You manage managers. Through training and experience you've learned how to manage tasks and teams to achieve objectives and get deliverables out the door. But how much training have you had on how to manage unmanageable managers, otherwise known as abrasive bosses?
"It Only Hurts When I Work"
Abrasive bosses rub their staff the wrong way with their aggressive management styles, displaying behaviours ranging from mild offence to open attack. The words and actions of these individuals create interpersonal friction that grates on subordinates, peers and even their superiors, grinding away at trust and motivation, and ultimately disrupting the smooth flow of work. Abrasive bosses can inflict deep wounds and intense suffering in employees, and the pain of working for or with an abrasive boss is usually felt by the company as well, eroding effectiveness and paralyzing productivity.
Dollars and Sense
Abrasive bosses can cause endless headaches for their bosses, who struggle to rein them in and stanch the flow of complaints from distressed employees. Tolerating abrasive bosses is expensive when calculated in the costs of absenteeism, lowered productivity, attrition of valued employees and harassment litigation. And senior managers who fail to intervene with an abrasive boss will be viewed by employees as tacitly condoning the abuse: "They've let this stuff go on for years — they don't do anything about him because they don't care anything about us — it's all about making a buck."
More often than not, upper management tends to avoid intervening, but not because they don't care — it's because they're afraid. These fears fall into two categories: the fear of being harmed by the abrasive boss ("If we confront him he'll quit and we can't afford to lose his expertise" or "What if she sues us?") and the fear of doing harm to the abrasive boss ("I don't want to hurt her — she's been loyal and works harder than anyone else" or "He's already got family problems — I don't want to add to his burden.") Companies also fail to intervene because they view the situation as hopeless: "He denies that he's the problem — he blames everything on our tight deadlines" or "We've talked to him/her, but things only improved for a few weeks." It's also not uncommon for management to avoid dealing with the problem of an abrasive boss through the defence mechanisms of denial ("She's just got some difficult employees"), minimization ("He doesn't blow up that often") or delay ("It won't be long before he retires.")
Tips for Taming Your Subordinate
So how do you tame the abrasive boss who works for you? The first step is to understand what you're dealing with.
Because of their intimidating, aggressive styles, it can be a stretch to believe that these fear-inspiring individuals are themselves driven by fear. The common myth holds that abrasive bosses are evil or crazy, continually contemplating new ways to torment their coworkers. I have found the exact opposite to be true: The majority of abrasive bosses are afraid. They have a deep need to be perceived as competent, and anything that threatens that perception of competence stirs their anxiety and must be defended against. In other words, when these bosses detect the slightest hint of incompetence in others that could threaten their success, they attack. They're not intent on doing harm — they just want to go about their business, but you'll pay if you get in their way.
The second step is to understand that the majority of abrasive bosses don't see that they're abrasive, or if they do, they don't see how much damage they do to others — they're clueless about the wounds they inflict. As one executive said, "I don't get it — why don't they see what they do? And when you point it out to them, why don't they get that they're causing damage?"
Abrasive bosses are generally blind to their impact on others because they lack the ability to read others' emotional reactions to their abrasive behaviour. A classic example: A CEO once complained that his senior management team sat silently when he pressed them for ideas. When I asked why he thought they didn't respond, he answered: "I don't know — they're either lazy or stupid." He was totally blind to the possibility (later confirmed as fact) that his management team didn't voice their ideas for fear that he would attack them. He was unaware that his tendency to, as one manager put it, "chew up and spit out" their input instilled fear. Only after the blinders came off did he see his role in the dysfunctional communication.
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