Why A Workplace Bully Bullies
A bullying boss can make life unbearable for many workers.
To help shed light on this problem, researchers from the University of California, Berkeley and the University of Southern California have been studying exactly why a workplace bully bullies.
According to their research, the main reason bully bosses do what they do is to hide their own inadequacies and incompetence.
In other words, the research found; while good managers manage - bad managers bully.
A recent US Workplace Bullying Institute survey found workplace bullying is rife in the workplace - with up to 65 million US workers affected by it.
If you were to compare that figure to the entire working population - that is almost one third of the country!
Interestingly, the findings challenge the belief that abusive bosses are solely driven by ambition and the need to hold onto their power at all costs.
In fact, the research found it is not just the combination of having a high-power role and fearing that one is not up to the task that causes many managers to bully their co-workers.
The data suggests that ultimately, it is all about the boss’s sense of self-worth.
The research also found many US workers are so used to being bullied they consider it almost normal behaviour.
There was even significant evidence to suggest the culture of many American workplaces actively encourages and even rewards bullying.
This is because many US companies place great emphasis on individualism and the importance of managers over workers.
This in turn discourages collaborative efforts - giving the most influential members of organisations the power to bully others without recrimination.
The high prevalence of bullying in the US workplace could also be a reflection of the negative workplace culture.
This finding was backed up by a 2007 University of New Mexico study on bullying which discovered the incidence of ‘persistent workplace negativity’ was between 20 and 50 per cent higher for US workers, than for their Scandinavian counterparts.
The other interesting thing about workplace bullying is it is not always aggressive or obvious.
It can include more subtle forms of bullying, such as, for example: purposeful exclusion from team meetings/activities; consistently taking credit for your work; disrupting or overloading you with work; purposely withholding information, and spreading false rumours and gossip.
Also, bullying behaviour at work can sometimes be driven by the need to control a targeted individual.
This may be because these bullies need to ‘call the shots’ at any cost - insisting on having things their own way all of the time.
If others do not comply with their wishes, then they may become targeted.
Another reason workplace bullies target their co-workers is because of jealousy.
This type of bullying usually concerns co-workers who are successful, and receive regular positive feedback or attention from others within the company.
The bullying tactics are used to try and reduce the target's positive achievements by turning others against them in an effort to ruin the victim's reputation; and to cast them in a negative light.
Unfortunately, addressing the problem of workplace bullying is made that much harder because it is largely a ‘silent epidemic.’
Many people do not want to talk about it as being a victim is usually an embarrassing and humiliating experience.
However, I believe doing nothing is not the answer.
If you are being bullied at work - you do need to stand up to it - and do whatever you can to try and stop it.
Program Coordinator
8yBullying type behaviors are also difficult to address in an EEO complaint because the victim must prove that the bullying is due to person's race, color, religion, sex (including gender identity, sexual orientation, and pregnancy), national origin, age (40 or older), disability or genetic information...and like stated in this article many times the behaviors are a result of internal issues, feelings of inadequacy or ego driven.
Offshore Construction
8yJust leave the company as soon as possible if such behaviour is tolerated or even encouraged.
Legal Professional
8yOne would think that such immature behaviour should be minimal in a country which prides itself with democratic principles and everything modern ...
Chief Executive Officer, AIM WA | Emeritus Professor | Social Trends | Workplace Strategist | Workplace Trend Spotter | Columnist | Director| LinkedIn Top Voice 2018 | Speaker | Content Creator
8yThanks Mark, Adam and John.