Why Teams Struggle With Accountability (And How to Fix It)
by
David Edwards
November 4, 2025


by
David Edwards
Katie Parrott is a staff writer and AI editorial lead at Every. She writes Working Overtime, a column about how technology reshapes work, and builds AI-powered systems for the Every editorial team.
Last updated:
November 4, 2025
When leaders discuss accountability issues, they often attribute them to motivation, discipline, or engagement. They assume that teams lack drive or commitment. But in most organizations, accountability failures have nothing to do with motivation. They stem from ambiguity—unclear expectations, overlapping responsibilities, and inconsistent communication.
A financial services company we partnered with faced this issue. Despite a talented leadership team, projects frequently stalled. Deadlines slipped, deliverables were revisited multiple times, and cross-functional initiatives lacked momentum. Leaders assumed the problem was insufficient follow-through. But a closer look revealed that the real issue was structural.
Team members did not know who owned what. Responsibilities were shared informally, and roles blurred as projects evolved. Without clear ownership, accountability became diffuse, and progress slowed.
Key takeaways
Accountability fails when ownership is unclear.
Responsibilities must be unambiguous and visible.
Progress increases when teams understand what “good” looks like.
Accountability systems should reduce friction, not add it.
To uncover the issue, we examined how decisions were made, how projects were assigned, and how progress was tracked. We discovered that most initiatives had multiple “owners,” none of whom had the authority or clarity to drive completion. Teams compensated by escalating decisions and seeking validation from senior leaders, increasing bottlenecks.
The first step was to redesign ownership. We applied a simple but rigorous principle: every initiative requires one accountable owner. Others may contribute, support, or consult, but accountability must rest with a single individual. This structure eliminated ambiguity and empowered leaders to act with confidence.
Next, we clarified expectations. Instead of vague deliverables, we defined measurable outcomes and timelines. Teams now understood what success looked like and how progress would be evaluated. We also introduced lightweight reporting mechanisms that made progress visible without creating administrative burdens.
These structural changes produced immediate improvements. Deadlines stabilized, projects moved forward with fewer escalations, and team members reported feeling more empowered and clearer about their responsibilities. Accountability shifted from a source of frustration to a source of clarity.
The key insight is that accountability is not about pressure. It is about structure. When roles are clear, expectations explicit, and ownership singular, accountability becomes natural. When ambiguity persists, no amount of motivation or discipline can compensate.
Organizations that design for accountability see stronger execution, better collaboration, and more consistent outcomes. It is not a question of effort, but of clarity.
Insights
Read more articles
Questions & answers



