Clarity Is King.
Most the preachers I know work very hard at the craft God has called them to. They labor hour after hour, week after week, in order to faithfully feed the people God has entrusted to them.
This means...
They work hard to humbly exegete each text.
They dispense an immense amount of effort into every word.
They carefully craft nearly every sentence.
They give much thought to the illustrations they use.
They want the gospel to be front and center every time they climb into the pulpit.
Despite the hard work, there is one common shortcoming I see in a lot of preaching, including my own. It's a shortcoming that I believe separates the sub-par sermons from the good ones.
Cultivating a Healthy Team Culture.
"You yourselves know how I lived among you the whole time from the first day that I set foot in Asia." - Acts 20:18
Leading a healthy team requires living in healthy relationship with the people on your team.
When the Apostle Paul met with the Ephesian Elders in Acts 20 he was able to speak out of the depth of the relationship he had built with them. Paul was not the kind of leader that barked orders out of isolation, but a pastor who "lived among" his people.
Unfortunately, many of us are trying to lead teams in the absence of any real relationship.