How managers can offer genuine care that boosts employee energy without causing guilt or burnout—six practical steps for teams and HR.
When Support Boosts — and When It Backfires
Managers who genuinely care for their people produce a powerful asset: energized, more vital employees. Yet empirical research shows that manager caring can also carry hidden costs. When a manager is the central source of emotional and practical support for a team, employees may feel guilty or indebted, and they may perceive the manager as overloaded. These unintended effects can reduce the long-term sustainability of caring behaviors and increase the risk of manager burnout. The solution is not to stop caring — it is to design how care is provided and shared across teams and the organization.
What Leaders Need to Know
Measured studies of manager caring behavior show two consistent patterns. First, caring manager behaviors are associated with improved employee vitality and engagement: employees who experience genuine concern and practical support report greater energy and motivation at work. Second, caring can also increase employee feelings of guilt (for needing support) and raise perceptions that the manager is overburdened. Crucially, these negative effects are strongest when teams lack a culture of mutual support; when peer caring is a norm, the perception that the manager is overloaded is substantially reduced.
The Practical Problem
Relying on individual managers as the primary source of emotional and practical support creates three organizational risks:
- Employee indebtedness or guilt. Employees who receive substantial one-on-one support may feel like a burden or overly dependent, which can undermine autonomy and psychological safety.
- Hidden emotional labor for managers. Managers absorb non-transactional work—listening, coaching, crisis response—that adds to their workload and is often invisible in standard workload measures.
- Distorted perceptions of capacity. Peers and leaders may interpret a manager’s visible caring as a sign they are already carrying too much, which can affect workload allocation, promotion decisions, or performance evaluations.
These problems are solvable—but they require intentional design: clear roles, distributed practices, and formal supports.
Practical Steps for Managers and HR
Below are six evidence-informed, operational actions teams can implement immediately.
1. Clarify roles and referral pathways
Define and communicate what types of support managers are expected to provide (listening, short-term accommodations, coaching, immediate problem-solving) and what belongs with HR, an employee assistance program (EAP), benefits teams, or external providers (long-term clinical care, complex personal crises). Clear boundaries reduce the unspoken expectation that managers must “fix” everything.
2. Train managers on boundary management
Offer short, skills-based training focused on active listening, co-creating action plans, and using referral scripts. Teach managers how to provide empathetic support while placing responsibility appropriately—for example, “Here’s what I can do, and here’s who else can help.” Role-play common scenarios so managers can practice saying no in ways that preserve dignity.
3. Build peer support rituals
Normalize mutual help so caring is distributed. Simple practices include rotating “buddy check-ins,” scheduled peer backup plans for coverage, a team roster that denotes who can step in during spikes, and monthly peer recognition for helpful behavior. Making peer support routine reduces the perceptual salience of a single caring manager.
4. Monitor manager emotional labor and workload
Track and surface the time managers spend on counseling, conflict resolution, or crisis work. Use skip-level check-ins, HR pulse surveys, and manager well-being conversations to identify overload. When caring duties spike, reassign tasks, provide temporary administrative support, or reduce non-essential deliverables.
5. Model and protect boundaries from the top
Senior leaders should visibly model healthy boundary management—taking vacation, delegating, and using support resources. When leaders prioritize their own well-being publicly, it signals permission for managers to do the same and reduces pressure to be the sole source of care.
6. Create formal supports and clear communication
Institutionalize easy referral pathways (for example, quick EAP referrals, a one-page HR intake form for complex cases, and a maintained list of community resources). Communicate these supports regularly so managers and employees use them instead of relying only on manager goodwill.
A Short Checklist for Leaders
- Specify what manager support should include and what must be referred to HR/EAP.
- Provide boundary-management training and referral scripts for managers.
- Launch two peer-support rituals (buddy check-ins; a coverage roster).
- Monitor manager time spent on emotional labor and reassign work when needed.
- Ensure senior leaders model vacation, delegation, and boundary setting.
- Create and promote simple, formal referral pathways for complex employee needs.
Final Thought
Caring managers are essential—their behavior measurably boosts employee energy and engagement. But expecting a few individuals to carry most of the emotional work is neither sustainable nor fair. The most effective approach is to cultivate a culture in which caring is led by managers but shared by teams and supported by organizational systems. That way, employees get the support they need and managers retain the capacity to lead without becoming overwhelmed.
Reference:
Boekhorst, J. A., Hewett, R., Shantz, A., & Good, J. R. L. (2021). The double-edged sword of manager caring behavior: Implications for employee wellbeing. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 26(6), 507–521. https://doi.org/10.1037/ocp0000313
