What Nobody Tells First-Time Managers
by Feras Asakrieh
Jul 06, 2026
| Career ยท Leadership | ||||||
| By Feras Asakrieh ยท 5 min read ยท Issue #13 | ||||||
| Six weeks into my first management role, one of my team members came to me with a problem. I had the answer in 30 seconds. I gave it to him. He thanked me and walked away. I felt great about it. Then I realized I had just made a terrible mistake. Not because the answer was wrong. Because giving it to him at all was. | ||||||
| That moment taught me something nobody had told me when I got promoted. The skills that made you great at your previous job are the exact skills that will hurt you as a manager. You were rewarded for having answers, moving fast, and solving problems yourself. Now your job is to step back, ask questions, and let other people figure things out. | ||||||
| Here is how to fix it | ||||||
| 1. Stop being the best doer. Start making others better. Your output is no longer measured by what you personally produce. It is measured by what your team produces. Resist the urge to jump in every time someone struggles. Let them work through it. Coach them through it. That discomfort you feel while watching someone figure something out slowly, that is called leadership. | ||||||
| 2. Have the hard conversation early. Every manager who avoids a difficult conversation pays for it later. With interest. If someone is underperforming, say something now. If there is tension on the team, name it now. Waiting does not protect the relationship. It slowly destroys it. Clarity is not harsh. Clarity is a form of respect. | ||||||
| 3. Coach. Do not just delegate. Ask questions instead of giving answers. "What would you do here?" is more powerful than "Here is what to do." One creates dependency. The other builds capability. The best managers I have ever seen ask far more than they tell. | ||||||
| 4. Protect your team's energy, not just yours. Your team absorbs whatever you carry into the room. Your job is to be a filter, not a funnel. Take the pressure that comes from above and translate it into calm, clear direction below. | ||||||
| 5. Build trust before you need it. Start building it on day one. Show up consistently. Do what you say you will do. Be honest even when it is uncomfortable. Trust is not given because of your title. It is earned by your behavior. Every single day. | ||||||
| The real job begins the day you stop trying to be the best person in the room and start becoming the person who makes everyone else better. | ||||||
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