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    Home»Business»The Big Freeze: Why teams seize up under pressure (and how to avoid it)
    Business 6 Mins Read

    The Big Freeze: Why teams seize up under pressure (and how to avoid it)

    Business 6 Mins Read
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    Across organizations, leaders are asking teams to move faster, adapt sooner, and make decisions with less certainty. Yet many are seeing the opposite: hesitation, silence, delayed decisions, and cautious compliance. This is the Big Freeze, a pattern that emerges when pressure rises faster than the conditions that people need to act with confidence.

    The Big Freeze is an environment problem

    When teams stop acting, it’s easy to blame mindset.

    Leaders may assume people are disengaged, resistant, or unwilling to step up. More often, the team is responding rationally to the environment around them.

    The Big Freeze happens when action feels more expensive than standing still.

    People stop showing initiative. They wait for permission. They avoid raising concerns. They comply on the surface while protecting themselves from blame. They reduce their exposure just when the organization needs them to notice problems early and act on what they see.

    Many organizations are creating the perfect conditions for the freeze: restructures, cost pressure, shifting customer expectations, AI adoption, market uncertainty, and constant changes in direction. All of this is causing teams to feel more threatened and less empowered to navigate change well.

    And when people are already stretched, more pressure rarely creates better action; it leads to self-protection instead.

    Why pressure makes teams smaller

    Under pressure, teams don’t always become bolder. Often, they become smaller.

    They narrow their focus to what feels safest. They do the visible work. They avoid the difficult conversation. They ask for endless information before making a single decision. They wait to see what the most senior person does and emulate them.

    The result is a strange organizational paradox: more urgency, less movement.

    There may be more meetings, more steering groups, more status updates, and more action trackers. But underneath the activity, people are hesitating. Decisions move upwards. Problems surface late. Teams spend more energy managing exposure than creating progress.

    Gallup’s 2026 State of the Global Workplace report found that global employee engagement fell to 20% in 2025, its lowest level since 2020, with low engagement costing the global economy an estimated $10 trillion in lost productivity. This is the human backdrop against which many leaders are asking teams to move faster, absorb more change, and act with greater confidence.

    Acting well requires attention. It also requires enough confidence to make a move before every variable is known. And when people lack that confidence, their safest option is often to pause.

    The symptoms leaders should watch for

    Most leaders don’t intend to freeze their teams. They inadvertently do so through small signals that teach people to stay careful.

    They ask for ideas, then reward only the “good” ones. They say “move fast,” then punish mistakes. They tell teams to take ownership, then override decisions when the answer doesn’t match their preference. They ask for honesty, then become defensive when the truth is uncomfortable.

    Over time, people learn the real rules:

    Don’t bring bad news too early. Don’t challenge the direction unless you can prove you’re right. Don’t make a decision if someone more senior might disagree later. Don’t expose the gap between the slide deck and the reality on the ground.

    This is why leaders need to stop treating inaction as a motivation problem and start treating it as an environment problem.

    3 ways to move teams out of the Big Freeze

    Moving a team out of the Big Freeze can start with small intentional and practical leadership moves.

    1. Start with curiosity, not judgement

    Teams often hesitate when it comes to taking action because something hasn’t been named out loud yet.

    It might be a lack of confidence, a hidden trade-off, an unrealistic deadline, a political tension, or a decision that still feels unsafe. If leaders rush straight to “we need more ownership,” they can miss the real blocker.

    Instead of asking, “Why aren’t they moving?”, leaders can ask:

    • What makes action feel hard right now?
    • What are people worried will happen if they move?
    • Where do they feel unclear, exposed or stuck?
    • What would make the next step feel safer or simpler?

    These questions shift the conversation from blame to diagnosis.

    A team that looks unmotivated may be overloaded. A manager who seems indecisive may be navigating conflicting instructions. A group that keeps asking for more data may be trying to avoid a decision they don’t feel authorized to make.

    Curiosity doesn’t mean endless discussion. It means staying with the problem long enough to understand what’s actually blocking action.

    2. Build courage through smaller action

    When teams are frozen, “be bold” or “take more initiative” is rarely useful advice.

    The next move often feels too big, too visible, or too risky to get wrong. So instead of asking for more ownership in vague terms, leaders need to reduce the size of the move.

    What can be decided this week? What can be tested with one customer, one team or one process? What would create useful evidence without turning the whole thing into a high-stakes performance?

    Google’s Project Aristotle found that effective teams need psychological safety, but also structure and clarity. What that tells us is that people don’t act because they’ve been told to be brave. They act when they understand the direction, the boundaries and the next decision they’re trusted to make.

    Leaders can ask:

    • What’s the smallest useful step from here?
    • What decision can this team make without escalating?
    • What would make this safe enough to try?
    • What would we need to learn before going bigger?

    This moves the team from abstract pressure to concrete action.

    When the next move is small enough to survive, people stop waiting for perfect certainty and start rebuilding confidence through action.

    3. Celebrate what the team learned

    Teams freeze when every move feels like a verdict on their ability.

    If the only outcomes worth discussing are wins, people become careful. They hide the messy middle. They avoid sharing what went wrong, what surprised them or what still feels uncertain.

    Celebration, in this sense, means making learning visible.

    It doesn’t mean pretending everything worked. It means helping the team process experience so the next move feels easier, wiser, and less loaded.

    Leaders can ask:

    • What did we learn?
    • What surprised us?
    • What should we repeat?
    • What should we stop?
    • What do we know now that we didn’t know 30 days ago?

    This helps teams build confidence through collective proof and incrementally moves them away from the Big Freeze.

    When action feels survivable, teams move again

    The Big Freeze doesn’t mean teams lack ambition. It usually means the environment has made action feel unsafe, unclear, or too costly.

    When leaders respond with more pressure, they often deepen the freeze. When they respond with curiosity, smaller moves and visible learning, they make action feel survivable again.

    That’s the real leadership shift. The goal isn’t to push people harder; it’s to create the conditions where people can notice what matters, take the next useful step, and learn from what happens. That’s when teams stop waiting for permission and start moving when it matters most.



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