Burnout is getting all the attention right now—but it’s not where the problem starts.
By the time a leader is burned out, the breakdown in performance, communication, and capacity is already underway. Organizations aren’t preventing the issue; they’re reacting to it after the damage is already done.
In a recent conversation with a senior executive at a large nonprofit navigating a period of rapid change, I asked whether her organization was dealing with a fire drill. She paused and said, “No, it’s more like things are smoldering.”
That distinction matters. Most organizations don’t recognize there’s a problem until the fire is visible. But by then, the impact is already unfolding.
More than 75% of the global workforce reports experiencing burnout. In response, companies have invested heavily in workplace well-being programs, often centered around self-care. But many of these efforts miss the mark—because they’re focused on the outcome, not the cause.
They’re solving for burnout after it happens instead of identifying what leads to it in the first place.
The better question isn’t how to reduce burnout. It’s: What are the early signs that burnout is already in motion, and how do we intervene before it gets there?
In my work with high-performing leaders—especially women—I’ve found that burnout is rarely the starting point. It’s the outcome. The earlier signal is overwhelm.
Most high performers don’t get flagged as at risk because they’re still delivering. From the outside, everything looks fine. On the inside, they’re operating under increasing pressure, carrying more responsibility, and making decisions with less margin for error. And no one thinks to ask if anything is wrong.
This is especially true for leaders who are also caretakers. Today, childcare costs exceed housing costs in all 50 states, and nearly a quarter of workers are part of the sandwich generation—caring for both children and aging relatives.
They are responsible not just for their teams, but for their families, their households, and often the emotional load of everyone around them. And yet, most workplace solutions still focus on adding more—more tools, more programs, more “self-care”—to an already maxed-out capacity.
The result? The strategies don’t get adopted—because leaders don’t have the capacity to implement them in the first place. Overwhelm continues to build, and burnout becomes inevitable.
Overwhelm isn’t a failure. It’s data.
It’s one of the earliest indicators that a leader’s strategies are no longer aligned with their reality. Most people experience overwhelm during periods of change, when the actions that previously worked are no longer producing the same results.
But one of the biggest challenges with overwhelm is that it’s not always obvious where it’s coming from. Leaders know something feels off, but they don’t know where to start. So nothing changes.
Over time, I’ve found that overwhelm is not random. It tends to follow predictable patterns—what I call the Overwhelm Culprits—that quietly erode a leader’s capacity long before burnout appears.
In organizations, these five patterns often show up as:
1. Lack of clarity: Leaders are moving quickly, but without the time or space to evaluate whether their actions are aligned with their priorities. When clarity is missing, speed doesn’t create progress but instead compounds misalignment. Organizations that effectively address this problem create space for leaders to regularly reassess what actually matters, so effort stays directed instead of being diluted.
2. Lack of confidence: Even high performers begin to second-guess decisions, leading to hesitation, overthinking, and increased mental load. This isn’t a capability issue—it’s an internal belief gap, often showing up as imposter syndrome. When the stakes are high and margin is low, decision making slows. Strong organizations provide leaders with personal and professional development opportunities that strengthen both capacity and belief.
3. Lack of community: Leaders are expected to carry more without the right support, resources, or shared responsibility. Over time, this concentrates pressure on the same high performers, turning them into the default solution for systemic gaps. Without intentional support structures, particularly those that foster inclusion and belonging, what looks like leadership strength becomes an unsustainable load.
4. Lack of conditioning: If leaders neglect to condition their minds and bodies through hydration, nutrition, exercise, sleep, and mental health practices, it becomes significantly harder to sustain performance under pressure. Addressing health and wellness as a performance strategy as opposed to simply self-care allows leaders to maintain performance without constantly operating in recovery mode.
5. Lack of consistency: Without systems and structure, even the right strategies fail to stick, creating more pressure instead of less. Inconsistent execution increases cognitive load, forcing leaders to repeatedly solve the same problems. When organizations build systems that support consistency with effective processes and routines, they reduce the need for constant decision making and free up capacity for higher-level thinking.
While many workplace well-being efforts focus on recovery, these patterns point to something more important: where capacity is breaking down before burnout occurs.
For organizations, this requires a shift in how leadership performance is evaluated and supported.
The question is not, “Are our leaders burned out?” Instead, try asking:
- Where is capacity being strained?
- What invisible workload are our leaders carrying that isn’t being accounted for?
- Where are we relying on high performers to compensate for broken systems—and calling that leadership?
Burnout isn’t the first sign of a leadership problem. It’s the result of unresolved overwhelm over time.
Organizations that want to sustain high performance don’t just invest in recovery —they learn to identify and address overwhelm in real time. Because the earlier leaders can adjust their strategies, the more effectively they can maintain both performance and well-being without breaking down just to recover from the role itself.
