
Every leader eventually faces the same uncomfortable truth: a team member has stopped growing. The early excitement is gone. Feedback doesn't land. Performance plateaus. Worse, it begins to slide.
This moment defines leadership. Easy reactions include ignoring the problem, transferring the person, or moving straight to performance improvement plans (PIPs). But great leaders pause. They ask a harder question: Why isn't this person improving?
The answer is rarely laziness. More often, it is a breakdown in clarity, capability, motivation, or fit. Your job is to diagnose which one—and then act with precision and empathy.
This guide covers exactly how to handle a team member who isn't improving. You will learn a structured diagnostic process, proven coaching frameworks, and when to recognize that improvement may not be possible.
Table of Contents
The First Step: Check Your Own Leadership
Before you examine your team member, examine yourself. Stagnation often starts at the top.
Ask yourself these tough questions:
- Have I clearly defined what "improvement" looks like for this role? If the goalposts move every month, the person cannot hit them.
- Am I giving feedback frequently enough? Once-a-quarter reviews rarely drive real change.
- Do I provide specific, behavioral feedback—or just vague praise and criticism?
- Have I removed obstacles in their way, or am I part of the problem?
Leaders who skip this step risk damaging trust. Your team member may already feel unseen or misunderstood.
Expert insight: Research from Gallup shows that only 21% of employees strongly agree they are managed in a way that motivates them to do outstanding work. The direct manager accounts for 70% of the variance in team engagement.
Diagnose the Root Cause of Stagnation
Improvement stalls for specific reasons. Use the Skill-Will Matrix to categorize where your team member sits.
| Quadrant | High Skill | Low Skill |
|---|---|---|
| High Will | Top performer (maintain) | Teachable beginner (coach) |
| Low Will | Disengaged expert (mentor) | Underperformer (PIP or move) |
But this is only the starting point. Dig deeper into four core areas.
1. The Clarity Gap
The person may not understand what improvement means. You may think the expectations are obvious. They are not.
Signs of a clarity gap:
- The team member asks frequent clarification questions.
- They deliver work that consistently misses the mark.
- They express confusion about priorities.
Fix: Write down three specific behaviors that would show improvement over the next 30 days. Share them. Ask the person to paraphrase back to you.
2. The Capability Gap
The skill required exceeds the person's current ability. This is not a character flaw. It is a training or experience gap.
Signs of a capability gap:
- The person works hard but results remain poor.
- They make the same mistakes repeatedly.
- They lack foundational knowledge in a key area.
Fix: Pair them with a mentor. Assign structured learning. Reduce scope temporarily to allow focus.
3. The Motivation Gap
The person can improve but does not want to. This is the hardest diagnosis because leaders often mistake capability issues for motivation issues.
Signs of a motivation gap:
- The person meets minimum standards but never exceeds them.
- They disengage in meetings.
- They show signs of burnout or resentment.
Fix: Have an honest career conversation. Ask: "Where do you see yourself in 12 months?" If their answer does not align with the role, you have a fit problem—not a performance problem.
4. The Environment Gap
The system is broken, not the person. Poor processes, unclear priorities, or toxic team dynamics can crush improvement.
Signs of an environment gap:
- Multiple team members struggle with the same issue.
- Turnover is high.
- Tools and resources are outdated.
Fix: Audit team processes first. If the environment is dysfunctional, no amount of coaching will fix the individual.
The Coaching Conversation: A Step-by-Step Framework
Once you understand the root cause, schedule a dedicated conversation. Do not handle this over Slack or during a 15-minute check-in.
Preparation checklist:
- Gather specific examples of missed expectations (dates, behaviors, outcomes).
- Write down what success looks like in measurable terms.
- Anticipate their emotional response.
Step 1: State the Observed Reality (Without Judgment)
Open with facts, not conclusions.
"Over the last four weeks, I've noticed that your weekly reports have been submitted two to three days late, and two have contained data errors."
Avoid: "You're not trying hard enough."
Step 2: Express the Impact
Connect the behavior to team or business outcomes.
"This delays our client updates and creates extra work for the review team."
Step 3: Ask for Their Perspective
This is where most leaders rush. Do not skip this step.
"I want to understand what's happening from your side. What has been going on?"
Listen without interrupting. The answer will tell you whether it is a clarity, capability, motivation, or environment issue.
Step 4: Co-Create the Improvement Plan
Do not hand down a plan. Build it together.
Ask:
- "What support do you need to get back on track?"
- "What do you think is a realistic timeline to improve?"
- "How will we know when you've improved?"
Step 5: Set Clear Consequences (Without Threats)
Improvement plans need stakes. But frame them as natural outcomes, not punishments.
"If we can get this resolved in the next 30 days, I see a strong path forward. If not, we'll need to consider other roles or arrangements."
Designing an Effective Performance Improvement Plan (PIP)
A PIP is not a weapon. It is a roadmap. Most PIPs fail because they are vague or punitive.
Elements of a strong PIP:
- Specific behavior changes: Not "improve communication." Instead: "Respond to all client emails within 4 hours."
- Measurable milestones: Weekly check-ins with clear metrics.
- Support resources: Training, mentorship, adjusted workload.
- Time-bound: 30 to 60 days maximum. Stretching beyond this creates anxiety without progress.
Example PIP Table
| Objective | Current State | Target | Support | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| On-time task delivery | 60% on time | 95% on time | Weekly prioritization coaching | 30 days |
| Error rate in reports | 5 errors per month | <1 error per month | Peer review process | 30 days |
| Team meeting participation | Silent in meetings | 2 contributions per meeting | Pre-read agenda 24 hours ahead | 30 days |
Coaching Techniques That Drive Improvement
Coaching is not telling people what to do. It is drawing out their own solutions.
The GROW Model
- Goal: What do you want to achieve?
- Reality: Where are you now relative to that goal?
- Options: What could you do to close the gap?
- Will: What will you commit to doing?
Example question: "On a scale of 1 to 10, how confident are you that you can meet this deadline? What would make it a 9?"
Socratic Questioning
Instead of giving answers, ask:
- "What do you think is causing this issue?"
- "What have you already tried?"
- "What would happen if you tried the opposite approach?"
The SBI Feedback Model
- Situation: When and where the behavior occurred.
- Behavior: What the person did (observable, specific).
- Impact: The result of that behavior.
"During yesterday's client call (situation), you interrupted the client three times (behavior). This made them feel unheard and we lost credibility (impact)."
When Improvement Doesn't Happen: The Hard Decisions
You have done the coaching. You have built the plan. You have provided support. And still, nothing changes.
This is the moment most leaders avoid. They hope the problem will resolve itself. It will not.
Signs that improvement is not coming:
- The person agrees but does not act.
- Excuses replace ownership.
- Effort increases but results remain flat (capability ceiling).
- The person has checked out emotionally.
The Three Options
| Option | When to Use | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Role reassignment | Skill mismatch, good attitude | May not have open roles |
| Managed exit | Motivation gap, culture mismatch | Severance cost, morale dip |
| Termination | Clear PIP failure, dishonesty | Legal risk if not documented |
Documentation is non-negotiable. Track conversations, emails, and performance data. If a legal challenge arises, your documentation is your defense.
Preventing Future Stagnation
Great leaders do not wait for problems. They build systems that prevent stagnation.
Weekly 15-minute check-ins: Not performance reviews. Growth conversations. "What are you learning? What is blocking you?"
Growth maps for every role: Each team member should know the next three skills they need to develop, regardless of performance level.
Peer coaching circles: Pair team members to give each other feedback. This normalizes improvement as a team value, not a punishment.
Culture of radical candor: Leaders who care personally and challenge directly create environments where improvement is expected, not feared.
A Note on Psychological Safety
When people fear punishment, they hide problems. When they feel safe, they reveal their struggles early—long before they become performance issues.
Psychological safety does not mean avoiding hard conversations. It means creating conditions where honest conversations are possible.
Ways to build it:
- Admit your own mistakes publicly.
- Ask for feedback on your leadership.
- Celebrate learning, not just outcomes.
Final Thoughts
A team member who isn't improving is not a failure. It is a signal. It signals a gap in leadership, a mismatch in role, or a need for support that has not been provided.
The best leaders do not avoid this signal. They lean into it. They diagnose with curiosity. They coach with structure. And when improvement remains impossible, they act decisively—for the good of the individual and the team.
Your job is not to fix everyone. Your job is to give everyone a real chance to grow. That distinction is the heart of leadership.