Monday, June 15, 2026

MICROMANAGING - WHEN IT HELPS AND WHEN IT HURTS


Micromanaging is one of those terms that gets thrown around easily, often as criticism, but in practice it sits in a much more nuanced space.

At its core, micromanaging simply means close supervision of work. Whether it is helpful or harmful depends entirely on context, stage of work, and competence level of the team.

On one hand, close supervision is not only useful but sometimes essential. In critical activities such as welding, steel fixing, concrete pouring, high-risk lifting operations, or commissioning works, close monitoring by a competent superior ensures compliance with specifications, safety standards, and quality requirements.

For new engineers or inexperienced workers, structured oversight helps prevent costly mistakes and builds competence. In this sense, what some call “micromanagement” is actually proper technical supervision and quality assurance in action.

On the other hand, when applied indiscriminately especially on experienced teams, micromanaging becomes counterproductive. A senior leader constantly “breathing down the neck” of site staff can undermine confidence, slow decision-making, and create dependency instead of accountability. In such cases, leadership should shift towards periodic oversight, trust-based delegation, and outcome-focused monitoring, with site visits that add value rather than disrupt workflow.

It is also important to recognise that “micromanaging” is sometimes used loosely as an excuse to avoid accountability. Some staff may interpret legitimate supervision or performance checks as interference, especially when they are expected to work independently but have not yet demonstrated consistency or reliability.

The balance lies in understanding that independent work does not mean absence of supervision, and supervision does not mean lack of trust. True teamwork sits in between: clear delegation, defined responsibility, technical guidance when needed, and structured review points.

In healthy project environments, leadership is not about constant control or total freedom, it is about knowing when to step in, when to step back, and when to simply observe results.

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