How to Foster Culture of Freedom and Innovation in Workplaces

Freedom and independence are the two crucial aspects of the stickiness of employees in organisations. They thrive in a workplace conducive to creative growth and push their limits. A motivated and supported employee goes the extra mile and outperforms in his/her role. On the contrary, employees who experience constant scrutiny eventually become apathetic towards their work. Micromanagement is a sad reality of the corporate world. It is a managerial style where leaders exert excessive control over their team. Superiors start to monitor every aspect of the work of their team members. They also dominate employees and limit their freedom of expression. Micromanagement creates a toxic work culture and discourages employees from using their creativity and potential. It also creates rigidity and monotony as managers shun innovative ideas and suggestions from the team. Despite several problematic elements, some leaders indulge in micromanagement and ignore its detrimental effects on employees. Micromanagement is not sustainable as it hampers the growth of both employees and organisations.

Motivation behind Micromanagement

Micromanagers often justify their control over team members for quality output aligned with organisational goals. However, their actions stem from the authoritarian approach, toxic self-esteem and trust deficit. Micromanagers like to invade the privacy of team members, and they dictate every aspect of work. They are also less tolerant towards mistakes and try to extract maximum output from their team members.

How Micromanagement Affects Employees

  • Quiet Quitting – Term Quiet quitting became quite popular during the global lay-off season in 2023. Quiet quitting refers to contributing the bare minimum at the workplace. Employees focus on retaining their jobs rather than aiming for growth. When managers control every step of employees’ work life, they stop using their judgement and go on an auto-pilot mode. They also become careless and develop enmity towards the organisation.
  • Mental Distress – Micromanagement can cause mental distress to employees as they cannot utilise their potential in the job. They feel choked due to a lack of freedom to explore their creativity and innovation. The dominance and intimidation tactics of managers affect their morale. They also experience anxiety, frustration and stress, which impact their performance.
  • Lack of Accountability – Since managers set one-sided expectations/goals, employees stop taking ownership of work. They become less accountable at work and start avoiding responsibilities. It creates room for mistakes and brings down the overall productivity.

How Micromanagement Affects Organisations

  • High Attrition Rate – The attrition rate is high in companies which are rigid and excessively driven by age-old systems. Ambitions and creative people do not thrive in controlled workplaces. Even if they attract talent, retaining them for long becomes challenging for micromanagers. The new generation, especially Gen Zs, prefers freedom over the package. Organisations should consider the modern work dynamics and make shifts in their approach.
  • Reduced Productivity and Growth – Micromanagement discourages leadership development as micromanagers avoid nurturing new talent and delegate responsibilities to them. Those who resist change lag in the competition and lose potential growth prospects.

How organisations can foster a culture of freedom and innovation

  • Promote Mentorship – Promote mentorship instead of micromanagement. Encourage new talent to take up leadership roles through human resource development programs. Allow autonomy and decision-making power to employees. Organisations which offer constant learning opportunities to employees at all levels maintain their growth momentum.
  • Encourage creativity and innovation – Micromanagement kills creativity. Develop a culture which encourages freedom of expression. Create a space where employees can explore their creativity to resolve problems.

Reward the talent – Rewards act as fuel and push employees to challenge their limits. Motivate employees through systematic reward programs to boost their morale. Encourage healthy competition among team members to avoid complacency. Well-paid and motivated employees shine in their jobs, benefiting the organisation.


The views and opinions published here belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of the publisher.

Priyanka Pugaokar
Priyanka Pugaokar is a communications professional with expertise in internal and external communication, crisis communications, content generation and media relations. She holds over ten years of combined experience in communications and business journalism. She is currently associated with Rashi Peripherals Limited as Corporate Communications Manager and leads several strategic projects. She is an avid travel explorer. A lifelong learner, she holds interest in yoga, naturopathy, energy healing and crystallography.

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