If You’re Always the Fixer, You’re Building a Team That Can’t Fix

When I first became a manager, my teammates would ask for help.

And I’d say yes, by taking the work.

I kept a running list of items that “needed to get done,” and after the team left for the day, I’d grind through them. At first it felt responsible. efficient, even. My team said, “If you write it down, I know it will get done.” That felt good.

Eventually that list pushed deep into the evening, every night.

It was untenable… unless I wanted my entire life to be work.

Looking back, I can see the belief that drove it:

If I can do a task quicker, it’s more efficient if I do it.

That belief is appealing. It’s also expensive.

The efficiency trap

There are two huge issues with this approach.

1) You stifle the team.
Growth doesn’t happen when work is easy. Growth happens when someone struggles through a hard task, gets coached, makes mistakes, and learns how to recover.

When I “saved” my team from hard work, I wasn’t helping them.

I was protecting them from the very experiences that would make them stronger.

2) You don’t develop capability, so the same work comes back to you.
When the team encountered that problem again, no one was closer to solving it independently.

It returned to the only person who had done it before: me.

That’s how managers become the permanent escalation path.

And then they wonder why they can’t get out of the weeds.

The better tradeoff: slower now, faster later

Mentoring someone through a challenging task is almost always slower in the moment.

But it’s an investment that compounds:

  • Broader skills across the team
  • More owners who can execute without you
  • Fewer repeat escalations
  • Less “hero work” after hours
  • A healthier, more resilient org

A mantra I live by: Leaders should encourage people to work at the edge of their comfort zone.

That’s where real growth happens.

Your job isn’t to be the fastest pair of hands.

Your job is to grow more hands that can handle the work without you.

The mindset shift

Stop treating mentoring like an interruption.

Treat it like what it actually is: A down payment on future autonomy.

Every time you “just handle it,” you buy speed today by selling your team’s capability tomorrow.