
As an executive, you’ve probably felt this before:
“Why am I the only one following up on deadlines?”
“Why do I have to chase people to finish what they promised?”
“Why does accountability seem to stop at my office door?”
You’re not imagining it. As your company grows, accountability gaps widen. What used to feel tight-knit and accountable suddenly feels loose, with missed deadlines, dropped balls, and a creeping sense of mediocrity settling in.
And when you are the one constantly circling back, following up, and holding people accountable, it can be exhausting. Not to mention, it’s a terrible use of your time as a leader.
The Accountability Drift: How It Starts
In a smaller business, accountability tends to happen naturally. You know everyone by name. Expectations are clear. There’s little room for hiding.
But as you grow, a few things happen:
Without intentional focus, accountability doesn’t just weaken, it disappears.
Research by Partners In Leadership found that 82% of managers admit they have “limited to no ability” to hold others accountable successfully. If your middle managers are dodging tough conversations, you’re feeling the effects at the top.
The Hidden Cost of Poor Accountability
Lack of accountability isn’t just annoying, it’s expensive.
Here’s what it’s costing your company:
Worse yet, this breeds culture drift, that dangerous shift from a driven, ownership-minded culture to one where excuses fly and mediocrity is tolerated.
The Executive Trap: Becoming the Enforcer
You’ve likely fallen into the same trap as many executives: You see things slipping, so you step in. You start checking up, following through, and getting directly involved.
In the short term, it works. Things get back on track.
But in the long term, you’ve just signaled to your team:
“Accountability doesn’t happen until the executive gets involved.”
This creates an unhealthy cycle:
If you want to build a scalable, healthy organization, you need to fix accountability at the root, not just keep putting out fires.
How to Build a True Culture of Accountability
1. Get Crystal Clear on Expectations
Accountability starts with clarity. If your people don’t know exactly what success looks like, you can’t expect them to deliver on it.
Vague expectations breed vague performance.
2. Hold Managers Accountable First
Most accountability breakdowns happen in middle management. If managers don’t follow up, don’t coach, or avoid tough conversations, you end up doing their job for them.
Your job as an executive is to coach your managers to manage:
If your managers aren’t delivering accountability downstream, hold them accountable upstream.
3. Create a Feedback-Rich Environment
In many growing companies, feedback becomes infrequent and sugar-coated. People get uncomfortable with direct feedback, especially across teams.
Reverse this trend by making real-time feedback the norm:
Accountability thrives in environments where feedback flows freely, not just during performance reviews.
4. Tie Accountability to the Mission
One reason accountability feels “forced” is that people don’t see how their daily actions connect to something bigger.
Reinforce mission-driven accountability:
When people understand the purpose behind their work, they hold themselves to higher standards.
5. Build Accountability into Systems, Not Just Conversations
Finally, don’t rely on willpower or charisma to enforce accountability. Build it into your systems and processes:
Systems create consistency. Conversations reinforce expectations. Together, they build a self-correcting culture.
The Outcome: You Lead, They Own
When accountability is restored across your leadership team and frontline managers, you stop being the only one pushing performance forward.
– You spend less time chasing and more time leading.
– Managers coach and correct in real time.
– Teams take ownership of results without constant nudging.
– Your company becomes healthier, faster-moving, and more engaged.
A company with strong accountability doesn’t require constant executive intervention; it thrives on shared ownership and mutual trust.
Ready to Step Out of the Accountability Chasing Game?
Here’s your next step:
· Take 10 minutes and jot down one area where you’re currently chasing accountability.
· Ask yourself, is this an expectation issue, a manager issue, or a system issue?
· Commit to a leadership conversation this week to address it at the right level.
If you’re tired of being the “accountability cop” and want a leadership team that drives performance without your constant involvement, I’d love to help.
Let’s have a conversation, schedule a free strategy call, and we’ll identify where accountability is breaking down and how to build it back stronger.
Leadership should feel focused, not like a constant game of follow-up.
Let’s fix it, together.