By Penelope Meniere, National Marketing Manager at Workshop17
Somewhere between the third Wi‑Fi troubleshooting call of the week and an unnecessary standoff over the cleaning rota, South Africa’s most capable leaders are quietly becoming something they never applied for, the facilities manager. A new trend is making the rounds in 2026, and it goes by the name of Conscious Unbossing. Penelope Meniere, National Marketing Manager at Workshop17, thinks it’s about time we rolled it out locally.
Nobody put this on your job description, nobody mentioned it in the interview, nobody handed you the corner office and said, by the way, you will also be fielding calls from the security company at 7am on a Tuesday. And yet. Here we are.
South Africa’s most capable leaders are spending an inordinate amount of their week on tasks that have absolutely nothing to do with the reason they were hired or here. Between troubleshooting boardroom technology, chasing lease escalations, negotiating with the cleaning contractor, their days and weeks are stretched by conversations that should not be happening at any level of seniority.
There is a name for this particular invisible tax, it’s called ‘shadow tax’, and it’s the accumulated weight of keeping a building operational while simultaneously trying to run a business and keep that profitable. Research puts the average shadow tax at roughly 15 hours a month, per senior leader – Equivalent to nearly two full working days, every month. Gone, not to strategy, not to their teams, and certainly not to the company’s bottom line. For context, it’s almost exactly the same number of hours most executives say they need for strategic thinking, for developing their people, for the kind of deep work that actually justifies the salary.
Enter the unbossers
2026 has arrived with a trend that, frankly, should have turned up sooner, Conscious Unbossing. A concept that’s a growing movement among younger professionals, Gen Z in particular, to quietly exit the traditional management track. This isn’t burn out or lack of ambition, it’s the observation that managing people is a skill, managing a building is a completely different one. Being asked to do both, simultaneously, while delivering results, staying on strategy and keeping some version of a personal life intact, is not leadership, it’s impossible. And to be blunt, a job, nobody wants.
Gen Z has noticed, hence them opting for what is being called the elite individual contributor path, roles where the work is the point, not the infrastructure around it. And organisations paying attention to this are finding that their best people stay longer, think better and, rather usefully, produce more. The status signal has shifted too, the corner office that used to mean something, in 2026, is being measured against the power of not needing to think about the office at all.
You cannot boss yourself if you are busy bossing the building
The whole promise of Conscious Unbossing, the autonomy, the focus, the shift from manager to coach starts to falter the moment the person at the helm is losing two days a month to facilities admin. You can’t hand your team real independence while trying to field Wi-Fi complaints and refereeing the AC.
The executives who have worked this out are making a deliberate call by moving into private offices within fully serviced spaces where someone else holds the entire operational brief. The Wi‑Fi. The cleaning. The access control. The security. The event logistics. All of it handled, so the person who is supposed to be leading can get on with the actual job. The effects are immediate and surprisingly tangible, meetings become sharper, decisions move faster and teams notice when their leader shows up to coach rather than to administrate.
The private office is having a moment. And it is long overdue.
Not because private offices disappeared. They did not. But the reason people want one has changed considerably, and the change is worth paying attention to.
The original argument was hierarchical. Bigger room, more important person. Status measured in square metres, natural light and whether the chair came with armrests. It was territorial. It was, let us be candid, not particularly inspired.
The 2026 argument runs in a different direction entirely. A fully serviced private office is not a trophy. It is a decision. Someone else holds the lease. Someone else manages the Wi‑Fi, the cleaning, the access control and the dozen operational threads that have, until now, been quietly eating into a leader’s week. The person in the office just leads. That is the whole deal.
This is Conscious Unbossing made physical. Not a management philosophy written on a slide deck. An actual room, with actual infrastructure, handled by people who are paid to care about it so that you do not have to.
The cognitive impact is harder to quantify but easy to recognise once you have experienced it. The background noise of keeping a building operational takes up mental space, even when you are not actively dealing with it. Remove it and something clears. Thinking becomes sharper. Decisions arrive more cleanly. Teams get the version of their leader the job spec promised.
The new status symbol is not the corner office. It is the office you do not have to manage.
For the bosses reading this…
Shadow tax is a structural problem, and structural problems have structural solutions. The most focused, most genuinely influential leaders in South Africa right now are the ones who have worked out what is beneath their pay grade and handed it over without guilt. They’ve fired the building chores to run their company vision.
Here is to a 2026 where the cleaning rota is someone else’s problem.
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