked for one thing. They did it. Then you say it’s wrong—because now you want something else. That’s not leadership. That’s confusion disguised as control.

4. You Undermine Your Team to Stay in Control

Do you correct people in meetings just to prove a point? Do you downplay their work or ideas? If you make others feel less smart so you look more capable, that’s not leadership. That’s fear in disguise.

5. You Twist Facts to Win Arguments

You bring up mistakes out of context. Or maybe you exaggerate timelines and say things happened differently than they did. Even small changes add up. Your team starts to question everything. Not just you—but themselves.

6. You Take Credit but Avoid Responsibility

When things go well, you highlight your role. When things go wrong, it’s always someone else’s fault. That’s a red flag. Leaders with real integrity don’t need to protect their ego. They give credit and own their part in failures.

7. You Confuse Feedback with Criticism

Tough feedback is important. But if your feedback feels more like judgment than guidance, it’s not helping. Ask yourself: Is this building someone up or just making them feel worse?

8. You Publicly Shame and Call It “Accountability”

If you call someone out in a meeting or make jokes at their expense, you might say you’re being direct. But that’s not what your team hears. They hear blame. Shame. Humiliation. That’s not accountability. That’s gaslighting.

9. Your Team Looks Tired, Not Inspired

You might think pressure gets results. But if your team seems drained, anxious, or checked out, there’s a deeper issue. Constant stress from toxic behavior leads to burnout. And gaslighting is a key driver.

10. You Make People Doubt Themselves, Not Grow

Great leaders build confidence. Gaslighting bosses chip away at it. If people leave meetings feeling confused or worthless, something is wrong. Growth doesn’t come from fear. It comes from safety.

Gaslighting Leads to Burnout, Not Performance

Gaslighting creates a work environment where no one feels safe. People overthink every message. They hesitate before speaking. They second-guess everything. Over time, that leads to burnout—not progress.

If your team is always exhausted, ask why. It’s not just the workload. It’s the emotional toll of never feeling seen, heard, or trusted.

When Insecurity Turns Toxic: Gaslighting and Imposter Syndrome

Sometimes, gaslighting starts from a leader’s own insecurity. You feel like a fraud. You’re afraid someone on your team is smarter than you. So you shut them down before they shine.

That’s imposter syndrome at work. And when leaders don’t deal with it, they project it. They gaslight others so they can feel less threatened. But it doesn’t solve anything. It just spreads the insecurity around.

Gaslighting Destroys Autonomy — and Teams Know It

Good teams need space. Space to think, solve, create. That’s autonomy. But gaslighting bosses take that away. They control everything. They micromanage and create fear around every decision.

When your team stops speaking up, that’s not a sign of alignment. It’s a sign they’ve given up. You haven’t built trust—you’ve built silence.

From Gaslighting to Accountability: Leading with Integrity Instead

If any of this sounds familiar, there’s good news. You can change. But it starts with honesty. Look at your habits. Ask your team for real feedback. Listen. Don’t defend—just hear them.

Accountability isn’t about blame. It’s about ownership. It’s about being the kind of leader who grows, even when it’s uncomfortable.

The best leaders don’t pretend to have it all together. They show up with integrity, and they fix what’s broken. That’s what real leadership looks like.

Interested in seeing if you are a gaslighting boss? Take this free assessment and see for yourself.

Frequently Asked Questions About Gaslighting at Work

What is gaslighting by a boss?
It’s when a boss manipulates someone to question their memory, instincts, or reality. It often involves denial, blame, or withholding information.

Can good leaders unintentionally gaslight?
Yes. Many do it without realizing. That’s why awareness and feedback are so important.

How does gaslighting affect employee performance?
It kills trust. It causes confusion, stress, and burnout. Over time, it breaks down morale and drives good people away.

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