A Successful Leader Is Not a Chief Problem Solver

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Quick answer: Embrace Growth Mindset Leadership to inspire innovation and adaptability in today’s fast-paced business environment.

By Andreas Petterson, founder of Leaders ADAPT and a former Canon executive who has built and scaled multiple companies.

As CEOs, it’s common to feel like the Chief Problem Solver. We see an issue, a customer complaint, technical glitch, or team conflict, and think, “Well, it’s just easier if I fix this myself.” While solving problems may be faster or seem most effective in the moment, the “Chief Problem Solver” approach inevitably leads to burnout, dependency, and a stunted organization.

So, how can you stop being the “Chief Problem Solver” and build a team that’s capable of handling challenges? You need a mindset shift, from solving problems to mentoring. Ask yourself: “How can I empower my team to take this on and solve it?” Your role as a CEO doesn’t mean you have to resolve every issue; it means enabling others to become problem solvers themselves. Along with this simple question, there are a few vital leadership skills to cultivate: avoid fostering dependency, stop operating from fear-based thoughts, and let go of “fix-it” mode.

Don’t Foster Dependency

When you act as a “Chief Problem Solver,” everything and everyone relies solely on you. This dependency creates a reality where your team will hesitates to take ownership. Why? Because they know you’ll step in and save the day. Thus, instead of empowering them, you’re conditioning them to lean on you for solutions. Not only will this drain your energy but it will prevent your business from expanding.

Stop Operating From Fear-Based Thoughts

Typically, when someone is trying to solve everything, it’s because they’re operating from fear-based thoughts. “What do customers think? What if I lose revenue? What if employees get upset?” If your main focus is avoiding negative outcomes, you’re making reactive decisions rather than steering the company toward long-term success. This is why a mindset shift is crucial, moving from fear to empowerment helps create a sustainable and thriving business.

Let Go of “Fix-It” Mode

Instead of your brain firing “Fix-it” on all cylinders, pause, look for ways to develop your team. Let them lead. Let them struggle a little. Be there to provide guidance. (Not answers!) By trusting your team and giving them responsibilities, you’re building an organization that’s resilient and capable, even when you are gone. This also allows you to focus on the bigger goals: refining company vision, building partnerships, pursuing strategic opportunities, etc.

Hello Chief Visionary and Leadership Coaching

In short, stop trying to be the “Chief Problem Solver.” Instead try on the hats for Chief Mentor, Chief Strategist, even Chief Visionary. By harnessing a growth mindset and stepping back, you create a company culture that is collaborative and self-sustaining. In this space, you’re team can shift out of the chaos as well.

If you are ready to shift from managing problems to leading problem solvers, so that your business and team can reach new heights, consider hiring a leadership coach who has walked the path before. The right mentor can help you gain clarity, build internal wealth, and assist you in becoming an intelligent, purpose-driven leader who can cultivate the right work culture.

 

Ready for a mindset shift to break free from endless problem-solving? Book a Free Consultation and discover how personalized coaching can empower you, and your team, to tackle challenges with confidence.

The hidden cost of being the Chief Problem Solver

Solving every problem yourself feels efficient in the moment and quietly cripples the company over time. Your team learns to bring you problems instead of solutions, your calendar fills with other people work, and the business cannot grow past your personal capacity. The bottleneck is not a workload problem, it is a leadership habit.

The shift: from solving to coaching the solve

The question that changes everything is not how do I fix this, it is how do I help my team solve this. You trade the quick hit of being needed for the compounding return of people who can think without you. That is the same transition every founder has to make to stop being the bottleneck in their own company.

A simple system to stop absorbing every problem

When someone brings you a problem, ask for their recommendation before you give yours. Match how much you step in to how proven they are on that kind of decision, and check at agreed points instead of hovering. Built into a routine, this is what delegation training and founder-to-CEO delegation systems are really about.

Frequently asked questions

Why should a leader stop solving every problem?

Because it creates dependency and caps the company at the leader personal capacity. A team that cannot solve without you cannot scale.

How do you build a team that solves its own problems?

Ask for their recommendation first, coach the thinking rather than handing over the answer, and let them own the outcome with clear guardrails.

Is delegating the same as abdicating?

No. Delegating means matching responsibility to proven skill and checking at agreed points. Abdicating is handing it off and disappearing.

The delegation ladder

Stopping the chief-problem-solver habit is not all-or-nothing, it is a ladder. At the bottom, a person does exactly what you specify. A rung up, they do it and report back. Higher, they recommend and then act once you agree. At the top, they decide and simply keep you informed. The skill is matching the rung to the person proven judgment on that kind of task, and deliberately moving people up over time rather than keeping everyone at the bottom because it feels safer.

How to coach the solve in real time

When someone brings you a problem, the instinct is to answer. Resist it. Ask what they would do, why, and what they are worried about. Most of the time they already have a workable answer and just need the confidence to own it. You spend thirty seconds more now and save yourself from being the bottleneck later. Over months this single habit turns a team of task-doers into a team of problem-solvers.

How to tell if you are still the bottleneck

Look at what happens when you are unreachable for a week. If decisions stack up and nothing moves, you are still the bottleneck regardless of how much you have delegated on paper. A healthier sign is decisions getting made in your absence, occasionally differently than you would have, and the business surviving it. That discomfort is the price of a company that can scale. The deeper version of this shift is in the founder bottleneck, with the mechanics in delegation training and founder-to-CEO delegation systems.

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