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A leader's role is to teach their team, not just provide answers. Even if you can build a solution faster (like an AI agent), doing it for your team deprives them of a critical learning opportunity. The best approach is demonstrating what's possible, then empowering them to build it themselves.

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Prescribing solutions atrophies your team's thinking. It's far more effective to teach them a process for analyzing data and designing solutions themselves. This empowers them to find better answers than you could alone.

Business leaders often assume their teams are independently adopting AI. In reality, employees are hesitant to admit they don't know how to use it effectively and are waiting for formal training and a clear strategy. The responsibility falls on leadership to initiate AI education.

Instead of solving problems brought by their team, effective leaders empower them by shifting ownership. After listening to an issue, the immediate next step is to ask the team to propose a viable solution. This builds their problem-solving and decision-making capabilities.

An outdated leadership model pressures leaders to have all the answers. The superior, long-term approach is to focus on the individual, not the problem, by asking questions that guide them to their own solutions, thereby building their confidence and critical thinking skills.

The most common mistake for new leaders is reverting to their individual contributor mindset, feeling the need to provide answers directly. True leadership success comes from shifting to a facilitator role, enabling the team to find solutions, which provides more long-term value and scales their impact.

There are two types of help-seeking. "Dependent" help just solves the immediate problem. "Autonomous" help focuses on learning how to solve the problem yourself next time. To develop your team's skills and self-reliance, frame requests and provide assistance in a way that prioritizes learning the process, not just getting the answer.

New leaders must transition from being the expert to being a coach. This involves letting your team struggle and even fail. Ask open-ended questions like, "When have you faced something similar before?" to build their problem-solving skills instead of simply giving them the solution.

Many leaders, particularly in technical fields, mistakenly believe their role is to provide all the answers. This approach disempowers teams and creates a bottleneck. Shifting from advising to coaching unlocks a team's problem-solving potential and allows leaders to scale their impact.

While senior leaders are trained to delegate execution, AI is an exception. Direct, hands-on use is non-negotiable for leadership. It demystifies the technology, reveals its counterintuitive flaws, and builds the empathy required to understand team challenges. Leaders who remain hands-off will be unable to guide strategy effectively.

Better products are a byproduct of a better team environment. A leader's primary job is not to work on the product, but to cultivate the people and the system they work in—improving their thinking, decision-making, and collaboration.

Leaders Rob Their Team of Growth By Building Solutions For Them | RiffOn