GOOD
BOSS BAD BOSS
How
to be the Best… and Learn from the Worst
ROBERT
I SUTTON, PhD
SECTION II
WHAT THE BEST BOSSES DO
CHAPTER 8
SQUELCH YOUR
INNER BOSSHOLE
Common features of bosses’ job –
power, performance pressure, and exhaustion – provoke bosses to leave followers
feeling disrespected, emotionally damaged, and de-energized. Bosses are often clueless to how followers
interpret their moves. You likely won’t
recognize episodes when you’ve been a temporary bosshole.
You can’t be a great boss if you don’t
keep your inner jerk in check. Bossholes
make people sick. Bossholes suffer
self-inflicted wounds.
Causes And
Cure For The Common Bosshole:
1. Toxic Tandem and Power Poisoning
There are plenty empathic and civilized
bosses. But there is strong evidence
that power turns people into insensitive jerks who are oblivious to
subordinates needs and actions. This toxic
tandem means that bosses are often oblivious to the moves they make that piss
off and hurt followers. There are often
times when the toxic tandem causes bosses to become so self-absorbed that they
treat underlings as if they are invisible.
Bosses often see power poisoning in
others, but rarely in themselves. As a
boss you need trusted advisors, mentors, and followers who feel safe telling
you when you’ve been a schmuck.
2. Extreme Performance Pressure
Although all bosses risk focusing on
performance too much and humanity too little, this balance gets especially out
of whack when performance pressure becomes intense. Time pressure causes people to become
especially insensitive to others. If you
are a boss with a history of treating followers with dignity and have built up a
lot of ‘love points’, your people will probabaly forgive you if you get nasty
now and then.
3. Sleep Deprivation, Heat, And Other Bodily
Sources Of Bad Moods
Lack of sleep causes people to make lousy
decisions and turns them into impatient jerks.
When people are physically hot, they turn mean. Heat is uncomfortable which makes people
grumpy and thus see things (and other people) in a more negative light.
4. Nasty Role Models
Scott Berkun, author: one reason
bosses become asshole is in trying to emulate someone more powerful than
themselves, they didn’t separate the good qualities from the bad and copied it
all..
5. Asshole-infested workplaces
Even bosses who aren’t bred or led by
assholes turn mean when they are knee-deep in demeaning colleagues and customers. Emotions are remarkably contagious. When people are surround by jerks, they
usually mimic such behavior and don’t realize they are doing so.
Bosses who treat their people like
dirt usually do more harm than good, even when they act with the best of
intentions.
TO BE CONTINUED....
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