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Set Boundaries Like An Executive

The best manager I ever had?


He was also the one with the strongest boundaries.

He didn’t say yes to every meeting. He wasn’t constantly on Slack. He didn’t send late-night emails or expect anyone to be “always on.”


In fact, he skipped some big meetings — or delegated them to me.


He made time for his family. He made time for his team. And somehow, even as a GM traveling constantly and sitting in billion-dollar conversations, he never seemed overwhelmed.

He didn’t hustle harder. He led smarter.


When I was interviewing for the role, I was nervous about working with a global team. I assumed it meant being online 24/7.


But when I asked him about expectations, his response floored me:

“You can manage your own time. What I need is for the work to get done.”


That kind of clarity? That kind of trust? It comes from someone who knows how to lead themselves first.


Because boundaries aren’t a luxury. They’re a leadership skill.


Boundaries Aren’t About Saying No. They’re About Leading Yourself.


Most high achievers don’t lose their boundaries.

They give them away one "yes" at a time.


We say yes to be helpful. To be liked. To be seen as a team player.

But over time, our days become ruled by other people’s priorities — and our own performance suffers.


What separates executives from everyone else isn’t that they work more. It’s that they protect the space to work on the right things.


Boundaries are how they do it.

And the first step in setting boundaries isn’t saying no. It’s getting clear on what makes you effective in the first place.


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Step 1: Define What You Need to Be Effective


Here’s a truth most people never pause to consider:

You can’t set the right boundaries if you don’t know what you’re protecting.


So before we dive into tactics or scripts, start here:

Ask yourself:

  • When do I do my best work?

  • What kind of schedule energizes me?

  • What drains me most during the week — and how often does it happen?

  • What do I want people to expect from me?

  • What values do I want my calendar and communication style to reflect?

A few of my own boundaries:

  • No work on Sundays

  • I answer emails within 48 hours, not immediately

  • I don’t send messages after 5 pm

  • No skipping lunch, even when things get busy

  • No defaulting to being the note-taker (especially as a woman)


These boundaries aren’t about being rigid. They’re how I protect my focus, my energy, and my ability to lead.

Your answers might look different — and that’s the point. Boundaries aren’t one-size-fits-all.

They’re a custom operating manual for your best performance.


Make sure you write down yours.


Step 2: Identify Where Boundaries Are Breaking Down


Here are four common boundary breakdowns and how executives approach them differently:


1. Time & Calendar


The problem: Back-to-back meetings leave no time for deep work.

The executive approach: Block time. Decline or delegate. Evaluate meetings like investments.


💬 Script:

“I’d love to stay focused on a project with a tight deadline. Can we do this async or loop me in if a decision’s needed?”


2. Communication & Responsiveness


The problem: Feeling like you have to reply to every ping immediately.

The executive approach: Set expectations for how and when you’ll respond. Don’t reward urgency by default.


💬 Script:

“I check Slack a few times a day between deep work blocks. If it’s urgent, feel free to text.”


3. Work Scope & Role Clarity


The problem: Saying yes to every “quick favor” or task outside your role.

The executive approach: Protect your priorities. Don’t default to being the fixer.


💬 Script:

“That’s outside my current priorities. Happy to help, but I’ll need to shift something else — what’s the tradeoff?”


4. Values & Energy Protection


The problem: Working through weekends, tolerating toxic dynamics, skipping breaks.

The executive approach: Know what’s non-negotiable and act accordingly.


💬 Script:

“I’m offline this weekend, but will tackle this on Monday. Let me know if timing is flexible.”



Step 3: Set and Communicate Boundaries Like a VP


Once you know what you need, you have to communicate it. Not defensively but strategically.


There are three ways to do this well:


1. Proactively (Before There’s a Problem)


Set expectations early, so you’re not constantly having to defend your time.


📌 Use tools like:

  • Calendar blocks

  • A team “ways of working” doc

  • Onboarding slides that explain your communication norms


💬 Example:

“To stay focused, I batch messages and reply within 24–48 hours. If anything is urgent, feel free to text me.”


2. In-the-Moment (When a Boundary Is Pushed)


This is where most people get stuck. You don’t have to say no harshly, just offer structure.


💬 Example:

“I’m not available at that time, but I can meet first thing Thursday — does that work?”


The key is to avoid over-explaining. You’re not apologizing. You’re leading.


3. Through Behavior (The Most Powerful of All)


If you say you don’t take Friday meetings… and then accept one every time someone asks?

You’ve taught people not to take your boundaries seriously.

Your actions reinforce your expectations more than any email or status message ever could.


Show people what’s okay by modeling it yourself.

(Some exceptions are okay when it is truly important, but aim for 80-20).



Step 4: Make It a System Not a One-Off


Boundaries aren’t a one-time decision. They’re a leadership system.

Use this flywheel to manage yours:


The Executive Boundary Flywheel

  1. Define → What do I need to be effective?

  2. Communicate → Proactively and in real time

  3. Enforce → Model the behavior you expect

  4. Adjust → Revisit boundaries as your role evolves

Most people never get past step 1. Executives run the full flywheel on repeat.



Boundary Checklist: Are You Leading Your Time?


Take a minute to audit your approach:


✅ I know when I do my best work

✅ I’ve named 1–2 “non-negotiables”

✅ I’ve clearly communicated how I work best

✅ I hold the line, even when it’s uncomfortable

✅ I revisit and evolve my boundaries as I grow


This isn’t about perfection. It’s about consistency.



Real-world results


One of my coaching clients used to get texts from her manager every single weekend, and it was adding a lot of stress and anxiety to her free time.

At first, she replied right away. She assumed that’s what she had to do. But then we worked on setting boundaries.

She started waiting a few hours to respond on weekends.

Then she waited until the evening.

Eventually, she’d say: “I’ll get back to you Monday.”

After five weeks, the weekend messages stopped completely.

You don’t need to be confrontational, you just need to be consistent.


Your Next Steps


Boundaries won’t hurt your career. They’ll help it grow.


They show that you know how to lead yourself and protect what makes you effective.


So here’s your challenge:

Pick one boundary to set this week.

Practice it. Communicate it. Hold it.

And see what happens when you stop letting your schedule run you and start leading your time like an executive.



I believe in you, and I’m rooting for you

Maya❤️

 
 
 

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