If a team isn’t performing, the answer isn’t just more meetings, new hires, or another restructuring. The answer starts with leadership. Executive coaching equips leaders to identify the unseen dynamics that are holding their teams back—and gives them the tools to create trust, clarity, and alignment at every level of the organization.
(PRUnderground) April 22nd, 2025
Most businesses don’t fail because of bad ideas or weak strategies. They fail because their teams can’t execute. A dysfunctional team will undercut even the best plans—causing delays, miscommunication, disengagement, and ultimately, stagnation.
One of the biggest mistakes leaders make is assuming that team dysfunction is just an HR issue. It’s not. It’s a business problem, and an expensive one at that. Research from Gallup estimates that disengaged employees cost businesses between $450 billion and $550 billion per year in lost productivity. That number skyrockets when dysfunction spreads across leadership teams, creating silos, misalignment, and constant roadblocks to progress.
If your company isn’t scaling the way it should, it’s time to stop looking outward and start looking at how your team is working together—or, more importantly, how they aren’t.
How Dysfunction Creeps into Even the Best Teams
Dysfunctional teams don’t always look like chaos. Sometimes, they look like politeness that masks avoidance. A lack of tension doesn’t mean a team is functioning well—it often means people don’t feel safe enough to challenge ideas, provide feedback, or speak up.
Here’s what dysfunction actually looks like in high-performing teams:
- Unspoken tension – Team members say what they think the leader wants to hear instead of what they really mean.
- Silos and misalignment – Departments operate like separate entities, making it harder to collaborate and innovate.
- Low trust – People hesitate to ask for help, admit mistakes, or take risks.
- Accountability gaps – When problems arise, the default response is finger-pointing instead of problem-solving.
- Burnout cycles – High-performers pick up the slack for dysfunctional team dynamics, leading to resentment and turnover.
These issues rarely fix themselves. Left unaddressed, dysfunction compounds, causing missed opportunities, stalled initiatives, and—most critically—talent loss.
The Leadership Factor: Why Teams Follow Their Leaders
A team can’t outgrow its leadership. If a team is dysfunctional, the real question isn’t “Why aren’t they performing?”—it’s “What are they missing from leadership?”
This isn’t about blame. It’s about understanding how leadership directly shapes team behavior. When teams don’t trust each other, it’s often because they don’t feel psychologically safe. When teams struggle with accountability, it’s often because expectations aren’t clear. When teams operate in silos, it’s often because leaders haven’t reinforced alignment.
Executive coaching works because it doesn’t just focus on what a leader is doing—it focuses on how they’re showing up and what impact that has on their teams.
What Leaders Can Do to Fix Dysfunction
If you’re seeing signs of dysfunction in your team, don’t wait for it to resolve itself. Here’s where to start:
- Create Psychological Safety – People need to feel safe enough to be honest, challenge ideas, and admit mistakes without fear of retribution. If you’re not getting real feedback from your team, that’s a red flag.
- Align on a Shared Vision – Leaders often assume their team is on the same page when, in reality, everyone is working toward different interpretations of success. Regularly reinforce priorities and make sure alignment is part of the culture, not just an expectation.
- Set Clear Expectations – Dysfunction thrives in ambiguity. Every person on the team should know exactly what’s expected of them, what success looks like, and how they contribute to the bigger picture.
- Lead with Accountability – If your team isn’t taking ownership, look at where accountability is breaking down. Strong leaders don’t just hold others accountable—they model it in how they communicate, follow through, and own their decisions.
Dysfunction Is a Leadership Challenge—Not a Team Problem
If a team isn’t performing, the answer isn’t just more meetings, new hires, or another restructuring. The answer starts with leadership. Executive coaching equips leaders to identify the unseen dynamics that are holding their teams back—and gives them the tools to create trust, clarity, and alignment at every level of the organization.
Great teams don’t happen by accident. They happen when leaders create the conditions for people to thrive. If your business isn’t growing the way it should, the real question is: What’s happening inside your team?
Want to know how executive coaching can help your team move past dysfunction and reach its full potential? Contact Arden Coaching today.
About Arden Coaching
Arden Coaching is a nationally recognized provider of executive coaching and leadership development solutions. With over 18 years of industry expertise, Arden partners with top organizations to deliver personalized, results-oriented coaching programs. Our team of over 35 coaches provides in-person and virtual services, ensuring exceptional support nationwide.
As a certified women-owned business, Arden is committed to fostering diversity, equity, and inclusion while upholding core values of integrity, service, and excellence. Our proven methodologies empower leaders to achieve transformative growth and measurable results.
To learn more, visit https://ardencoaching.com/ or call 646.374.2370.
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Original Press Release.