End of management is here: New leadership trend that will replace managers, define your career success
For a long time, we thought of a boss as a “manager”. The word itself tells a story. To manage means to handle, to control, to organise. It sounds like moving pieces on a board but people are not pieces. They are not resources to be used up. Over the last few years, expectations of employees from their leaders has evolved. Employees do not want a boss who just gives orders. They want a guide, a mentor an ally who is their partner in their journey towards success. They want someone to help them grow. The era of “managing” is over. The era of “mentoring” has begun.
The recent years have marked a clear shift in leadership, from traditional management to meaningful mentoring, driven by rapid technological change, evolving workforce expectations and a stronger focus on human-centered workplaces. Leaders today are expected not only to guide teams but to inspire growth, build trust and enable long-term development. This transition has become one of the most important leadership lessons of the year.
In 2025, organisations across sectors have realised that managing tasks is no longer enough. With AI automating operational work and data driving decision-making, the real differentiator is how leaders invest in people. In an interview with the Times of India, Vishal Sood, Founder and CEO at Placecom, shared, “Mentoring has emerged as the new leadership currency, influencing retention, engagement and innovation. Employees want leaders who listen, guide and unlock their potential, not just supervisors who measure output.”
According to him, one of the biggest lessons is the shift from control to collaboration. Leaders who encourage open conversations, empower teams to take ownership and treat mistakes as learning opportunities have built stronger, more resilient teams. This approach has shown significant impact in fast-changing environments where adaptability matters more than perfection. Stressing upon the importance of personalised leadership, Sood explained, “In a hybrid and multigenerational workforce, one-size-fits-all management no longer works. Leaders who tailor their mentoring style, based on an individual’s strengths, aspirations and working style, have seen improved performance and stronger relationships.”
This shift has positioned leaders as enablers of careers, not just managers of tasks. Emotional intelligence has also stood out as a defining skill. Sood elaborated, “Leaders who demonstrate empathy, self-awareness and active listening have been able to build psychologically safe environments where people feel valued and motivated. This emotional connection is proving to be just as important as technical expertise, especially in high-growth and high-pressure workplaces.”
Mentoring is a two-way process. The best leaders engage in reverse mentoring, learning from younger employees about new technologies, cultural trends and evolving expectations. Sood opined, “This collaborative learning mindset has helped leaders stay relevant, open-minded and future-ready. The biggest leadership insight is clear: Managing ensures performance. Mentoring ensures progress. Leaders who move beyond supervision and step into the role of mentors are creating workplaces where people grow, innovate and thrive. The future belongs to such leaders, those who guide with purpose, lead with empathy and uplift others along the way.”
Talking about why this is happening now, Sonica Aron, Founder and Managing Partner at Marching Sheep (a global leading HR firm), said, “Look at the workforce. Nearly 70% of our workforce today is Gen Z and younger millennials. We have digital tools that do the boring work for us. Knowledge, data, information is available at the click of a button. Team members are no longer solely dependent on their managers to get inputs. We have teams working from home and the office. Today the geographically scattered team requires to be motivated, aligned and empowered. You cannot force people to do good work. You have to inspire them.”
She highlighted the key leadership lessons that mark this shift from managing to mentoring:
The title ”Manager” might be on your business card but it should not be your mindset. The tasks of managing budgets, rosters, reports, will never go away but they are not the heart of the job anymore. The heart of the job is people. We need to stop managing talent and start mentoring potential. We need to stop counting hours and start making hours count. It is a big shift. It takes patience. It takes letting go of control but the payoff is huge. You build a team that can work without you. You build a legacy that lasts. So, look at your style today. Are you moving pieces? Or are you growing people? The future belongs to the mentors.
Are you a manager or a mentor?
In 2025, organisations across sectors have realised that managing tasks is no longer enough. With AI automating operational work and data driving decision-making, the real differentiator is how leaders invest in people. In an interview with the Times of India, Vishal Sood, Founder and CEO at Placecom, shared, “Mentoring has emerged as the new leadership currency, influencing retention, engagement and innovation. Employees want leaders who listen, guide and unlock their potential, not just supervisors who measure output.”
Manager vs Mentor: The Leadership Shift Redefining Workplaces in 2026
According to him, one of the biggest lessons is the shift from control to collaboration. Leaders who encourage open conversations, empower teams to take ownership and treat mistakes as learning opportunities have built stronger, more resilient teams. This approach has shown significant impact in fast-changing environments where adaptability matters more than perfection. Stressing upon the importance of personalised leadership, Sood explained, “In a hybrid and multigenerational workforce, one-size-fits-all management no longer works. Leaders who tailor their mentoring style, based on an individual’s strengths, aspirations and working style, have seen improved performance and stronger relationships.”
This shift has positioned leaders as enablers of careers, not just managers of tasks. Emotional intelligence has also stood out as a defining skill. Sood elaborated, “Leaders who demonstrate empathy, self-awareness and active listening have been able to build psychologically safe environments where people feel valued and motivated. This emotional connection is proving to be just as important as technical expertise, especially in high-growth and high-pressure workplaces.”
The leadership shift you can't ignore
Mentoring is a two-way process. The best leaders engage in reverse mentoring, learning from younger employees about new technologies, cultural trends and evolving expectations. Sood opined, “This collaborative learning mindset has helped leaders stay relevant, open-minded and future-ready. The biggest leadership insight is clear: Managing ensures performance. Mentoring ensures progress. Leaders who move beyond supervision and step into the role of mentors are creating workplaces where people grow, innovate and thrive. The future belongs to such leaders, those who guide with purpose, lead with empathy and uplift others along the way.”
Gen Z Has Spoken: Traditional Managers Are Officially Outdated
Talking about why this is happening now, Sonica Aron, Founder and Managing Partner at Marching Sheep (a global leading HR firm), said, “Look at the workforce. Nearly 70% of our workforce today is Gen Z and younger millennials. We have digital tools that do the boring work for us. Knowledge, data, information is available at the click of a button. Team members are no longer solely dependent on their managers to get inputs. We have teams working from home and the office. Today the geographically scattered team requires to be motivated, aligned and empowered. You cannot force people to do good work. You have to inspire them.”
She highlighted the key leadership lessons that mark this shift from managing to mentoring:
- Stop watching, start trusting - In the past, a manager’s job was to check tasks. Did you finish the report? What time did you log in? This is not leadership. It is babysitting. Aron said, “A mentor acts differently. A mentor sets a goal and steps back. They trust the team to find the way. This builds confidence. When people feel trusted, they own their work. They do not just follow rules. They solve problems. In 2025, we learned that control kills speed. Trust creates speed. If you have to check every small step, you are too slow for today's market.”
- Ask more, tell less - A manager was expected to have all answers. A mentor has the right questions. This is a hard habit to break. Aron said, “Leaders love to fix things. When a problem comes up, we want to say, “Do it this way” but that stops learning. The best leaders this year practiced a new skill. They paused. Instead of giving the answer, they asked, “What do you think we should do?” This simple change is powerful. It forces the team to think. It builds their muscles for making decisions. A manager creates followers. A mentor creates new leaders.”
- Focus on the person, not just the output - Burnout was a big buzzword last year because we treated people like machines. We looked at their output but not their minds, their ambitions, likes and dislikes. Mentoring is personal. You cannot mentor someone if you do not know them. Aron suggested, “You have to know what drives them. What are their dreams? What are they afraid of? In 2025, smart leaders made time for real talk. They did not just talk about deadlines. They asked, “How are you feeling?” They looked at the whole human. When people feel seen, they stay. When they feel like a number, they leave. It is that simple.”
- Learning goes both ways - The old boss stood at the top of the hill. They knew everything. The team knew nothing. Today, that is false. Aron said, “A 22-year-old on your team might know more about AI than a CEO with 20 years of experience. Mentoring is a two-way street. We call it “Reverse Mentoring.” The leader guides the junior on strategy. The junior guides the leader on new trends. Both sides learn. Both sides win. It breaks down the ego. It shows that we are all students.”
- Mistakes are part of the plan - Managers hate mistakes. Mistakes mess up the plan. They look bad on a report. Aron said, “Mentors expect mistakes. They know that growth is messy. If your team never fails, they are not trying anything new. The lesson for 2025 is to create a safe space. When things go wrong, do not blame. Ask, “What did we learn?” This turns a loss into a lesson. It removes fear. Fear freezes people. Safety frees them.”
Bottom line
The title ”Manager” might be on your business card but it should not be your mindset. The tasks of managing budgets, rosters, reports, will never go away but they are not the heart of the job anymore. The heart of the job is people. We need to stop managing talent and start mentoring potential. We need to stop counting hours and start making hours count. It is a big shift. It takes patience. It takes letting go of control but the payoff is huge. You build a team that can work without you. You build a legacy that lasts. So, look at your style today. Are you moving pieces? Or are you growing people? The future belongs to the mentors.
Top Comment
P
Prasad Mallavaram
13 days ago
What go around comes around. It's good these concepts and management practices get repeated. I am.a retired HR guy. Most of the inputs enumerated in the article are true and were advocated even in 70s and 80s. The difference is current managers, better comply, to avoid attrition of high fliers in particular. In the bygone era, attrition due to this reason were far and few. Now with the classification of employees being talked about in every corner, yes, Gen Z category whether they are good or not doesn't matter. But the common traits in them are they dislike micro-managing coupled with relatively less patience. So, managers, better comply with the mentor approach for the good of the team and the organization.Read allPost comment
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