If you haven’t experienced burnout, you’ve surely witnessed it. I have certainly taken part in conversations about someone who hit that wall of physical and emotional exhaustion at work. The sentiments are almost always the same: They were working too hard; they just didn’t know how to create a work-life balance.
But what is “work-life balance”? Does it really exist in the definition that everyone’s used to screaming about?
Work-life balance is one of those phrases that sounds wise until you examine it, because the framing treats work as the enemy of life: something to be rationed and kept on its side of a line.
My point: Work is part of life. For most people, it’s a large part; for some, smaller. And the goal was never to do less of it. The goal was to do it in a way that doesn’t hollow you out.
Gallup’s data points that employees who feel unfairly treated at work are 2.3 times as likely to experience burnout as other employees. When people can’t connect their effort to an outcome, when success is undefined, when their work disappears into a fog of shifting priorities, the volume doesn’t matter. Forty hours of unclear work feels worse than 60 of purposeful work.
In my 14-year experience of managing different teams and different seniority levels, burnout has three real causes.
1. Unclear expectations
The first—and probably the main one—is unclear expectations. When success isn’t defined, people fill the gap with effort because effort is the only variable they control. They work harder to compensate for the fact that they don’t know if they’re working right. And they still feel like they’re failing, not because of lack of effort, but because no one told them what a winning point looks like.
Each of our teams at Hily & Taimi takes our long-term goals and breaks them down into short-term goals in their own way. We give managers full ownership of both the result and the roadmap; that way, they aren’t just hitting targets, they’re defining their own value and the path to get there. So, the expectations are not only clear but deeply personal. It’s almost impossible to burn out on a mission that was designed with your input and help.
2. Slow decisions
When a piece of work stalls waiting for a sign-off, gets looped back for revision because the brief was vague, or gets quietly deprioritized after two weeks of effort, output stops matching input. That mismatch is demoralizing in a way that workload never is. People can sustain intensity, but can’t sustain the feeling that their work doesn’t count.
We defined the average, aka normal, responsiveness time rate, and every team member never delays it.
3. Unnecessary work
These are tasks that exist because of poor processes, unclear ownership, or organizational failures. For example, the meeting that could have been a text, the document that existed to show progress rather than create it, the approval chain of 15 people that doesn’t trust the person doing the work.
With AI implementation, now we see that automation removes only the symptoms. And only leadership can remove the causes.
At the moment, we’re focusing on optimizing most of the processes with artificial intelligence. Not to replace people, but to give them back time. The goal is to free some space, so they can focus on strategic shifts, explore new directions and opportunities, and even build new products and tools. And, of course, stop drowning in repetitive tasks.
Building a work life that works
So, when talking about how to avoid burnout, the question isn’t how to wall off work from everything else; it’s how to build a working life that fits inside a human life, with clear ownership, fast decisions, and the removal of work that doesn’t need to exist.
If you want people who work for you to enjoy it, focus on clarity and the speed of making important decisions. These are the main things that might create burnout conditions that will probably be felt as overwork.
I truly believe that people are happier, more successful, and more productive at their workplace when their efforts give them a sense of purpose.
Bottom line: When work isn’t a source of frustration, there’s no need to balance it with the rest of your life, because it’s no longer the enemy of everything else.
As a leader, you should be fast, accountable, clear, and consistent, especially when your leadership style is leading by example—which appears to be the most successful in our company.