Learn Practice Perform

Team leaders have to manage a huge volume of work and yet their job descriptions can be quite vague. Let’s look at the role, tasks and the 5 key responsibilities managed by team leaders.

Show Notes

Team leaders are first-wave management who add another level of control. They’re hired to influence and build relationships, to make things happen, but few people really understand what's involved in this all-encompassing role. In this podcast, we discuss what a team leader is and what they do, plus cover the vastness of their to-do lists and show you how to by categorising them and get clarity about the purpose behind your job. 

In this episode of Learn Practice Perform, we discuss:
  1. What is a team leader?
  2. Why do we need team leaders?
  3. What does a team leader do?
  4. 5 key team leader responsibilities
  5. #1 Manage the operation and admin
  6. #2 Lead and motivate the team
  7. #3 Manage performance
  8. #4 Solve problems
  9. #5 Care for the health safety and welfare of your people
  10. Duties outside of the five categories
If you need to develop your leadership and management skills, here are just some of the virtual courses we offer: 

What is Learn Practice Perform?

Learn Practice Perform, a skills development podcast is packed full of learning that sticks and makes a difference. Produced by TSW Training and featuring its guest leadership and management, health and safety, and environmental management experts, it gives everyone the tools to make a difference to their careers and workplaces.

Team leaders have to manage a huge volume of work and yet their job descriptions can be quite vague. Let’s look at the role, tasks and the 5 key responsibilities managed by team leaders.

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Key points
Team leaders are first-wave management
They add another level of control. They’re hired to influence and build relationships, to make things happen
Team leader’s to-do lists can be vast, but by categorising them, it’ll give you clarity about the purpose of your job
What is a team leader?
A team leader has an overview of a group of people, motivates, gives instruction and monitors performance.

It might be an official title change or a delegation exercise from your management, but either way, being a team leader separates you from your peers as a trusted person to manage a project or group of people.

If you want a career in management, the title makes your CV stand out – it signals you’ve worked hard to gain responsibility and perhaps achieved an increased salary.

“Team leaders are the first step on the ‘management ladder” says our Head of Leadership and Management, Andrew Wallbridge. “They have to step in at a moment’s notice to cover an absent manager, making sure the rest of the team perform and hit their targets, all without authority“.

What is the difference between a manager and a team leader?
A manager has authority and accountability, they’re responsible for strategising and overseeing.

Team leaders are responsible for communicating the strategy and guiding the team towards targets.

For more information, read our blog on leadership v management.

Why do we need team leaders?
Some operations are too vast for one manager, so employers add another layer of control – the team leader. Although that shifts responsibility down one notch, the manager retains accountability.

Team leaders and managers have different responsibilities. Unlike managers, team leaders won’t have the authority to direct, change plans, enforce or build their teams through hiring and firing.

Their role is usually a motivational and inspirational one within an organisation. They’re skilled relationship builders and mediators, liaising between the people and management.

When they apply their leadership qualities, they push projects ahead

Leadership pushed to the limit
The skills our apprentices learn on a Leadership & Management course can prepare them for almost anything.

Listen to our ILM Level 5 delegate Jamie Davies, talk to us about flexing his leadership muscles in the Jordanian desert, during his time as a recruit on SAS: Who Dares Wins.

What does a team leader do?
An awful lot. Day-to-day team leader tasks may include some of the following, but it’s more than likely that you’re covering around 50-60 jobs in total:

Covering your manager when they’re out of office
Admin
Email
Monitoring projects
Communicating goals and targets
Encouraging success
Motivating your team
Gaining commitment
Quality control
Resolving conflict
Managing resource
Time management
Problem-solving
Having difficult conversations
Communicating changes from seniors
Reporting
Conducting team meetings
Leading 1-2-1s
The role is demanding and complex, but fulfilling. You can see the personal impact that your leadership achieves.

The drawbacks are that there’s little in the way of financial compensation, even though you’re poking your head above the parapet and you’re in a riskier position.

5 key team leader responsibilities
Even though your daily tasks run into the tens, and your organisation and managers rely on your ability to push projects ahead, your job description can be quite vague.

There’s no clear evidence of just how much you do.

We would always suggest that you document just how much you bring to your role and the simplest way to do that is to organise and categorise your duties.

All your responsibilities can be grouped under five umbrella categories:

1) Manage the operation and admin

2) Lead and motivate the team

3) Manage performance

4) Solve problems

5) Care for the health, safety and welfare of your people

Activity
Take a pack of post-its and on each one write down a task you fulfil as a team leader. When you’re happy you’ve got all your tasks, start to categorise them into the team leader responsibility categories we’ve listed above.

#1 Manage the operation and admin
Emails, paperwork, planning, scheduling meetings, taking minutes, monitoring performance, reporting and many other organisational tasks fall under this category. It’s your responsibility to make your team’s work and achievements transparent and accessible to anyone else in the business. If you’re asked for a report or a document, you should know exactly where it is and have performance data to hand.

Team leaders are only effective and successful when they’re organised. If you’re looking after the interests of a fairly large group of workers, managing admin and operations can be all-consuming, so getting your team to strict processes – that won’t duplicate your workload – and time-management techniques, will be the greatest support.

Read more:

How to manage your time, talent & energy using the Eisenhower Matrix
#2 Lead and motivate the team
Although you lead and motivate using your leadership skills and qualities, there are tangible duties that drive performance too:

Coaching and mentoring
Communicating goals and targets
Setting objectives
Sharing feedback
Leading team meetings
Leading 1-2-1s and personal development plans (PDPs)
Pitching ideas through presentations and reports
Supporting social and wellbeing activities
Using incentives and rewards
Your team will only meet their targets and goals if they have the right support from you. You need a firm handle on their individual objectives, how well they’re performing and giving them feedback, then plugging the gaps with coaching and mentoring.

Some team members will need more support than others, but it’s critical that you show you have that level in interest in everyone around you to keep morale and interest high.

Read more:

How to motivate your team
Motivate your Team with Herzberg’s Two Factor Theory
#3 Manage performance
You manage performance by observing results. Your duties under the category might include the measurement and feedback tools you use.

As a team leader, your performance management job is two-fold:

You’ll appraise their interpersonal skills to evaluate how well they do their job and work well in the team
The effectiveness of their work. What did they deliver and what impact did it have?
The more formal and thorough your approach to performance management is, the clearer you can be with your team. With the evidence in hand, you can justify what’s going well and what could be improved.

It’s leverage to be assertive about your requirements and the expectations on them. It gives you powerful reasoning behind targets, objectives and goals, particularly if they shift unexpectedly.

Read more:

How to manage performance appraisals
How can Belbin’s team roles improve performance in the workplace?
McGregor’s Theory X vs Theory Y: How to increase performance in your team
#4 Solve problems
The duties in this category are people management skills and harder to quantify in a single duty or task.

The real art of solving problems draws on your interpersonal skills and experiences to unite different personalities while empathising with both sides.

Alongside empathising, seeking compromise and avoiding shame or punishment, you can also avoid conflict by:

Introduce new rules and ways of working together
Clearly define and separate tasks to avoid overlap and clashing
Lead mediation
Schedule more regular 1-2-1s
Liaise with management and HR
Read more:

Solve problems with the Six Thinking Hats
#5 Care for the health safety and welfare of your people
You have a duty of care to look after your people, so the tasks in this category will focus on the environment, atmosphere, compliance and work/life balance.

Health and safety training and other appropriate training
Risk assessments
Safeguarding against bullying
Safeguarding against substance abuse
Prevent presenteeism and control working hours
Ensure compliance with relevant laws and standards
Read more:

Managing stress in the workplace
Health and safety in the workplace
A Guide on Risk Assessment
Find even more ways on how to be a better leader in our leadership and management blog.

Duties outside of the five categories
If any tasks fall outside of the five categories, carefully review what extra work you’re taking on.

Some tasks are relevant to the team leader role, whereas others might sit more comfortably with someone who has accountability, or who has no responsibility at all.

It’ll reveal opportunities to delegate, but also opportunities to progress.

If your responsibilities are closer to that of a manager than a team leader, it might be time for you to climb the management ladder and apply for a job with more authority.

Need to develop your Leadership and Management skills further?
Here are just some of courses we offer at TSW:

ILM Level 2 in Leadership and Team Skills
ILM Level 3 in Leadership and Management
ILM Level 5 in Leadership and Management
Core Skills for Management Training Course
Core Skills for Team Leaders Course
Management Training Courses
ILM courses and qualifications
Leadership and Management Apprenticeships
and more