Why The Difference Between Expectations and Agreements at Work Matters
At work, clarity is often the dividing line between high and low performance. Research on organizational alignment shows that strategic clarity explains 31% of the difference between high and low performing companies across:
Yet while organizations invest heavily in leadership development and new manager training, too few address a common source of team dysfunction: the difference between expectations and agreements at work.
Research from action learning leadership development programs consistently shows that unclear goals, vague accountabilities, and assumed understanding create:
Leaders who intentionally distinguish between expectations and agreements, however, create:
Expectations at Work: Unspoken Assumptions
Expectations at work are often invisible assumptions about how something should happen. They are shaped by:
For example, a manager may expect a project update by the end of the day with a certain level of detail and polish, yet never explicitly communicate the timeline or quality standard. The employee, meanwhile, may believe a draft next week is sufficient. Both individuals are acting reasonably based on their own assumptions, but the outcome is frustration, disappointment, and diminished trust.
Organizational culture assessment data shows that expectations are frequently one-sided, poorly communicated, and rarely verified for alignment. In fast-moving or highly collaborative environments, this creates unnecessary risk. When people are held accountable for standards that were never explicitly discussed, resentment and blame often follow.
As organizational psychologist Dr. William Schutz observed, “Unexpressed expectations are premeditated resentments.” That insight remains highly relevant in modern workplaces where speed and complexity amplify the cost of ambiguity.
Agreements at Work: Mutual Clarity and Commitment
Agreements are fundamentally different. Agreements are explicit, two-way commitments that define:
Unlike expectations, agreements require dialogue, mutual understanding, active consent, constructive debate, and ownership.
Consider the difference when a manager says:
“Can you commit to delivering the report by 4 PM Friday, matching the quality and format of last week’s report, and including analysis on customer retention, revenue variance, and implementation risks?”
When the employee responds, “Yes, I can deliver that by 4 PM Friday,” both parties now share a measurable and trackable commitment. Accountability becomes clearer, follow-up becomes easier, and misunderstandings decrease significantly.
Research-backed examples reinforce this distinction. A study by the Corporate Executive Board found that organizations with strong accountability systems can improve employee productivity by up to 25%. Similarly, Google’s Project Aristotle identified psychological safety and role clarity as two critical drivers of high-performing teams. In both cases, explicit agreements played a central role in improving execution and collaboration.
Project postmortem data shows that:
Building a Culture of Agreements
Shifting from expectation-driven management to agreement-driven leadership requires intentional practice.
The Bottom Line
Expectations operate in the shadows of assumption. Agreements operate in the clarity of shared understanding. That distinction has a profound impact on trust, accountability, collaboration, and execution. Leaders who intentionally convert assumptions into explicit agreements create high performing teams, healthier cultures, and more consistent business results.
To learn more about managing high performing teams, download 7 Immediate Management Actions to Create Alignment with Goals

Tristam Brown is an executive business consultant and organizational development expert with more than three decades of experience helping organizations accelerate performance, build high-impact teams, and turn strategy into execution. As CEO of LSA Global, he works with leaders to get and stay aligned™ through research-backed strategy, culture, and talent solutions that produce measurable, business-critical results. See full bio.
Explore real world results for clients like you striving to create higher performance