Leadership & Executive Coach | David Buirs

Should You Compliment Team Members? The Honest Answer

David Buirs is a leadership coach based in Amsterdam. This article addresses the common worry managers have about complimenting their team, whether recognition leads to complacency, and what specific, honest appreciation actually sounds like. You learn why the discomfort of giving compliments is often a useful signal about your own leadership.

When someone at work tells you they really appreciated something you did, what do you actually do?

A lot of us mumble "oh it was nothing" and move the conversation along quickly. We brush it off before it can land. The spotlight feels uncomfortable, even when it's a kind one.

If receiving appreciation feels this awkward, no wonder we rarely give it either.

Won't it make my team lazy?

A worry I hear often from managers: won't complimenting my team make them lazy? Won't people stop pushing themselves if they feel too good about their work?

It sounds logical on the surface. Comfort breeds complacency, right?

But notice what's underneath. The fear assumes that people need to feel slightly short of good enough to keep trying. That the absence of recognition is what keeps performance high.

The opposite is closer to what I see in practice. People who feel genuinely seen at work tend to raise their standards over time. They work harder, not softer. Because they're no longer spending energy wondering if anyone noticed.

How you talk to yourself is how you talk to your team

Think about how you talk to yourself after finishing something good. Most of us don't pause to feel good about it. We go straight to the next item on the list.

We're wired to be tough on ourselves. The inner critic is always on. For many leaders, self-assessment borders on self-interrogation.

So being warm with someone else about their work can feel strange. It's not the language you speak with yourself. If your inner dialogue is dominated by what still needs to be better, a moment of warmth to someone else can feel off-brand. Almost dishonest, even when it's completely real.

This is why the work of giving compliments often starts with looking at how you treat yourself. The generosity you can't give inward is hard to send outward.

What actually happens when you do it

From my own years as a manager, and from working with managers who try this deliberately: it works. People start caring more. Connection increases. Engagement follows.

But something more human happens too. People feel less alone at work. They bring a bit more of themselves to the team. They're more willing to take risks, try things, speak up without hedging every sentence.

You notice they show up with more weight, not less. More ownership, not less.

What a real compliment sounds like

Here's where many managers get stuck. "Great job" doesn't land. It's too generic. It could apply to anyone. The brain processes it as background noise, the same way it processes "how are you" in a hallway.

A real compliment is specific. It names what the person did, why it mattered, and what you noticed about how they did it.

"I saw how you handled the question from finance yesterday. You stayed calm, gave them the data, and didn't get pulled into the drama. That took discipline."

That lands. Because it proves you were paying attention.

Most people have never been told something like that at work. Not once in their career. The first time you do it, you may see them not quite know what to do with it. That's how rare this kind of recognition is.

The discomfort is the signal

If giving compliments like this feels uncomfortable, that's useful information. It tells you where you've been playing small as a leader.

Joseph Campbell wrote about the cave you fear entering holding the treasure you seek. Around compliments, this pattern shows up often in coaching. The conversation that feels slightly off is often exactly the one that would move everything.

Step outside your comfort zone this week. Your team needs to see a bit more of what you already think about them.

Where this shows up in coaching

One of the patterns we often work on in management coaching is this exact gap. Managers who see their team clearly, who care deeply, whose team has no idea. Because the care stays inside.

For leaders at director and board level, the dynamic gets sharper. Senior leaders often become less visible emotionally as they climb, not more. Teams read silence as indifference. In coaching for executives we work on how to stay warm and present without losing the composure the role demands.

Organizations that want this kind of culture across the whole management layer need more than individual work. That's where leadership training comes in. Building recognition and feedback skills into the team structurally, instead of hoping one manager at a time figures it out.

An invitation for this week

Pick two people on your team. Tell them something real about their work. Specific. Concrete. No agenda attached.

See what happens to your own energy afterward. Notice what happens to the conversation. Notice what happens the next time you see them.

If you want to work on this kind of leadership more deliberately, you can always plan a free introduction. Zero obligation. Just a conversation about where you are and where you want to go.

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