Strategic Detachment: A Trend for Surviving and Thriving

Episode 536 | Author: Emilie Aries

What would change if you stopped taking on everything at your organization?

As a recovering perfectionist and overachiever, is it any wonder the workplace trend called “strategic detachment” intrigues me? I’ve adopted a more balanced approach to work and life in recent years, but I know I—and the high-achieving women who listen to this podcast and read this blog—can always use a refresher in what it means to be our best without being absolutely everything to everyone. 

Let’s take a look at how strategic detachment can be applied in a workplace context and why it’s so important, especially for team leaders. It might just be the trend we need to survive 2026.

Figure out your driving fears

Strategic detachment isn’t about caring less, or checking out, or quiet quitting. Rather, it’sabout becoming more discerning when it comes to where you engage and where you detach (which is different than disengaging altogether). 

If asking you to not do some of the things currently piled onto your plate feels terrifying, consider what might be fueling this over-functioning mentality. All too often, it’s fear. We worry that something bad will come out of relinquishing just a little bit of control—maybe we’re worried we’ll lose our job or be seen as dispensable. Sometimes, it’s the anxiety we know we’ll experience if we aren’t involved in every decision.

All these fears and feelings are valid, but they also deserve closer inspection. How many of the things you’re leaping to agree to and complete promptly are truly urgent? Why is saying “yes” your default?

Take a beat before you take the reins

The knee-jerk tendency to take on a new task is something many of us need to work on. Rather than seeing every request as needing an immediate answer—and that answer being ”yes,” obviously—consider the full time, effort, and urgency implications of the ask. Is it within the scope of your role, your responsibility, or your best use to the team? Does it offer an opportunity to grow, shine, or gain helpful recognition? 

And finally: what are the hidden costs (exhaustion, overwhelm, putting off your well-deserved downtime)? Why is your first impulse to say yes? 

Unintended consequences for leaders

Let’s face it: there’s a little dopamine hit that comes with being the one who does everything. You’re recognized as the go-to, and you’re kindly taking things off others’ plates.

However, especially for team leaders, weighing in on every day-to-day item comes with some pretty hefty drawbacks.

You’re preventing your team from learning and growing

When you over-involve yourself in the daily workings of the front-line team, you prevent your direct reports from thinking and learning for themselves. If you’re always there to present the solution or answer the question, you might be making yourself indispensable, but not in a good way. 

This kind of management creates an environment where, if you quit or had to take a leave tomorrow, your organization would be at a loss. They’d need two or three people to replace you, people who would have to somehow re-source with all the information you were keeping exclusively in your brain. You think you’re being kind in taking on so much, but in doing so, you’re actually creating an organizational dependency.

Leading isn’t about having all the answers all the time. It’s about supporting and coaching the people you lead so they have the opportunities to take accountability and ownership of their own career journeys.

You’re stealing focus from other leadership responsibilities

The other downside to biting off more than you can chew is that all this busywork distracts you from the bigger-picture strategizing. Lost in the weeds of the everyday task list, you neglect the analysis, deep thinking, and innovation you’re uniquely qualified for.

This unintended consequence is relevant to those who aren’t “formal” leaders, too. Even if you don’t have a team to manage, if you’re constantly picking up odd jobs that don’t move the needle on your bigger dreams and goals, you’re missing out on opportunities to level up in your career.

How do you feel about this concept of strategic detachment? If you’re planning to embrace this trend or already practicing its tenets, what does that look like in your day-to-day? Keep the conversation going in our Courage Community on Facebook or join our group on LinkedIn to share your experience with reining in your unbridled overachieving and really honing in on the most impactful part of your work.

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