Managers are supposed to lead and supervise, but incessantly overanalysing and nitpicking every small move can turn even simple tasks into nerve-wracking moments. When management zooms in on every decision, it turns into classic micromanaging. This can make the employees feel like they are walking on eggshells at work, spiking anxiety even over very basic assignments when you have your boss hovering over you.
Micromanaging is common in the workplace, especially when a manager is a stickler for details or a perfectionist. On the manager’s side, they are ensuring that things are in order, from ensuring deadlines are met to maintaining quality standards in work.
But controlling every step, constantly checking in, may put immense stress on employees, as small missteps may be blown out of proportion, causing the employees to second-guess everything. So much stress is bound to affect health in the long run.
HT Lifestyle reached out to experts to understand how micromanaging affects employees adversely, deteriorating their health. Along with this, let’s also see if leaders can guide effectively without constantly hovering.
How does micromanaging hurt mental health?
Micromanagement may work in the beginning with the manager ‘supervising’ every last detail, but this constant scrutiny embeds fear among employees. Priyanshi Nautiyal, consultant psychologist at 1to1help, told HT Lifestyle that the atmosphere itself of the workplace changes, becoming one of mistrust.
She said, “Micromanagement doesn’t improve performance, it paralyses it. The relentless criticism can erode the self-esteem of the subordinates, fueling symptoms of anxiety and depression. This fear-based work culture, often disguised as supervision, quickly turns into tyranny, which slows down the cognitive processes of the subordinates as they are constantly stricken with the fear of making the ‘wrong’ choice.”
In addition to this, micromanagement also stifles original thinking. As per the psychologist, it ‘subdues critical thinking,’ making employees feel that putting in effort is pointless since the manager will anyway override it. Then the job starts to feel meaningless. According to Priyanshi, the job becomes ‘robotic.’ Since mental health issues like burnout rise, it eventually also gives way to physical ailments.
How can managers effectively lead and not micromanage?
Micromanagement for leaders may feel like the best option to keep things running smoothly, but it can backfire. It decreases trust in the team, leaves no room for creativity and pushes employees towards burnout, getting demotivated.
Samira Gupta, senior executive presence and leadership communication coach, told us that so much micromanagement causes too much dependency as well. She said, “For leaders, the constant oversight steals time and energy from strategic priorities. Over time, it creates dependency, burnout, and attrition.” In other words, employees become too reliant on the manager, which also slows the workflow because of reduced independent thinking.
Here are some of the practical strategies she shared for leaders to reduce tendencies of micromanagement:
1. Lead by the lighthouse principle: Set the direction, clarify the end goal, and let your team chart the course. Clear objectives with measurable outcomes empower people to innovate while staying aligned.
2. Replace hovering with honest check-ins: Agree on milestone-based updates rather than constant interruptions. This creates space for deep work and ensures leaders step in only when needed.
3. Trust as a performance multiplier: Equip your team with the right tools, authority, and support, then step back. Trust accelerates ownership, decision-making, and problem-solving far more than constant supervision ever could.
Better designs for a calmer workplace
While micromanaging is a leadership style, from a broader perspective, this controlling behaviour can also come from a poorly designed workspace. Sounds surprising? Ill-designed environments make people feel out of sync and act out. And since they can’t fix it, they end up controlling what they can, which is often the people in the team.
Aryaman Vir, founder and CEO of Morpho Dimensions, told us that the right office design, especially the colours, affects mood. He cited research from 2018, where the colour schemes in the workplace influence mood significantly.
Aryaman said, “The right palette can create energy, inspire innovation, and foster focus. The wrong one can do quite the opposite, dulling creativity, draining motivation, or even increasing stress.”
Here are some of the further colour-related design tips he shared for the workplace:
- Blues and greens for calming effects: Cool colours, particularly blue and green, have been historically shown to encourage productivity and a state of calm. Blue environments can increase productivity, and generally, green can improve job satisfaction and cognitive clarity, which is beneficial in high-demand jobs.
- Vibrant colours for high energy: Vibrant tones like yellow can infuse a space with optimism and are especially effective in environments that thrive on ideas and brainstorming. Red, used with intention, can bring urgency and drive usefulness in high-intensity zones.
- Avoid stark white or grey: Stark white or uninspired grey spaces, though once seen as neutral, often leave occupants feeling disengaged and uninspired.
So in conclusion, micromanagement needs to be toned down at the workplace to build trust, foster autonomy, and improve mental health. Productivity comes from supporting people, not controlling them.