Your Team is Burned Out! Nine Ways to Recognize It

As a leader in several world-class global organizations, I quickly learned that managing people well is immensely challenging.

I remember one technical implementation project where we were under tremendous pressure to deliver results with limited resources. I had to balance performance with the wellbeing of my team.

At one point, a team member, with dark circles under their eyes, told me: “I don’t think I can do this anymore.”

It was a wake-up call. I realized that while pushing for results was necessary, recognizing and addressing burnout was just as critical. That moment shaped how I lead to this day.

Burnout Isn’t a Weakness; It’s a Workplace Risk

Burnout isn’t your team member’s personal flaw. It’s a workplace risk that:

  • Spreads through teams like wildfire
  • Erodes trust and engagement
  • Harms your department’s results
  • Damages your reputation as a leader

The Costs of Ignoring Burnout

  • Productivity loss: Exhausted employees make more mistakes, recover slower, and need more oversight.
  • Turnover risk: Burnout is a top predictor of attrition. Replacement costs run 1.5–2x an employee’s salary. And in the meantime, the workload piles up.
  • Engagement decline: Burned-out teams don’t innovate. They do the minimum to survive, and you may never hear their million-dollar idea.
  • Reputation damage: A culture of overwork repels top talent. When word spreads, your best candidate my decline, forcing you to settle for a B or C player.

Read more about the hidden costs of burnout.

Nine Early Warning Signs of Burnout

  1. Withdrawal – Once-engaged employees pull back in meetings or socially.
  2. Irritability – Small setbacks spark frustration or cynicism.
  3. Declining performance – Not from lack of skill, but lack of energy and focus.
  4. Disengagement – They show up physically, but their spark is gone.
  5. Absenteeism – They take more sick days or PTO than usual. (Gallup: burned-out employees are 63% more likely to take a sick day.)
  6. Griping – Complaints and negativity about leadership become common.
  7. Physical signs – Tired eyes, low energy, weight gain / loss, and visible exhaustion.
  8. Loss of confidence – Once-bold employees shy away from high-visibility projects.
  9. Negativity – They see roadblocks instead of opportunities.

What Leaders Can Do

  • Put your own mask on first: You can’t support others if you’re running on empty. Seek support from your manager, mentor, coach, or EAP.
  • Name it out loud: Talking about burnout destigmatizes it and opens space for honesty.
  • Model healthy behavior: Take time off, set boundaries, and don’t send late-night emails unless truly urgent.
  • Clarify workload: Burnout thrives in overload and ambiguity. Revisit priorities, redistribute tasks, and remove unnecessary steps.
  • Invest in recovery: Encourage breaks, PTO, flexible schedules, and use of wellness benefits. (The APA highlights recovery as a driver of wellbeing and performance.)
  • Recognize contributions: Recognition is free but often overlooked. Thank people for what they do and who they are.
  • Address root causes: Burnout isn’t fixed with yoga classes. It’s fixed when leaders address workload, control, fairness, community, recognition, and values alignment.

Your Move as a Leader in 2025

Burnout isn’t just a human problem. It’s a leadership imperative with business consequences.

The sooner you recognize and address it, the stronger, more resilient, and more innovative your team will be.

I gave you nine ways to spot burnout early.

In your experience, what’s a tenth sign you’ve noticed – on your team, or even in yourself?

Let’s build a conversation that helps every leader get better at this.

We’d love to hear from you and understand your story.

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