First and formost is organization. If you don't know what everyone on your team is working on and what else needs to be done, that is the first step.
Delegate. Yes it is easier to do many things yourself, but working 18 hour days while your team is leaving every day on time and not busy is a bad thing. Also, they don't learn to do those things if you don't give them to them. As a the team lead, you can often become the bottelneck, delgating helps to prevent that from happening.
When developers do things wrong, don't fix them yourself. Tell the developer what is wrong and have him or her do the fix. I've seen people merrily go on making the same mistakes repeatedly because their boss was in a hurry and just fixed things himself. It will take longer the first time or two, but you know what, once people find out that you will send stuff back, you end up getting higher quality stuff to begin with.
Keep notes on performance, you will end up doing the appraisals, so take notes through the year on bad and especially good things for each employee you have. It seems obvious but don't save these in a public folder. (I accidentally found my own appraisal and someone else's once in a public folder.)
Be even-handed in applying rules. Some of the team members are probably your friends. Make sure you hold them to the same standards you hold other team members to. As a manager, you need to be able to separate any personal relationships you have from work performance. I've seen a lot of people go down in flames because they couldn't do this and kept their buddy on when he wasn't performing or promoted their girlfriend when others were more qualified. If you play favorites, the others will resent it and will eventually undermine you in the company. Some of your friends will try to manipulate you to treat them better, give them better assignments than the others, allow them more latitude concerning work hours etc. It is best to establish from the start that you will treat everyone evenly.
Listen as much as you talk. Make sure your people feel their concerns are heard.
Protect your folks as much as possible from the stuff that comes down from above. Everyone prefers to work for someone who will take the heat and share the praise.
If you have a problem performer (and most team leads have to deal with this eventually), make sure you clearly tell the person what the problem is, document the problem and tell the person what he or she needs to do to correct it. But do it in a way that allows the other person to express his or her own view on the subject. And try to keep to actions not personality. Remember though you are the final arbiter of what consitutes acceptable performance, so even if Joe disagrees that his performance is unacceptable (poor performers almost always think they are stars for some reason), you still may have to insist on the change. Be specific in dealing with problems. Also try to catch those poor performers doing something right. Make sure you mention that to them and others if apropriate. Try not to make every conversation you have with this person be a negative one.