Employee Engagement, Executive Coaching, Leadership
The Hidden Cost of Leading Friends
When we get called in to work with a struggling leader, one of the first things we do is interview the people on that leader’s team. It tells us a great deal about what’s really happening inside a department. Over the years, we definitely see patterns. One of those patterns emerges with surprising regularity. Somewhere in the mix, there is either a direct report who has become the leader’s close friend, or a friend the leader brought in and hired. In both cases, the dynamic follows a predictable path. The leader struggles to hold that person accountable. The rest of the team notices. Morale starts to slide. And the leader, often well-intentioned, can’t quite figure out why things feel off, and trust is an issue.
The two scenarios get there differently, but they land in the same place. When a leader gradually becomes close friends with someone on their team, the shift is usually subtle. Over time, the relationship deepens, the boundaries soften, and what started as a strong working relationship quietly becomes something harder to manage. When a leader hires a friend from the outside, the problem is baked in from day one. The history, the loyalty, and the social dynamic all arrive before the job does. In our experience, the second scenario tends to create problems faster and at a higher cost, because the friendship predates the leader’s authority entirely.
What makes both situations difficult is that they are often rooted in something genuinely good. Leaders who care deeply about their people, who want authentic relationships at work, who value loyalty and trust, are not wrong to want those things. In fact, we would argue that those qualities are essential. The issue is that caring deeply about someone and being their friend are not the same thing, and confusing the two puts both the relationship and the leadership at risk.
The most visible consequence is accountability. As we have written before [link to The Cost of Avoiding People Decisions: The Cost of Avoiding People Decisions – Peter Barron Stark Companies, the failure to hold people accountable is one of the most common and costly leadership mistakes we see. When friendship enters the picture, it raises the emotional stakes of every difficult conversation. Leaders find themselves making exceptions they would not make for others, softening feedback that needs to be direct, or simply avoiding the conversation altogether. They tell themselves they are being compassionate. What they are actually doing is letting the friendship override the leadership.
The second consequence is perception, and it spreads quickly. When team members sense that one person is being held to a different standard, they do not stay quiet about it. They watch. They compare. They talk. And as we have noted in our work on trust, trust erodes not through single events but through the accumulation of small signals over time. Perceived favoritism is one of the fastest ways to burn through the trust a leader has built.
What we recommend to the leaders we coach is not distance. It is not a colder, more transactional style of management. It is something more precise: be genuinely warm, be deeply interested in your people, and be friendly in every meaningful sense of the word. Just don’t be personal friends. The distinction matters more than it sounds. A leader who is friendly listens well, remembers what matters to people, shows up for them in hard moments, and makes them feel valued. A leader who is friends with their direct reports does all of that and then finds it nearly impossible to deliver the feedback or make the call that the role requires.
How to stay close without crossing the line.
Know where your line is. Genuine care, regular check-ins, and interest in your people’s lives are all part of strong leadership. Socializing outside of work is not off-limits, but keep it inclusive and keep it brief. If you go to happy hour, invite the whole team, not just the people you are closest to.
Hold the standard for everyone. The clearest test of whether a friendship is affecting your leadership is whether you are applying the same expectations across the board. If you find yourself making exceptions for one person that you would not make for another, the friendship has started doing the leading.
Hire for fit and capability, not familiarity. Bringing a friend into your organization feels like a safe bet. You know them, you trust them, and you want to work with people you like. But the comfort of that familiarity is exactly what makes it harder to lead them when it matters most. If you are going to hire someone you know personally, go in with clear eyes about what you are taking on.
The goal is not to keep your people at arm’s length. The goal is to care enough about them, and about the team around them, to lead with clarity when it counts. That is what they actually need from you. And in the end, it is what protects the relationship far better than the friendship ever could.







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