Nov 12, 2025
Welcome to Manufacturing Greatness with Trevor Blondeel, where we work with organizations to manufacture greatness by leveraging resources you already have to achieve greater retention, productivity, and profits. To learn more, visit www.manufacturinggreatness.com and click here to subscribe to Trevor’s monthly newsletter.
Now, let’s jump in!
Are you leading like a thermometer or a thermostat?
If you find yourself reacting to problems instead of setting the tone for your team, you may be acting like a thermometer. With the right mindset, you can become a thermostatic leader who creates stability, clarity, and accountability on the shop floor.
In this episode, Sheri Miller Holt, author of Thermostatic Leadership: The Quiet Power of Creating Balance and Influence, shares insights on manufacturing leadership, communication skills, and employee engagement for Operations Managers, Production Managers, Manufacturing Managers, and Shift Supervisors.
Sheri explains how thermostatic leadership helps manufacturing leaders balance firmness with compassion, strengthen trust, and build shared accountability. You’ll learn practical strategies to improve manufacturing culture, develop frontline leadership habits, and create workplaces where people feel supported, engaged, and motivated to perform.
2:20 - Leaders must decide whether they simply react like a
thermometer or adjust and influence like a thermostat.
4:00 - Thermostatic leaders empathize, mobilize, and shift the
energy in a room toward positive outcomes
6:50 - Real organizational change begins when leaders change their
own behaviors and mindsets
8:30 - Leaders should remove barriers that prevent people from
performing at their best
10:50 - The biggest obstacle to better leadership is simplicity —
people think it has to be more complex than it really is
11:30 - Knowing your team personally builds trust and
motivation
12:40 – Sheri’s Dr. GRAK framework focuses on shared results,
resources, accountability, and agreed-upon consequences
14:20 - Both leaders and their teams should share outcomes, both
good and bad
16:30 - When people understand shared consequences, they
self-manage and become more invested in team success
22:40 – Shift your “you” statements to “I” statements to avoid
accusations and foster empathy
24:50 - Compassionate leadership doesn’t weaken accountability — it
deepens it. When people feel cared for, they perform better and
take ownership
Connect with Sheri Holt
Find her on LinkedIn
and Facebook
Buy her
book