How well do you value your leadership team?

Charles Stone

How well do you value your leadership team?iStock

Teams that don't feel valued often simply go through the motions, which dampens motivation and decreases productivity. Great leaders pay keen attention to how valued their teams feel. Poor leaders seldom even think about it. Evaluate your leadership against these five behaviors great leaders show.

1. Great leaders regularly tell and show their team members that they value them.

Thank your team members often. Tell them how valuable their contributions are even though their jobs may not be viewed as important as other ones. Use tangible expressions of appreciation.

Discover what uniquely gives them a sense of value and communicate thanks in that way. The highest performing teams receive a ratio of six positive comments to one negative one.

However, praise should focus on effort such as hard work rather than attributes such as intelligence. Praise for effort keeps your team open to grow whereas praise for attributes can sometimes cause the person to become static in order to protect those attributes.

2. Great leaders help their team members make progress in their work.

Support your team members so that they feel they are making headway. In one study, over 600 managers recorded at the end of each day the experiences that satisfied them the most. Progress on their goals and tasks satisfied the most, even more than receiving praise or recognition from their boss.

3. Great leaders teach their teams about healthy and unhealthy comparison.

Most people tend to naturally compare their efforts against others. Often such comparison leads to either pride or diminishes that person's sense of accomplishment.

Talk to your team members about the downsides of comparison and help them learn to recognize it when they begin to compare themselves with others. Teach that good comparison is comparing their personal efforts against their own efforts and goals.

4. Great leaders provide their new team members with a thorough orientation process.

Whether your teams are paid or volunteer, a good orientation process will help new team members feel valued, right from the get-go and help create a sense from them that you really care.

5. Great leaders value the insight and input from their teams.

Help your team realize that we naturally default to believing others see things as we ourselves do. It's called the false consensus effect.

Foster a healthy, open atmosphere so that everybody on the team feels free to share his or her views. Foster an atmosphere that not only gives everyone a chance to share his opinions, but welcomes his opinions as well.

When you do, everybody can get a boost of the neurotransmitter, oxytocin, which helps build trust.


Charles Stone coaches and equips pastors and teams to effectively navigate the unique challenges ministry brings. By blending biblical principles with cutting-edge brain-based practices he helps them enhance their leadership abilities, elevate their preaching/ teaching skills, and prioritize self-care. A pastor for over 42 years, he has served as a lead pastor, associate pastor, and church planter. He published seven books, and over 300 of his articles have appeared on various Christian leadership websites. He holds four earned academic degrees, including a D.Min. and a Ph.D.

Learn More »

More on Psychology and the Brain


Don't miss any of this great content! Sign up for our twice-weekly emails:

Free eBook

Success Unlocked: The Transformative Power of Questions

This isn’t just another leadership book—it’s your invitation to discover how Christ-centered questions can transform the way you lead and live. Packed with real stories and timeless wisdom, it shows you how to grow your influence, deepen your faith, and lead with the same life-changing impact Jesus did.

Download Now


Our Writers

Scott Couchenour has a combined 30 years of experience in ministry, business and entrepreneurship. He …
Bob Tiede helps leaders everywhere move from telling to asking. He has been on the …
Andy Zawacki, a former pastor and teacher has a passion for developing leaders who will …

Already a member? Sign in below.

  or register now

Forgot your password?

b'S1-NEW'