Productivity


How to Spot Burnout Before It Happens

Organizations are pouring resources into recovery and self-care programs, yet they’re often missing the earlier warning signs that predict burnout long before performance collapses.

Burnout is receiving plenty of attention these days—but it’s rarely where the problem actually begins. By the time a leader reaches full burnout, the decline in performance, communication, and overall capacity is already well underway. Rather than preventing the issue, most organizations are simply reacting to it after significant damage has occurred.

In a recent conversation with a senior executive at a large nonprofit undergoing rapid change, I asked if her team was facing a “fire drill.” She paused and replied, “No, it’s more like things are smoldering.”

That distinction is critical. Most organizations don’t recognize a problem until the flames are visible. By then, the impact on people and results is already unfolding.

More than 75% of the global workforce reports experiencing burnout. In response, companies have invested heavily in workplace wellness initiatives, many centered on self-care. However, these efforts frequently miss the mark because they address the *outcome* rather than the root causes.

The more effective question isn’t “How do we reduce burnout?” but rather: *What are the early signals that burnout is already in motion, and how can we intervene sooner?*

 Overwhelm: The Precursor to Burnout

In my work with high-performing leaders—particularly women—I’ve found that burnout is typically not the starting point. It’s the end result. The earlier, quieter signal is **overwhelm**.

High performers often fly under the radar because they continue to deliver results. From the outside, everything appears fine. Internally, they’re operating under mounting pressure, shouldering greater responsibility, and making high-stakes decisions with shrinking margins for error. Few people stop to ask if something is wrong.

This is especially true for leaders who are also primary caretakers. Childcare costs now exceed housing costs in all 50 U.S. states, and nearly a quarter of workers belong to the “sandwich generation,” caring for both children and aging parents. These leaders carry responsibility not only for their teams but also for their families and the emotional load of those around them.

Yet many workplace solutions continue to add more—more tools, more programs, more self-care expectations—to an already overloaded system. The result? These initiatives go largely unused because leaders lack the bandwidth to adopt them. Overwhelm builds, and burnout becomes almost inevitable.

**Overwhelm isn’t a personal failure. It’s valuable data.**

It signals that a leader’s current strategies are no longer aligned with their reality. Overwhelm commonly emerges during periods of change, when previously effective approaches stop delivering the same outcomes.

The challenge is that the sources of overwhelm aren’t always obvious. Leaders sense something is off but often don’t know where to begin. Over time, I’ve identified five predictable patterns—what I call the **Overwhelm Culprits**—that quietly drain capacity long before burnout sets in:

 The Five Overwhelm Culprits

1. **Lack of Clarity**  
   Leaders move fast but rarely pause to evaluate whether their actions still align with core priorities. Without clarity, speed creates more misalignment than progress. Organizations that address this build regular opportunities for leaders to reassess what truly matters.

2. **Lack of Confidence**  
   Even strong performers can begin second-guessing decisions, leading to hesitation, overthinking, and unnecessary mental load. This is often rooted in imposter syndrome rather than a lack of ability. Targeted personal and professional development that builds both skill and self-belief is essential.

3. **Lack of Community**  
   Leaders are expected to carry more without adequate support, resources, or shared accountability. This concentrates pressure on high performers, turning individual strength into an unsustainable burden. Intentional structures that foster inclusion, belonging, and real support are critical.

4. **Lack of Conditioning**  
   When leaders neglect physical and mental conditioning—through hydration, nutrition, exercise, sleep, and mental health practices—it becomes much harder to sustain performance under pressure. Wellness should be treated as a performance strategy, not just recovery or self-care.

5. **Lack of Consistency**  
   Without reliable systems and routines, even good strategies fail to stick. This creates repeated problem-solving and higher cognitive load. Organizations that implement effective processes reduce decision fatigue and free up mental space for strategic thinking.
A Better Approach for Organizations

Rather than asking, “Are our leaders burned out?” organizations should ask sharper questions:

- Where is capacity currently being strained?
- What invisible workloads are our leaders carrying that aren’t being recognized?
- Where are we relying on high performers to compensate for broken systems—and calling it “leadership”?

Burnout is not the first sign of trouble. It’s the cumulative result of unresolved overwhelm.

Forward-thinking organizations don’t just invest in recovery—they learn to detect and address overwhelm in real time. The earlier leaders can realign their strategies, the better they can sustain both high performance and personal well-being—without having to break down to recover from the role itself.