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What do you need from me?” It’s a simple question, yet many leaders fail to ask it. Instead, they default to offering advice, solutions, or directives—thinking they are helping. But as Edgar Schein explains in his book Helping: How to Offer, Give, and Receive Help, true helping is not about providing answers; it’s about fostering a relationship where the recipient feels empowered rather than obligated. |
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The Problem with Traditional HelpingToo often, helping in the workplace is transactional. A manager sees an employee struggling and jumps in with a fix. The unintended message? I know better than you. This can create dependence, resistance, or even resentment. Schein describes how many helping interactions subtly reinforce power dynamics, making the helper feel superior and the recipient feel diminished.
For leaders, this is a critical blind spot. If your support erodes autonomy, it’s not really helping—it’s controlling.
Shifting from Fixing to FacilitatingSchein highlights the difference between three types of helping:
Leaders who default to expert or doctor-patient help might get short-term compliance but fail to build long-term capability.
The most effective leaders focus on process help—guiding, questioning, and empowering rather than directing.
How to Help Without UnderminingHere’s how leaders can apply Schein’s approach:
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The Helping CultureA leader’s approach to helping shapes organizational culture. When leaders model inquiry, humility, and empowerment, they create environments where people seek help without fear of judgment. This leads to better learning, problem-solving, and collaboration.
Schein reminds us that helping is not about status or control—it’s about partnership. The best help doesn’t make people dependent; it makes them stronger. So, the next time you’re about to “help,” pause. Ask yourself: Am I truly supporting, or am I just solving? The difference is everything.
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