Lead, Manage, Do
Unpacking the deeper meaning and applying to your own or your team’s role is not always so simple.
Three seemingly simple words: Lead, Manage, Do.
I like to think of this balance as a triangle similar to the Project Management triple constraint of Scope, Schedule, and Budget, with each side representing one leg of performance. Strength in one area can only be sustained if it’s supported by the other two.
‘Lead’ gives us vision and direction: the why behind our work. To ‘Lead’ means setting the vision, communicating purpose, and inspiring others to act. Leaders ask, ‘Are we doing the right things?’
‘Manage’ gives us structure and control: the how we organize and deliver. To ‘Manage’ means planning, coordinating, and optimizing work. Managers ask, ‘Are we doing things right?’
And ‘Do’ gives us execution and results: the what we actually produce. To ‘Do’ means executing and producing results that meet expectations. Doers ask, ‘Are we doing what we said we’d do?’
Of course, these aren’t silos, they overlap.
Communication, prioritization, and problem-solving are shared across all three legs. For example, a project manager managing risk (Manage) must also communicate upward to align with leadership (Lead) and coordinate with the delivery team to mitigate issues (Do).
The strongest professionals, at any level, learn to flex between these roles fluidly. They can step up to lead, step in to manage, and roll up their sleeves to do.
When one leg dominates, the system tips.
- Too much ‘Lead’ and not enough ‘Do’ — you get vision without delivery.
- Too much ‘Do’ and not enough ‘Lead’ — you get activity without direction.
- Too much ‘Manage’ and not enough ‘Lead’ — you get process without purpose.
The key is not to pick one leg, but to develop all three — and to know when to lead, when to manage, and when to do.
In the end, "Lead, Manage, Do" is a dynamic system. Every project, every product, every program requires all three in different proportions at different times.
Our challenge as professionals is to stay balanced within that triangle, to know when to set direction, when to establish order, and when to get it done.
