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Provide Leadership to Individuals and Teams: Participation, Delegation and Confident Action
Strong leadership gives people direction, invites practical input and places responsibility where it can succeed. In public safety teams, leaders must communicate the purpose, involve people wisely, support innovation and delegate tasks with care.
Mark each section as refreshed
The “L” in the TEAM LEAD Cycle
Part 6 focuses on the “L” in the TEAM LEAD Cycle: Leadership through delegation and participation. PUATEA003 expects leaders to communicate team function and organisational goals, use participative decision making, support new and innovative work practices, delegate tasks according to procedure and ensure allocated tasks match the competence of team members.
Good leadership does not mean doing everything personally. Instead, it means setting a clear direction, helping the team understand its purpose and sharing responsibility in a fair and supported way. As a result, the team becomes more capable, more involved and more reliable.
Communicate the team’s function and the organisation’s goals
People lead and follow more effectively when they understand the purpose of the team and the wider goal behind the work.
Make the team purpose visible
PUATEA003 begins this leadership element by requiring leaders to communicate team function and organisational goals. In simple terms, team members need to know what their team exists to achieve and how that work supports the organisation. Without that clarity, people may complete tasks but miss the bigger purpose.
For example, a team may handle readiness checks, shift coordination, public safety preparation, incident support or workplace improvement tasks. Each activity has a place within the organisation’s wider objectives. Therefore, a capable leader explains the connection between daily work and the larger mission.
Connect purpose to action
Clear goals support better decisions. When the team understands why a task matters, members can judge priorities more accurately. They can also see why standards, timelines and follow-through matter. In turn, this reduces confusion and helps the leader maintain focus.
Leaders should communicate purpose in plain language. Short explanations often work best. For example, “This handover process matters because it helps the next crew start with accurate information.” That simple link turns a routine task into meaningful work.
Before assigning work, explain the purpose. People support tasks more strongly when they understand the reason behind them.
Use participative decision making to strengthen team work
Leaders remain responsible for decisions, yet teams often produce better practical outcomes when people contribute to the process.
Invite useful input
The unit states that participative decision making is used to develop, implement and review the work of the team and to allocate responsibilities. This does not remove leadership authority. Instead, it asks leaders to involve team members where their insight can improve the work.
Team members often know where a process slows down, where a briefing becomes unclear or where a responsibility could be allocated more effectively. Therefore, their input can improve both planning and implementation. Participation also builds commitment because people better understand how the decision formed.
Use participation at the right moments
Participative decision making works well during planning, workplace reviews, local process improvement and the allocation of practical responsibilities. However, leaders must still respect organisational requirements and time pressures. Some decisions need immediate direction. Others benefit from discussion.
A strong leader knows the difference. They can say, “This requirement is fixed, but I want your input on the best way we implement it locally.” That wording keeps the boundary clear while still valuing team involvement.
Confusing participation with total agreement
Team input matters, but leaders still need to make decisions in line with organisational goals and procedures.
Explain what is open for input
This helps the team contribute meaningfully without creating false expectations.
Give people room to develop new and better work practices
Improvement grows when leaders welcome sensible ideas and help teams explore better ways of working.
Encourage improvement with purpose
PUATEA003 expects leaders to give individuals and teams opportunities to develop new and innovative work practices and strategies. This does not mean changing processes carelessly. Instead, it means leaders should allow practical improvement ideas to surface and be explored through the correct channels.
For instance, a team might suggest a clearer briefing layout, a smarter handover prompt or a better way to organise a routine check. When these ideas align with standards and procedure, they may improve consistency and team ownership.
Keep innovation safe and relevant
Innovation should still serve the work. Therefore, leaders need to ask useful questions. Does the idea support organisational goals? Does it fit required standards? Does it improve clarity, safety, efficiency or team coordination? If the answer is yes, the idea deserves thoughtful consideration.
Leaders should also close the loop. If a suggestion cannot proceed, say why. If an idea will be tested, explain the next step. As a result, team members see that innovation is handled seriously rather than casually dismissed.
Notice
Listen for practical ideas that may improve how the team works.
Check
Compare the idea with goals, standards, policies and workplace needs.
Act
Progress, test, adjust or explain the outcome through the right pathway.
Delegate tasks with clarity and responsibility
Delegation works when the leader assigns the right task, to the right person, with the right level of support.
Delegation is a leadership skill
The unit states that delegation of tasks and activities is undertaken according to organisational policies and procedures. Therefore, delegation is not simply offloading work. It is a deliberate leadership decision that supports team function and helps responsibilities move to the right place.
Effective delegation creates clarity. The person receiving the task should know what needs to happen, why it matters, what standard applies, when it is needed and what support is available. When leaders skip these points, they create uncertainty and later frustration.
Delegate outcomes, not confusion
A leader should avoid vague directions such as “Can you take care of that?” unless the context is fully understood. Clearer wording is better. For example, “Please coordinate the updated readiness checklist today, confirm the current version with the team and let me know if any step remains unclear.”
That instruction gives the task, the purpose and the review point. As a result, the team member can act with greater confidence. The leader also retains oversight without taking the task back.
Before delegating, confirm the task, the standard, the timeline, the authority and the support needed.
Match tasks with competence, authority, autonomy and training
A task becomes fair and workable when the team member has the capability and support required to complete it well.
Check competence first
PUATEA003 requires allocated tasks to stay within the competence of team members. This is a vital safeguard. Leaders should not assign work simply because someone is available. They should consider whether the person has the knowledge, skill and readiness needed for that activity.
If a task stretches someone in a reasonable development way, the leader should provide suitable guidance. However, stretching a person is not the same as setting them up to fail. The leader remains responsible for sound judgement during allocation.
Provide authority, autonomy and training
The unit also says tasks must be supported with appropriate authority, autonomy and training. Each part matters. Authority gives the person permission to act. Autonomy gives them a suitable level of independence. Training gives them the preparation needed to work safely and correctly.
For example, a person asked to lead a small review activity may need clear approval to gather input, space to manage the process and guidance on how the review should be recorded. Without those supports, the task becomes unclear. With them, the person can succeed.
Competence to perform the task
Authority to make the required decisions
Autonomy that matches the responsibility
Training or support where needed
Good delegation does not abandon people with a task. It equips them to complete it well.
Scenario drill: delegate a task without setting the person up to fail
Use this scenario to apply team goals, participation, delegation and supported task allocation together.
The revised equipment-check process
A team leader wants to review how the station completes its weekly equipment-check process. The organisation wants stronger consistency, and several team members have ideas. One capable team member has shown good coordination skills, although they have never led this type of review before. The leader wants to involve the team, improve the process and delegate responsibility appropriately.
Which response best reflects Element 5 of PUATEA003?
The strongest response keeps the purpose clear and uses leadership well. It communicates the goal, involves the team, assigns responsibility with care and supports the delegated team member properly. As a result, the work can progress while capability also grows.
Check your understanding
1. Leaders should communicate:
2. Participative decision making helps leaders:
3. Delegated tasks should be:
4. Opportunities for innovation should:
Say it in one minute
Use this quick drill to summarise Part 6 aloud or in your own notes:
- Leaders communicate team function and organisational goals.
- Participative decision making improves team planning, implementation and review.
- People should have opportunities to develop new and useful work practices.
- Delegation must follow organisational policies and procedures.
- Allocated tasks should match competence and include the right authority, autonomy and training.
