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The Disconnect Problem: When Senior Leadership Loses Touch

Makin - Public Relations PR Advice, Strategy

In any business, and especially in project-driven ones, the gulf between senior management (or business owners) and the operational teams is a latent risk.

From a recent case described in an article by the BBC (concerning a company where the leadership’s grand vision was divorced from front-line reality) the consequences are instructive.

When leadership drafts big ambitions without maintaining a direct connection to how work actually happens, several things tend to go wrong:

  • Mis-understanding of actual constraints: Senior management may over-estimate how fast, how easily or how well teams can deliver, ignoring day-to-day glitches, skills gaps or legacy systems.

  • Feature/quality drift: When senior management sets targets or features based on vision rather than operational reality, the end-product may fail to satisfy the customer in either function (what it does) or quality (how well it is done).

  • Morale and alignment issues: Teams who feel “out of touch” with leadership can disengage; they may deliver something that meets the numbers but not the true customer need.

  • Project risk increases: Without good connection, risk of cost or time blow-outs, scope creep or rework rises leading to compromised delivery or worse, failed projects.

  • Customer dissatisfaction & reputational damage: Ultimately, projects that do not meet expectations (either functionally or in quality) damage the brand, customer retention and future business.

In the BBC article, the leadership’s ‘grand vision’ and decision-making seemed divorced from the facts on the ground, leading to waste and under-delivery. For SMEs, where resource margins tend to be tighter, the risk is higher: one mis-aligned project can have outsized consequences.

Why this matters for SMEs specifically

Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) often have fewer buffers and less slack in terms of time, budget, personnel, and risk tolerance. Here are some key points I often consider:

  • Closer day-to-day interaction: Often in SMEs, the owner or senior manager is the project sponsor, but paradoxically may also spend time removed (strategic, networking) leading to less in the operational file. This can create a siginificant gap.

  • Rapid growth pressures: As SMEs grow, leadership often shifts from hands-on to strategic. If that transition removes operational visibility too quickly, disconnect ensues.

  • Informality + evolving process: Many SMEs rely on informal processes. As projects get more complex, the informal may no longer suffice without strong leadership-to-team alignment.

  • Customer expectations are unforgiving: SMEs often win business by promising quality or responsiveness. If internal mis-alignment hampers delivery, their competitive advantage suffers.

  • Resource constraints: Mistakes due to disconnect (e.g., rework, misunderstanding, missed requirements) cost time and money which SMEs often cannot absorb easily.

For SME owners and senior managers, maintaining a direct and grounded connection with the teams doing the work and the customers receiving it is critical to effective risk management.

How senior-team disconnect evolves into project failure

I think putting the above into a sequence shows clearly how risk grows:

  1. Leadership sets ambitious (or high-level) objectives or project targets based on market vision, growth goals or competitor moves.

  2. Leadership becomes less engaged in the operational detail (for example: they don’t meet regularly with project teams, don’t review early deliverables, don’t walk the floor or talk with customers directly).

  3. The project team interprets leadership’s goals without full context, or makes assumptions about quality/feature trade-offs.

  4. Operational constraints (skills gaps, technical debt, process inefficiencies) are either underestimated or overlooked.

  5. Feedback loops from workers or customers are weak or delayed; issues are discovered late (or post-go-live).

  6. Functions or quality deliverables don’t meet expectations: perhaps the feature set is misaligned, or the finish/quality is compromised.

  7. The customer is dissatisfied, the project overruns budget/time, the business reputation suffers, and future opportunities may be lost.

  8. For the SME, the financial or reputational hit may jeopardise growth, profitability or even survival.

In short: disconnect in management → weak operational insight → poor decision-making or missed signs → project under-delivers → customer loss or cost blow-up.

Practical ways managers can avoid this disconnect

Here are steps I recommend for senior management teams in SMEs to maintain alignment, mitigate risk, and ensure projects meet customer expectations for both quality and functionality:

1. Stay connected to the front line

  • Regularly spend time with project teams: attend stand-ups, review progress, observe blockages.

  • Meet with customers or end-users, not just via account managers, to hear what they really need or are frustrated by.

  • Use simple “walk-throughs” of live projects: what’s going well? what’s holding back? what are the risks we are ignoring?

  • Encourage field visits or user-site visits so senior leaders see how the solution is used in the real world.

2. Build strong feedback loops

  • Establish early stage checkpoints and “show-me” deliverables so issues surface early.

  • Have project teams provide dashboard updates that include not just “are we on schedule” but “what is quality like”, “what user feedback have we had”, “what risk has emerged”.

  • Encourage open discussion of concerns — if the team feels leadership will react punitively, issues will be hidden until too late.

  • Create mechanisms for customers to provide direct input during development, not just at the end.

3. Align leadership vision with operational reality

  • When setting objectives or features, leadership should explicitly ask: “What will it take to deliver that? What resources? What are the risks? What trade-offs?”

  • Conduct workshops where leadership, project teams and perhaps even customer representatives brainstorm feasibility, quality thresholds, risks and assumptions.

  • Ask for minimal viable product (MVP) / phased delivery rather than “big bang”, so that operational learning is built in and leadership can calibrate.

  • Be transparent about the constraints: budgets, timeline, capacity, legacy systems. Senior leaders should not assume unlimited flexibility.

4. Invest in project governance without bureaucracy

  • Even in SMEs, have a lightweight governance structure: project sponsor (senior leader) meets regularly with project manager, peer review of milestones, quality sign-off steps.

  • Make sure the senior leader is visible as the project sponsor, not just signing cheques but actively engaged: reviewing risks, reviewing major decisions, being seen.

  • Governance should emphasise quality, functional fit (does the product do what the customer needs), and customer satisfaction not just “delivered on time”.

5. Promote a culture of “hands-on learning”

  • Leadership should stay curious: ask operational teams what they are seeing, what problems they face, how systems/processes can improve.

  • Encourage senior leaders to spend a “day in the life” of different functional teams periodically to maintain empathy and operational awareness.

  • Celebrate operational successes and bring learnings back into strategic planning: what worked, what didn’t, what we learnt about customer behaviour etc.

6. Measure what matters to customers (not just internal metrics)

  • Add metrics such as: customer satisfaction scores post-project, defect/bug rates, feature usage analytics, user engagement, return business.

  • Track “real world quality” not just “did we implement everything”. A project may deliver features but if customers don’t use them, or the quality is poor, it has failed.

  • Review these metrics at senior leadership level — so leaders stay anchored in actual outcomes rather than just internal “delivered” flags.

7. Continuously revisit assumptions and course-correct

  • At each major milestone or every few weeks, ask: are our assumptions still valid? Has anything changed in the market, customer needs, technical environment?

  • Senior leaders should not assume that an approved plan is set in stone. They must stay engaged to sense shifts early.

  • Encourage project teams to speak up if they find the plan no longer fits reality. Senior leaders must be open to modifying scope, timeline or even cancelling a project if necessary (better to stop early than deliver badly).

Making it work

When senior management becomes disconnected from the reality of those they manage, the teams delivering projects and the customers receiving them, the risk to business performance, project success, and customer satisfaction is substantial. As the BBC’s article underscores, even large organisations can fall prey to this disconnect. SMEs, with tighter margins and fewer buffers, are even more exposed.

The remedy is straightforward in concept (stay connected, build feedback loops, align vision with reality) but it requires discipline, humility and consistent leadership behaviour. For SME owners and managers, treat this not as optional “nice to have” but as a core part of risk management and project governance.

Thank you for taking the time to read this article. Staying connected as a leader isn’t always easy, but it’s one of the most valuable investments any business owner can make.

I’d love to hear your thoughts. Have you experienced the challenges of leadership disconnect or found effective ways to stay aligned with your team and customers? Feel free to share your experiences or insights in the comments below.

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