"Glue employees" are team members with high EQ who proactively help others and prioritize the team's success. They are multipliers but often go unnoticed because they aren't traditional "star" performers. Leaders should actively identify them by asking team members who helps them the most and then reward them accordingly.

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Simply hiring superstar "Galacticos" is an ineffective team-building strategy. A successful AI team requires a deliberate mix of three archetypes: visionaries who set direction, rigorous executors who ship product, and social "glue" who maintain team cohesion and morale.

Organizational success depends less on high-profile 'superstars' and more on 'Sherpas'—generous, energetic team players who handle the essential, often invisible, support work. When hiring, actively screen for generosity and positive energy, as these are the people who enable collective achievement.

Don't wait for a promotion or new job opening to grow. Proactively identify other teams' pain points and offer your expertise to help solve them. This proactive helpfulness builds relationships, demonstrates your value across the organization, and organically opens doors to new skills and responsibilities.

Well-meaning professionals often take on "glue work" like improving onboarding or team culture. While valuable, this work often doesn't align with promotion criteria for senior roles. Audit your energy and focus on activities directly tied to the expectations of the role you want.

To encourage participation from everyone, leaders should focus on the 'why' behind an idea (intention) and ask curious questions rather than judging the final output. This levels the playing field by rewarding effort and thoughtfulness over innate talent, making it safe for people to share imperfect ideas.

Leveraging frameworks like Human Design transforms team collaboration. By understanding archetypes (e.g., a fast-executing Manifesting Generator vs. a guiding Projector), team members can anticipate and accommodate different work styles, turning potential points of friction into a complementary partnership.

The well-intentioned question "How can I help?" puts the burden on the receiver to delegate. A far more valuable trait is proactively identifying needs and simply taking action—a "just do" mentality. This demonstrates a deeper understanding of team goals and removes cognitive load from leaders.

To find the true influencer, ask how a low-level problem affects high-level business goals (e.g., company growth). The person who can connect these dots, regardless of their title, holds the real power in the decision-making process. They are the one paid to connect daily actions to strategic objectives.

Stop defining a manager's job by tasks like meetings or feedback. Instead, define it by the goal: getting better outcomes from a group. Your only tools to achieve this are three levers: getting the right People, defining the right Process, and aligning everyone on a clear Purpose.

The employees who discover clever AI shortcuts to be 'lazy' are your biggest innovation assets. Instead of letting them hide their methods, companies should find them, make them heroes, and systematically scale their bottom-up productivity hacks across the organization.