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    Home»Business»Why ’empowerment’ is a management lie
    Business 4 Mins Read

    Why ’empowerment’ is a management lie

    Business 4 Mins Read
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    We need to have a blunt conversation about the word empowerment.

    In the majority of companies, the lie behind the word “empowerment” becomes apparent in familiar ways: job descriptions that promise autonomy, leaders who proudly talk about their empowered  teams, and meetings that end with “you’ve got this.” Reality though strips away the veneer of this lie: that same work still runs through a gauntlet of approvals, sign-offs, and second-guessing. The language suggests freedom. The system reinforces control.

    The result is not empowerment. It is dependence with better branding.

    In our work at Amazon helping Fortune 500 leaders understand how to dismantle their rigid bureaucracies, and previously driving large scale change at companies like DHL and McDonald’s, we see the same patterns. Organizations say they want people to act like owners. They encourage initiative and accountability. But when they maintain top-down control over decisions, people adjust their behavior accordingly. They stop acting like owners and start acting more like renters.

    Here is what we mean. Think about how you treat a rental car. You don’t worry about long-term maintenance. You don’t take extra care beyond what is required. You use it, then move on. That’s how people behave at work when they do not feel true ownership. When every meaningful decision still needs approval, even high performers begin to operate within the limits of the system instead of pushing beyond it. They wait. They hedge. They protect themselves.

    Over time, this creates an invisible friction. Work slows down. Initiative fades. Curiosity narrows. Leaders become the bottleneck without realizing it, spending their time reviewing, approving, and correcting work that should never have needed their involvement.

    The issue is not a lack of motivation or talent. It is the system itself. Most organizations were designed for control, not ownership. That made sense in a world where work needed to be standardized and predictable. But in a world where speed and adaptability matter more than ever, those same structures quietly undermine performance.

    Leaders try to compensate with words and direction. They say be more proactive. They say take initiative. They say act like an owner. But people cannot act like owners if the system is rigged against allowing them to own anything.

    True ownership is a condition you must actively create. At its simplest, ownership is responsibility paired with authorship, the ability to decide how the work gets done. Most organizations give people responsibility. The outcome is theirs to deliver. But they hold onto the authorship of the decision-making path, of how to deliver the outcome. That gap is where ownership breaks down.

    Leaders who create real ownership operate as system architects rather than micromanagers, designing environments where better decisions happen without them. This requires providing clarity over giving instructions, defining the outcomes, and providing context on what success looks like, while trusting people to navigate the path to get there. It also means favoring guardrails over approvals, replacing rigid checkpoints with clear boundaries within which teams move faster and with greater confidence without requiring explicit decisions and approvals. It entails letting people make reversible decisions with roughly 70% of the information they wish they had.  This drives speed and low-stakes learning. When leaders insert themselves into these low-risk choices, they slow the organization down and signal a lack of trust.

    If your team still needs your approval to move forward on most decisions, they don’t have true ownership. They are waiting. And if they are waiting, you are the bottleneck.

    Try a simple thing: For the next 48 hours, do not make a single decision your team could reasonably make themselves. You will feel the instinct to step in. That is the habit of control. But if you hold the line, something else happens: your team starts stepping up. They make decisions. They take responsibility. They move faster.

    That is not “empowerment.” That is ownership.



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