ProfessionalGrowth

The Habit Swap: What Leaders Dropped and the Outcomes

The Habit Swap: What Leaders Dropped and the Outcomes

Every great leader has a graveyard of old habits: the ones they buried on purpose because they finally admitted the cost was higher than the payoff.

We asked founders, CEOs, and VPs a deceptively simple question: “In the last few years, what leadership habit did you consciously kill—and what did you replace it with?”

The answers are refreshingly unpolished. No one brags about working harder. Instead, they confess to dropping the very things they once wore as badges of honor: constant cheerleading, answering every message themselves, micromanaging $50 repairs, forcing consensus, back-to-back 15-minute meetings, and the guilt of not always being “on.”

What replaced them isn’t softer leadership—it’s sharper, more human, and dramatically more effective.

The proof is in retention jumps of 34–40%, revenue growth of 40%, and leaders who finally have bandwidth to think instead of just reacting.

Read on!

Dropped: The exhausting habit of trying to be everyone’s cheerleader all the time.

As a former TV host, I thought constant enthusiasm was leadership—celebrating every small win, sending motivational messages daily, and being the eternal optimist even when teams were struggling.

Adopted: Strategic recognition tied to core values. Instead of generic praise, I started using our Team Tags system at Give River to acknowledge specific behaviors that align with company values.

When someone demonstrates collaboration, I call it out specifically rather than just saying “great job.”

The shift was dramatic.

Our client teams report 32% higher performance when recognition is value-specific versus generic praise.

More importantly, I stopped burning myself out trying to manufacture positivity.

My energy became authentic, focused on meaningful moments rather than surface-level cheerleading.

The cemetery sales experience taught me this—grieving families didn’t need fake enthusiasm, they needed genuine recognition of their loss and specific guidance.
The same principle applies to workplace leadership.

People crave authentic acknowledgment of their actual contributions, not empty motivation.

Fake Cheerleading Is Exhausting Leadership

Dave Brocious
Executive Leader, Sky Point Crane

Dropped: Trying to respond to every customer inquiry personally within minutes.

I used to pride myself on answering my phone immediately and handling every quote request myself – it was killing my ability to focus on strategic growth at Sky Point Crane.

Adopted: Building systems that let my team be responsive without me being the bottleneck.

We implemented CRM automation and trained multiple team members to handle quotes and customer communications with the same urgency I demanded of myself.

The outcome was dramatic – our quote response time actually improved from hours to under 30 minutes, while I gained 15+ hours weekly to focus on major account development.

Revenue grew 40% year-over-year because I could finally spend time on the relationships and deals that truly needed executive attention, rather than micromanaging every customer touchpoint.

The lesson: Being responsive doesn’t mean being personally involved in every interaction. Systems-driven responsiveness scales; personal heroics don’t.

Heroic Availability Killed Growth

Dropped: Micromanaging maintenance requests. I used to want approval on every repair, even $50 plumbing fixes, thinking it showed fiscal responsibility.

Adopted: Empowering my team with pre-approved spending limits up to $300 for urgent repairs.

When a tenant in Newark reported a Sunday evening plumbing emergency, my team dispatched help within an hour without waiting for my approval.

The outcome was dramatic – our average repair response time dropped from 2-3 days to same-day service.

Tenant retention jumped 40% because residents felt prioritized.

Property owners actually preferred this approach since faster repairs prevent small issues from becoming expensive problems.

The key insight: trying to control every decision creates bottlenecks that hurt everyone.

Setting clear boundaries and trusting your team delivers better results than hovering over every choice.

$50 Repairs Don’t Need My Signature

Dropped: Micromanaging every detail of my short-term rental operations.

I used to personally handle every guest message, cleaning schedule, and maintenance request across all seven Detroit properties, thinking I was maintaining quality control.

Adopted: Implementing automated systems while focusing on strategic partnerships.

I invested in property management software that handles 80% of guest communications automatically, and built relationships with local hospitals and corporate housing agencies for steady bookings.

The results were immediate and measurable.

My occupancy rate jumped to 100% for budget rooms under $50/night, and I secured consistent corporate contracts with traveling nurses.

Most importantly, I freed up 15+ hours weekly that I now spend on expanding the business and improving guest experiences rather than answering repetitive check-in questions.

The automation didn’t hurt the personal touch—it improved it.

Guests now get instant responses 24/7, while I can focus on the unique touches that matter, like our custom neon signs and arcade game areas that guests rave about in reviews.

Micromanaging Messages Lost Me Weekends

Dropped: Micromanaging our mobile IV nurses’ daily schedules and appointment approaches.

I used to obsess over every patient interaction detail, thinking tighter control meant better outcomes.

Adopted: Trust-based autonomy with clear outcome metrics.

Our RNs and paramedics now manage their own routes and patient care approaches, while I focus on tracking what matters—patient satisfaction scores and treatment effectiveness.

The results were immediate and measurable.

Our customer retention jumped 34% within six months, and we expanded from Phoenix to five states.

Our team now handles 40% more appointments weekly because they’re not waiting for my approval on routine decisions.

Most importantly, our online reviews improved dramatically—patients started specifically mentioning how confident and empowered our nurses seemed.

When you stop hovering over skilled professionals, they deliver their best work naturally.

Hovering Nurses Hurt Patient Love

I consciously dropped the habit of feeling guilty for not always being “on.”

As a business owner, I used to tie my value to that, but I realized that sustainable leadership means setting boundaries, prioritizing family and personal time and that has made me more present, creative, and strategic for my clients.

At the same time, I adopted a consistent habit of daily touchpoints with clients.

I know this might seem contradictory to what I just said.

But, whether it’s sharing an idea, checking in on media results, or flagging an opportunity. It’s a small gesture that builds trust and reminds them I’m thinking about their business.

It has built stronger ships, better client retention and a more grounded version of leadership.

Drop Guilt, Embrace Daily Wins

Neel Somani
Founder & CEO, Eclipse

One leadership habit I dropped was scheduling back-to-back 15 minute meetings.

I used to do this in an effort for efficiency. What I found is that meetings were often rushed or cut short, and we were better off without the meeting at all.

Now, if I schedule a meeting, it’s still 15 minutes, but they’re not back-to-back, and I’m prepared to run over.

After all, I minimize how many meetings I take to begin with. I’ve found greater depth in my interactions.

A habit I adopted was the principles in the book “Nonviolent Communication”. This book is widely recommended by Satya Nadella at Microsoft.

The book encourages the reader to identify and share what they are feeling, and also to guess how their conversational partner is feeling. I’ve had fewer misunderstandings since then.

Back-to-Back 15s Were Fake Efficiency

Monika Malan
Leadership Roles, She Leads Boldly

After my baby was born, I realized I could no longer rely on sheer grit and long hours to get things done.

I consciously dropped the habit of doing everything myself and started prioritizing more ruthlessly, focusing only on what truly moved the needle.

I also began relying more on others: delegating, trusting, and shifting from being the doer to being the leader.

The outcome? My team grew in confidence and capability, and I became a more strategic, less overwhelmed leader.

Letting go wasn’t easy, but it made me better.

Now, as a coach, I help other emerging female leaders do the same – trade perfectionism for clarity, and hustle for healthy leadership habits that actually move their careers forward.

Motherhood Forced Me to Delegate

From Consensus-Seeking to Clear Decision-Making

I let go of the need to build consensus on every decision.

Instead, I adopted a habit of clarity: stating when I needed input from the team vs. when a decision is final and the rationale behind it.

This built trust, increased transparency, and accelerated delivery timelines while still honoring collaboration.

Consensus Was Slowing Everything Down

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

Leaders on Leadership: Habits Dropped, Habits Adopted

Leaders on Leadership: Habits Dropped, Habits Adopted

Leadership evolves through deliberate shifts, dropping outdated habits for empowering ones amid 2025’s fast-paced demands. 

This HR Spotlight article compiles insights from business leaders and HR professionals on one practice abandoned and one adopted, with direct outcomes. 

Experts share ditching micromanagement for strategic check-ins, ego for empathy, and “always-on” for boundaries, yielding 60% faster development, 18% pay hikes, and doubled engagement. 

By modeling calm, prioritizing sleep, and trusting teams, they foster innovation and retention. 

These changes prove small adjustments amplify impact, turning personal growth into organizational strength in hybrid, AI-driven workplaces.

Read on!

As the entrepreneur of Convert Bank Statement, I’ve experienced tremendous leadership development that directly affected my company’s growth curve and employee productivity.

Abandoned Practice: Micromanaging all development decisions. I used to review all code commits and sign off on minor feature tweaks, believing this ensured quality. This did slow things down and discouraged my talented developers.

Habit Developed: Weekly strategic check-ins with defined outcome expectations. Instead of micromanaging tasks daily, I established formal weekly check-ins regarding project milestones, problems, and resource requirements.

I shifted from “how are you doing this?” to “what do you need to be successful?”

Direct Results: Development rate was boosted by 60% over three months. Team satisfaction ratings increased from 6.2 to 8.7 out of 10.

My developers began coming to me with suggestions I never would have considered, leading to two patent-pending features.

Most importantly, this freed up 15 hours a week for me to focus on strategic partnerships and business development, leading to 40% revenue growth over six months.

Ditch Micromanaging, Unleash 60% Speed

Dan Salganik
Managing Partner, VisualFizz

In recent years, I consciously dropped the habit of immediately saying “yes” to every request and opportunity that came my way.

I realized this scattered my focus and often led to my team feeling overwhelmed by a constant stream of new priorities.

Instead, I intentionally adopted the practice of pausing and evaluating requests against our core objectives, asking “Does this align with our most important goals right now?”

This shift has had a direct and positive outcome: our team’s work is now more focused and impactful.

We’re making more significant progress on key projects, and there’s a greater sense of shared purpose and less burnout.

It has empowered us to dedicate our best energy to what truly matters.

Say No to Chaos, Yes to Focus

One leadership habit I dropped was being the first to speak. Earlier in my career, I believed decisive input from the top was essential.

But I’ve learned that when a CEO fills the space, it limits what others feel empowered to contribute. Today, I speak last—if at all. I’ve found that better ideas surface when people aren’t trying to guess what the boss wants to hear.

What I adopted instead was presence, both physical and relational.

I want our team to know that leadership isn’t detached, and that no one is too senior to listen, learn, or lend a hand.

That approach paid off during Winter Storm Uri, when rapid trust across teams helped us act decisively and protect the communities we serve.

As I say in my book Status Quo Is Not Company Policy, leadership isn’t posture. It’s proximity.

And showing up, even when it’s uncomfortable, has reshaped how I lead and how others lead alongside me.

Speak Last, Unlock Team Brilliance

Alexis Braly James
Founder & Principal Consultant, Construct the Present

As a founder and former educator, I’ve learned that leadership is as much about what you stop doing as what you start.

Habit I dropped: I stopped checking email first thing in the morning. It was pulling me into reaction mode and draining my focus before I had a chance to set an intention. Letting that go has allowed me to start my days with clarity, purpose, and presence.

Habit I adopted: I now take quarterly solo retreats and intentionally block out time for strategic thinking each week. These moments help me stay grounded in our long-term vision, rather than just responding to what’s urgent.

The outcomes:
1. I make decisions that are more aligned with my values and long-term goals.

2. My team has clearer direction and less confusion about priorities.

3. Our client engagements are more intentional, rooted in strategy, not urgency.

4.I experience less stress and more capacity to hold space for deep, meaningful work.

By giving myself space to think, I’ve become a more present leader, a better strategist, and a stronger advocate for the kind of culture we’re helping others build.

Ditch Email Mornings, Ignite Clarity

Pooja A. Patel
Founder & Elder Care Consultant, Pooja Patel OT

In 2023, I made a pivotal shift: I stopped micromanaging and started consciously trusting the people I hire, employees and external partners alike.

Instead of hovering over every task, I now set clear goals, supply resources, and then step back.

The time I once spent on status checks is now invested in business-development conversations, creative planning, and forging new partnerships.

Team members feel genuine ownership, volunteer innovative ideas, and move projects forward without waiting for my sign-off.

Personally, I’m lighter and far more strategic, and the organization enjoys a steadier pipeline of fresh initiatives and quicker decision-making.

Stop Hovering, Spark Innovation Surge

Lori Bruhns
Leadership & Performance Development Coach, Lori Bruhns

As an executive coach and leadership developer I believe a habit to adopt is Get To Know Your People. What does this exactly mean?

An effective and efficient leader is a servant leader. They know that their role as leaders is to develop those they lead.

When a leader knows their people they are able to lead them with ease.

Knowing your people is being aware of who they are both at work and outside of work.

Don’t get me wrong… it’s not imperative to be best friends with those you lead and it is imperative to know them well enough that when something looks off with them you are in tune with it and cultivate a relationship that affords you the opportunity to be curious with them enough to support them where they are at.

What habit to drop… one’s Ego. When leaders drop their ego they lead with intention and purpose vs self-interest.

Ego-lead leadership has potential to create toxic work environments, low morale, and high turn-over within an organization.

Leaders who drop their ego are self-reflective, empathetic, lead with humility and focus on the overall team and organizational success.

Drop Ego, Ignite Servant Leadership

A leadership habit I consciously dropped was relying on intuition alone during high-stakes decisions.

In fast-moving environments, what feels instinctive can be a residue of past bias or urgency.

I replaced that habit with a more biologically grounded one: deliberate pause.
Even a brief pause lowers cortisol, increases heart rate variability, and improves access to prefrontal thinking.

That one shift—just a few seconds of controlled breath before responding—made me more effective in conflict, more trusted in feedback conversations, and better able to model calm under pressure.

The direct outcome? Higher-quality decisions, more resilient teams, and clearer alignment between intention and impact.

Sometimes the smallest change—like a pause—is the most powerful.

Pause Powerfully, Boost Decision Magic

Playing the “always-on, superhero CEO” role was one of the leadership habits that I was happy to leave behind.

I think I used to believe that a great leader was one who was constantly on caffeine and responding to email at midnight. It’s not—spoiler alert: it’s daily password forgetting and burnout calendars.

Rather, I learned about ruthless prioritization and unapologetic boundary-setting.

Sleep is my job description, and I now believe that mental clarity is a superpower (because it is).

The reward? Better creative decision-making, a happy team, and fewer Slack messages composed in a haze at three in the morning.

Leadership, I’ve learned, is doing the right things, with a full battery and perhaps a dance break in between. It’s not doing everything.

Ditch Superhero Mode, Recharge Creativity

One leadership habit I dropped was trying to do it all myself, driven by what I call ‘head trash,’ the subconscious belief that says, ‘If I want it done right, I have to do it myself.’

That mindset kept me overworked and my team underutilized.

The habit I adopted instead was empowering others.

By letting go of control and trusting my team, I created space for bigger growth and less burnout.

As I teach my clients: your business can only grow as fast as you let go.

Let Go Control, Skyrocket Growth

The HR Spotlight team thanks these industry leaders for offering their expertise and experience and sharing these insights.

Do you wish to contribute to the next HR Spotlight article? Or is there an insight or idea you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.