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Burnout is often seen as a personal failure to manage stress, but the truth is different. Most burnout comes from how work is designed, l...
8 Leadership Practices That Reduce Team Burnout and Boost Engagement
May 15 -
2 minutes, 36 seconds
What Causes Team Burnout and How Leaders Can Help
Burnout is often seen as a personal failure to manage stress, but the truth is different. Most burnout comes from how work is designed, led, and experienced every day. Leaders shape the conditions that affect team vitality through expectations, clarity, recognition, and psychological safety. While personal stress management matters, it cannot fix chronic overload, poor communication, or cultures that reward exhaustion. Preventing burnout requires a systemic approach, and leaders are uniquely positioned to influence team dynamics, workflows, and workplace norms.
Why Leaders Matter So Much for Burnout Prevention
Research shows that leaders account for at least 70% of the difference in team engagement. A survey of 3,400 people across 10 countries by The Workforce Institute at UKG found that a manager’s impact on mental health (69%) was greater than a doctor’s (51%) or therapist’s (40%), and equal to a spouse or partner. Work stress negatively affected home life (71%), well-being (64%), and relationships (62%). Employees experiencing burnout rate manager support 33 points lower than those who are not burned out.
The Leadership Training Gap
Leaders are often promoted based on business results, expertise, or reputation, not on their ability to lead well. Leadership training rarely covers team formation, workflow design, or the psychology of motivation, engagement, resilience, and stress awareness. Yet leadership style directly affects burnout, job satisfaction, and retention. Behaviors like providing clarity, encouraging development, offering guidance, and nurturing social support reduce work stressors. Leaders need development and ongoing support to build these skills.
8 Leadership Practices That Decrease Burnout
In a multi-site study, physicians who rated their supervisor’s performance in the top third had 48% lower risk of burnout, 66% lower intent to leave within two years, and nearly 6 times greater odds of high professional fulfillment. Mayo Clinic analyzed almost 40,000 employee surveys and found burnout was much higher among those who rated their immediate supervisor unfavorably on these eight qualities:
- Treats me with dignity and respect
- Encourages me to develop my talents and skills
- Recognizes me for a job well done
- Provides helpful feedback and coaching on my performance
- Encourages me to suggest ideas for improvement
- Holds career development conversations with me
- Empowers me to do my job
- Keeps me informed about changes taking place
For each 1-point increase in the composite leadership score, the odds of burnout decreased by 7%, and satisfaction with the organization increased by 11%. This held true even after adjusting for gender, age, length of employment, and job category. Researchers concluded that the single biggest driver of professional satisfaction was the behavior of each person’s immediate supervisor—nothing else came close.
How to Start Reducing Burnout Today
These eight practices are low-hanging fruit for leaders. You don’t need a complete cultural overhaul to make a difference—just focus on these areas. Burnout prevention is not about eliminating hard work or lowering standards. People can thrive under high stress when they feel supported, valued, connected to purpose, and confident that work is sustainable over time. Leaders who intentionally design healthier ways of working will not only slow burnout but also build stronger, more adaptive, and more committed teams.
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