Manage Overwhelm Before It Spirals into Burnout. Overwhelm is easy to miss and costly to ignore. As a leader, your job is to recognize when capable people are quietly running on empty, burning out, or disengaging—and intervene accordingly. Here’s how. Spot the silence and the strain. Don’t mistake calm for calmness. Overwhelm often hides behind composure or quiet disengagement. Watch for subtle signs: restlessness, missed deadlines, indecision, or working through breaks.

Read online 

Manage email preferences

Harvard Business Review | The Management Tip of the Day
 

Today’s Tip

Manage Overwhelm Before It Spirals into Burnout  

Overwhelm is easy to miss and costly to ignore. As a leader, your job is to recognize when capable people are quietly running on empty, burning out, or disengaging—and intervene accordingly. Here’s how.  

Spot the silence and the strain. Don’t mistake calm for calmness. Overwhelm often hides behind composure or quiet disengagement. Watch for subtle signs: restlessness, missed deadlines, indecision, or working through breaks. Ask open-ended questions to surface what’s really going on. 

Create micro-control in unpredictable times. When everything feels urgent and uncertain, help your team regain focus. Break down big goals, clarify what matters most, and align on what can wait. Small doses of predictability restore a sense of control.  

Recalibrate expectations—starting with your own. Perfectionism and invisible standards fuel overwhelm. Replace assumptions with shared definitions of success. Ask, “What does 80% done look like?” or “Where can we let go?” to lower pressure without lowering ambition.  

Make it safe for people to say “I’m at capacity.” Model and normalize boundary-setting. Shift from “Can you take this on?” to “What would make this manageable?” Publicly support those who speak up.  

Design work for recovery, not endurance. Encourage rhythms of effort and rest. Normalize breaks, time off, and mental detachment as essential to performance—not perks.  

 
Photo of a person working at a laptop with sticky notes all over the place.

Read more in the article

Do You Know If Your Team Is Overwhelmed?

by Alyson Meister and Nele Dael

Read more in the article

Do You Know If Your Team Is Overwhelmed?

by Alyson Meister and Nele Dael

Photo of a person working at a laptop with sticky notes all over the place.
 

ADVERTISEMENT

 

A tablet displaying the HBR subscriptions webpage.

Make HBR part of how you work

Move beyond occasional reads and engage with the ideas shaping modern organizations.

Pick your plan

 

Podcast

Future of Business: Mars CEO on How Business Can Be a Force for Good

A conversation with CPG leader Poul Weihrauch about sustainability and profitability.

Read more
 

CEO Ready: What You Need to Know to Earn the Job—and Keep the Job

CEO Ready: What You Need to Know to Earn the Job—and Keep the Job

by Mark Thompson and Byron Loflin

Learn more

Don’t forget you’re entitled to 20% off your first purchase*

 

*Use promo code HBRORGREG4.
View details here.

 

 

The HBR App:
Get the best in leadership thinking on-the-go.

Download on the App Store.
Get it on Google Play
 
X IconFacebook Icon Instagram Icon

You are receiving this because you registered at hbr.org to receive <