I appreciate the way you imply that just because I don't plan like you means I am a worse leader. Thanks! That kind of planning would require that I never set with my team and in effect, lose all respect from them. Times have changed.
I didn't imply you were a bad leader, I said you would ultimately not be as successful. I can see how you would gather that from my post though.
How long has it been since you've been a PPTL? Surely you realize that not all stores are run the same way, and with the same amount of payroll?
Not to mention the amount of work teams are expected to do in addition to their normal work on POG.
It's been less than a year. I left target because I was a Sr. TL running PPTL + Flow and BR. The job was not worth the money. I was with Target for 13 years, I'm well aware of what has changed.
It's not about you not planning. You're obviously already planning the work. If you weren't how would they know what they're doing. In this instance, all that would be needed would be to say "hey, you know most of that candy will be on the candy pallet. I should send an email saying it needs to be sorted before we set it, or it won't be pushed." It's literally 60 seconds of your time, to save yourself a headache.
When you're planning, think about what else will impact that planogram set, whose job it is to mitigate (clearance in aisle, product being staged, etc) and send them an email saying "do abc or I can't do xyz"
Your job is to protect your team, and remove the things that prevent them from doing their job smoothly. If your team feels like you have their back, and you do everything in your power to keep them happy and ensure they have a smooth day, then they will respect you. I'm not saying that you shouldn't be boots-on-the-ground with your team when needed. But if you're doing that every day then there's a problem. Either you aren't planning efficiently or you aren't being given the time you need to be successful. If you plan effectively and aren't being given the time to execute, or your team is being overtasked with other things, then your planning will be hard evidence to take to your ETL/STL to prove to them you need more payroll, or that extra things need to be removed from your plate. If they don't go for it, then ultimately it isn't your problem when things get heavy and you can't execute.
Planning effectively will save you a huge amount of time. Instead of backstocking that candy revision, why not have it staged? You already know when it's being set, you know when the candy is coming in. Why waste time backstocking AND pulling it, again. It's one revision, but when you add this mindset throughout all of your planning it adds up quickly. Now more than ever, with shit like 4x4's, brand duties, and plano back up cashiering in some stores, it's really very important to plan this way.
Again, I'm not saying you're bad at your job, or ineffective, I'm genuinely trying to help you, because I've been there and I understand it's a colossal pain in the ass.