You built a leadership team. You promoted your best people, or hired experienced operators from the outside. They have titles, direct reports, and P&L responsibility.
And yet — it still feels like you’re carrying most of the weight.
This is one of the most frustrating patterns in growing companies. You’ve done the thing everyone says to do: build a team, delegate, get out of the weeds. But the results don’t match the investment. Your leaders execute, but they don’t truly lead. They manage their areas, but they don’t own outcomes the way you do.
Before you conclude that you hired the wrong people, consider this: the problem is almost never the people. It’s the system they’re operating inside.
The Three Modes of Leadership Team Dysfunction
After twenty years working with founders and their teams, I see the same three patterns:
1. The Reporting Team
This is the most common. Your leadership team meets weekly (or biweekly). They go around the table. Each person reports on their area. You ask questions. Maybe you solve a few problems together.
On the surface, this looks like a functioning team. In practice, it’s a collection of individuals reporting to the same person. There’s no shared ownership of company-level outcomes. Each leader optimizes for their function, and the founder holds all the cross-functional tension.
The tell: When two departments have a conflict, it gets escalated to you rather than resolved between the leaders directly.
2. The Consensus Team
This team talks everything to death. Every decision requires everyone’s input. Meetings run long. Decisions get deferred because someone hasn’t weighed in yet. The team values alignment so much that speed suffers.
This often happens when the founder has explicitly tried to empower the team. “I want everyone to have a voice.” The intention is good. The result is that nobody has authority. Consensus becomes a way to avoid individual accountability.
The tell: Decisions take three meetings instead of one. People leave the room unsure about who actually owns the outcome.
3. The Execution Team
This team is efficient. They hit their targets. Rocks get completed. KPIs are tracked.
But they never surface the real issues. The conversations stay operational: what’s on track, what’s behind, what’s next. Nobody talks about the leadership dynamics that are actually constraining the company — because those conversations are uncomfortable, and the team doesn’t have the relational capital or the permission structure to go there.
The tell: Quarterly goals are met, but the company’s foundational challenges (role clarity, decision rights, trust between leaders) never change.
Why This Happens
Leadership team dysfunction is almost always a system problem, not a people problem. Three root causes:
The founder hasn’t actually transferred authority. You’ve given people titles and areas of responsibility. But you haven’t given them the right to make decisions that you might disagree with. Real authority means your VP of Operations can make a call you wouldn’t have made — and it stands. Most founders aren’t willing to do that. Not because they’re controlling, but because the business is their identity, and letting go feels like risk.
The team has no shared ownership model. Each leader owns their function. Nobody owns the company’s performance as a collective. Without shared ownership, there’s no reason for leaders to invest in each other’s success, challenge each other directly, or hold each other accountable. That burden stays with the founder.
The team has never been developed as a team. You developed each person individually — coaching, mentoring, giving feedback on their functional performance. But the team has never been developed. The way they communicate, make decisions together, handle conflict, and hold tension — none of that has been deliberately designed.
What Actually Works
Transfer real authority
Not just tasks. Not just “you handle this.” Real authority means: you make the call, you own the outcome, and I support the decision even if I would have gone differently. This is terrifying for most founders. It’s also non-negotiable for building a team that truly leads.
Create shared accountability
Your leadership team should own a shared set of outcomes that matter more than any individual function. When the VP of Sales and the VP of Operations share accountability for client retention, they stop optimizing for their own metrics and start solving for the company.
Develop the team, not just the individuals
Individual coaching is valuable. But the real leverage is in developing how the team operates together — how they make decisions, surface disagreements, hold each other accountable, and navigate tension without escalating to the founder.
Design the conversations that matter
Most leadership meetings are too operational. The meetings that actually build capacity are the ones where leaders discuss: What are we avoiding? Where is authority unclear? What decisions are we making too slowly? Who is compensating for whom?
These conversations are uncomfortable. That’s exactly why they matter.
The Test
Here’s a simple assessment:
If you removed yourself from your leadership team meetings for a quarter, would the team:
A) Continue to execute at the same level, make the same quality decisions, and hold each other accountable?
B) Gradually slow down, defer decisions, and wait for your return?
If the answer is B, you don’t have a leadership team. You have a group of capable individuals who report to you.
The good news: this is fixable. Not by replacing people, but by redesigning the system they operate in.
Next Step
This is the kind of work we do at Culture to Cash. We help founders move from being the center of every decision to leading an organization that holds itself.
It starts with a diagnostic — mapping where authority actually lives, where leaders are compensating, and what the team needs to develop. From there, we design the dynamics that allow the team to lead without the founder as the constant backstop.
Curious whether this applies to your situation? Check the fit criteria.