As 2026 unfolds, organizations are investing heavily in AI: new tools, new workflows, new promises of efficiency.
But here's the uncomfortable truth: **if your organizational performance is breaking down, no amount of AI will fix it.**
And right now, things are breaking in the middle.
The Squeeze No One Talks About
Senior leaders often measure engagement at the employee level. That's understandable—but it's also a strategic blind spot.
The real pressure point? **Middle managers.**
Today's managers are caught in a perfect storm:
- Expected to drive performance from below
- Absorbing strategic pressure from above
- Tasked with coaching, developing, and retaining teams
- Often without the training, clarity, or support to do any of it well
This isn't a "manager problem." It's a leadership design problem.
And when managers aren't cared for, the outcome is predictable: they disengage. They get overwhelmed. Many are quietly burning out.
> *"Great leaders don't just share the vision. They share the fires they're fighting."*
When managers burn out, everything downstream breaks. Team morale dips. Retention suffers. Performance stalls.
The Data Doesn't Lie
A recent Gallup report found that **managers report higher levels of burnout than the people they lead**. And burnout is contagious.
When managers are burned out, their teams are:
- **88% more likely** to be watching for—or actively seeking—a new job
- **67% less likely** to report excellent mental health
- **3.5x more likely** to say their job is harming their mental health
- Missing **4.5 more days** on average due to poor mental health
What's driving this? It's not individual weakness. It's system failure:
- Unmanageable workloads
- Unclear role expectations
- Unreasonable time pressure
- Poor communication from senior leadership
- Perceived unfair treatment
These aren't HR issues. They're strategy issues. And they point directly back to the top.
If You Want Better Managers, Lead Them Better
Most organizations expect managers to be great coaches—without ever showing them how. Then they wonder why engagement stalls.
Here's the reframe: **If you want stronger teams, build stronger managers.** And that starts with senior leaders treating manager development as a top-tier priority.
Four Shifts That Actually Move the Needle
1. Teach managers how to lead real conversations
Most managers default to task updates because that's all they've ever been shown. Senior leaders must model—and teach—how to have honest, two-way conversations that build trust, not just track to-dos. Help them see their role as coach, not taskmaster.
2. Stop saving feedback for performance reviews
Delayed feedback is useless feedback. Managers need real-time course correction from *their* leaders. When senior leaders model consistent, constructive feedback, it creates clarity and removes guesswork for everyone downstream.
3. Develop strengths, not just fix weaknesses
Great managers lead from their strengths. Yet too many development programs focus exclusively on gap-closing. Help managers identify what they do best—and turn those strengths into repeatable leadership habits.
4. Design the manager experience intentionally
Most companies obsess over the employee experience and treat the manager experience as an afterthought. We have this backward. How your managers feel about their job shapes how every employee feels about theirs. From onboarding to exit, that journey needs to be deliberate.
If middle managers are the engine of your culture, then senior leaders are the maintenance crew.
Right now, too many organizations are running that engine into the ground—then wondering why performance won't accelerate, no matter how much AI they add.
**To truly fix engagement across your enterprise, don't just empower your employees. Equip the people responsible for leading them every single day.**
Because strategy doesn't execute itself. People do. And people need leaders who lead *them*—not just the vision.
*If this resonated, forward it to a leader who needs to hear it. And if you're a senior leader reading this: what's one thing you could do this week to better support your managers? Reply and let me know. I read every response.*
*— [Your Name]*
P.S. Next week: How to spot "quiet burning out" before it costs you your best managers.
