When most people hear “servant leadership,” they picture someone who lets their team walk all over them. Someone who can’t make hard decisions. Someone who puts everyone else first to the point of losing all authority.
That’s not what servant leadership is. And that misunderstanding is costing a lot of business owners dearly.
What servant leadership actually means
Servant leadership means that your primary job as a leader is to make the people around you more capable, more confident, and more effective. It means you ask “How can I help you do your best work?” before you ask “Why isn’t this done yet?”
It does not mean you’re soft. It does not mean you avoid accountability. In fact, servant leaders tend to hold higher standards — because they’ve invested in the people they’re holding accountable, which earns them the right to demand more.
Why it produces better business results
People work harder for leaders they trust. They stay longer, communicate better, and bring more of themselves to the job. When you lead from a place of genuine service — when your team knows that you care about their growth and not just their output — the business benefits in ways that no management system or incentive structure can replicate.
The best teams I’ve seen built are always built around this principle. The leader serves the team. The team serves the client. The client stays, refers others, and helps the business grow. It’s a compounding return that starts with how you choose to show up every day.
It starts with a question, not a position
You don’t need a title to lead this way. You need a decision. The decision to ask your people what they need before telling them what to do. To remove obstacles before demanding results. To invest in someone’s development before expecting them to perform at a higher level.
That decision, made consistently over time, builds the kind of team and the kind of culture that outlasts any single person — including you.
A challenge for this week
Before your next team meeting or one-on-one, ask each person: “What’s the one thing I could do that would make your work easier or better this week?” Then actually do it. See what happens over the next 30 days.
You might be surprised how much changes when your team realizes you’re serious about serving them.
