When people think of labor, they often picture physical work or long hours at the office. But there’s another kind of labor that’s less visible yet just as vital: the labor of leadership.

Nowhere is this more evident than in how we lead our vendors.

Too often, vendor management is reduced to numbers: cost savings, SLAs, performance metrics. And while those matter, they aren’t enough. Real leadership in vendor relationships requires more: a balance of accountability and relationship.

Beyond the Numbers

Vendors aren’t just suppliers. They’re partners who play a critical role in delivering outcomes that impact employees, customers, and communities.

Leading with numbers alone creates transactional relationships. Leading with relationship and accountability creates alignment, innovation, and trust.

And here’s the hidden benefit: when relationships are strong and fairness is paired with accountability, vendors become more than service providers. They become sources of knowledge.

Because vendors serve clients across the globe and in multiple industries, they often have a front-row seat to best practices, emerging trends, and lessons learned that we might never access internally. When trust is established, they’ll share that knowledge freely—and it can transform how your organization operates.

What Relationship + Accountability Looks Like

Mutual Respect: Treating vendors as collaborators, not just contractors.

Clear Expectations: Holding them accountable for outcomes without micromanaging.

Open Communication: Addressing challenges early, celebrating wins often.

Shared Purpose: Connecting their work to your organization’s broader mission.

Knowledge Exchange: Leveraging their insights from serving diverse clients.

When vendors feel both respected and responsible, they show up differently. They don’t just deliver—they contribute.

The Labor Connection

On this Labor Day week, I’m reminded that the labor of leadership is about more than results—it’s about people. Vendors are people. Teams are people. Communities are people.

Leading vendors with relationship and accountability honors their labor. It says: Your work matters, and so does how you do it.

That’s where true partnership lives—and where real innovation begins.

Closing Thought

Numbers tell us what’s happening. Relationships tell us why it matters. Accountability ensures it keeps happening. And partnership unlocks knowledge we could never create alone.

The labor of leadership isn’t about squeezing more from people—it’s about building trust so that everyone’s labor leads to shared success.

That’s LeadHERship.

Your Turn: What’s one insight you’ve gained from a vendor or partner that changed the way you led your team or organization?

Want more? This post is part of my weekly series alongside MothHERload Monday and WealthiHER Friday, helping women thrive in motherhood, leadership, and financial freedom.