Why Do People Want Freedom But Not Judgment?

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Over the years, I’ve found myself returning to the same question whenever discussions about leadership, ownership, and accountability come up.

The answer has never been obvious to me.

In fact, the more people I manage and the more businesses I observe, the less certain I become.

What follows is an attempt to think through the question rather than answer it.

Answer #1: I don’t think people necessarily want to be told what to do. I think they want clarity. There is a difference. Most people are comfortable making decisions once they understand the objective, the boundaries, and how success will be measured.

Answer #2: Because managers usually observe the symptom, not the cause. They see people waiting for instructions and conclude that people lack initiative. What they don’t always see is the risk calculation happening underneath.

Answer #3: In many organizations, following instructions is safer than making decisions. If I do exactly what I was told and the outcome is poor, responsibility is shared. If I take initiative and the outcome is poor, responsibility may rest entirely on me.

Answer #4: Absolutely. It may not be ideal, but it is often rational.

Answer #5: That’s the pattern I find most interesting. Many people want autonomy. Far fewer want accountability. The two are often mistaken for each other.

Answer #6: Autonomy is the freedom to make decisions. Accountability is accepting that those decisions will be evaluated. People often enjoy the first part and struggle with the second.

Answer #7: To some extent, yes. Nobody enjoys being wrong. Nobody enjoys criticism. But ownership begins where defensiveness ends.

Answer #8: That ownership is much rarer than intelligence, experience, or skill. True ownership means being comfortable saying, “This was my decision. Here’s why I made it. Here’s what I learned.”

Answer #9: To create an environment where people know the outcome, understand the boundaries, and feel safe enough to exercise judgment. Most people don’t need more instructions. They need more clarity.

Answer #10: To recognize that authority and accountability are a package deal. You can’t sustainably ask for one while avoiding the other.


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delhiabhi@gmail.com
delhiabhi@gmail.com
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