When teams misfire: what misalignment really signals
- Robert Slob
- Jun 10
- 3 min read
Team misalignment is rarely a team problem.
When priorities clash, communication breaks down, decision-making slows, and execution loses momentum; most organisations focus on the visible symptoms. They introduce new processes, hold more meetings, clarify responsibilities, or invest in team development.
Sometimes these interventions help. Often, they don't.
Because misalignment is usually not the cause of the problem. It is the consequence of something deeper. It is one of the first visible signs that organisational coherence has weakened.
Looking Beyond the Symptoms
Leaders typically notice misalignment through its effects:
Delayed decisions
Conflicting priorities
Reduced accountability
Frustration between teams
Slow execution
Declining trust

These are often treated as communication or performance issues.
In reality, they are signals that different parts of the organisation are no longer operating from the same understanding, rhythm, or intent.
The organisation may still be functioning, but the coherence that connects leadership, teams, strategy, and execution has begun to erode.
When that happens, performance becomes increasingly difficult to sustain.
Four Sources of Organisational Misalignment
Through our work with organisations, we repeatedly observe four patterns that contribute to the loss of coherence.
1. Information Overload
Teams today receive more information than ever before. Strategic initiatives, changing priorities, leadership messages, project updates, dashboards, meetings, and digital communication channels all compete for attention.
The challenge is rarely a lack of information. The challenge is a lack of clarity.
When people receive too many competing signals, they become uncertain about what matters most. Decision-making slows, priorities blur, and execution becomes fragmented.
The issue is not communication volume. It is signal clarity.
2. Rhythm Misalignment
Every part of an organisation operates at its own pace. Executives often think in quarters or years. Teams work in weeks, sprints, projects, or operational cycles. Problems emerge when these rhythms become disconnected.
What leadership sees as urgency may be experienced by teams as disruption. What teams see as necessary stability may be perceived by leadership as resistance. Without synchronisation between strategic and operational rhythms, friction increases and alignment decreases.
3. Loss of Shared Context
People make decisions based on the information available to them. When context becomes fragmented, different parts of the organisation begin creating different interpretations of the same reality.
Teams may continue working hard and making competent decisions, but those decisions gradually drift away from strategic intent. The result is not poor performance. It is a coherent effort being directed in different directions.
4. Structural Contradictions
Many organisations unintentionally create competing expectations.
They encourage autonomy while maintaining excessive approval processes.
They promote innovation while punishing risk.
They demand collaboration while rewarding individual performance.
These contradictions create hidden friction. People are simultaneously pulled toward conflicting objectives, consuming energy that could otherwise be directed toward value creation. The organisation remains active, but its energy becomes dispersed.
Why Traditional Solutions Often Fail
When misalignment appears, organisations often respond by asking people to work harder.
More communication.
More meetings.
More reporting.
More oversight.
Yet these actions frequently increase complexity without addressing the underlying issue. The problem is not usually effort. The problem is coherence.
When organisational coherence weakens, teams are forced to compensate for structural friction they cannot see. No amount of individual effort can fully overcome a system that is working against itself.
Restoring Organisational Coherence
At The NeO Frequency, we approach misalignment differently.
Rather than focusing solely on behaviours, we examine the systemic conditions that shape those behaviours. We look at how leadership intent moves through the organisation, where clarity is lost, where contradictions emerge, and where energy is being consumed unnecessarily.
This includes:
Identifying conflicting priorities and messages
Measuring how strategic intent is understood across organisational levels
Aligning leadership direction and decision-making
Synchronising operational and strategic rhythms
Removing structural contradictions that create friction
The objective is not to create more activity. The objective is to restore coherence.
When Coherence Returns
When organisational coherence strengthens, many performance issues begin to resolve themselves.
Communication becomes clearer.
Decision-making accelerates.
Execution aligns more naturally with strategy.
Trust increases.
Accountability improves.
People don't suddenly become more capable, but the system begins supporting the capabilities that already exist. Misalignment is not a failure. It is feedback.
It is the organisation signalling that something deeper requires attention. The most effective leaders learn to read these signals early.
Because when coherence is restored, performance is no longer driven by effort alone.
It is sustained by alignment, clarity, and the energy that emerges when an organisation moves as one.
Floris Robert Slob, Founder of The NeO Frequency

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