When The Boss Is A Bully – Are you being bullied?

Jan 12th, 2014 | By | Category: aptitude, Career advice, career challenges, challenges, competitive peers, difficult boss, difficult boss, difficult coworkers, fear, finding a mentor, influential enemies, mentor, opportunity, problem, professional image, self confidence, will to win

When the Boss Is a Bully –

Are You Being Bullied?

The number one workplace challenge, over and over again, is the bullying boss.

There are many different types of bullying, and yes even the silent treatment is a tactic for the boss to bully employees. Ever been to a brain storming session when you were preempted from contributing. Every time you try to interject your boss over rides your bid for the floor? This is a form of bullying.

We are all aware of the schoolyard bullying tactics. Somehow they manage to survive not only grade school, but also high school and college, and are carried into the workplace. There are two types of schoolyard bullies. The dumb jock who relies on his popularity and brawn to coerce others into compliance. Often they pick on the smallest and weakest kid to lessen the chances of someone fighting back. One the example is mad, even those who could standup to the bully let him have his way.

The other type of bully is the smart popular bully who is an over achiever scholastically, active in school activities, and student government. There power rests in their brains and connections. We learn early that the smart kids have a leg up with most teachers, and it carriers on into the workplace.

In grade school, high school and even college, one of the main tactics for dealing with a bully is to avoid them. If you were one of their victims you even tried altering your schedule and routines to avoid a bully. I remember students who would eat their lunch alone in art class supposedly working on a project just so they would not be humiliated in the cafeteria by a bully. Others would for go after school activities, and participating in school events just to avoid the bully.

There are effective ways of coping with bullies besides avoidance. The two things bullies rely on are their popularity and their special status. (jock or brain). Both are difficult to defuse, but with a little effort you can at least create some neutral ground where they leave you alone. Trying of topple a bully is usually difficult and can get very messy. Unlike in the movies, usually a bully has the establishment on their side.

The best weapon is the establishment. Teachers, coaches, activity directors, etc lend a lot of power to a bully by giving them cart blanch to act up. If you can worm your way into their protective custody, the bully will find another victim. I remember in grade school a kid who was bullied. He learned to stay with sight and earshot of the playground monitor. When the bully came near him, he would retreat to the proctors protection. Even if the proctor liked the bully they were bound to protect the victim. After school was a different story. I learned to be friends with the guys a few grades ahead. When they were around I had nothing to fear from the bullies in my class. That tactic served me well all the way though high school and even in the military. I always found a friend who was big enough that no one wanted to mess with them. The movie “The Bodyguard” is a good example of finding a powerful ally.

Dealing with the bully who is very smart and an overachiever is a little more subtle. These people can say and do some very vicious things. They are smart and are not easily outwitted. The brainy bully relies on their value to the organization to support and protect them. While it is not wise to openly challenge a brainy bully, even if you win the battle you will lose the war. A more indirect approach is to do some intelligence gathering and find out who are their key supporters, both students and teachers, then try to make friends with as many of the brains supporters and possible. The more you can undermine their control over their supporters the weaker they become.

There are some physical bullies in the workplace, most pull practical jokes, and just use the threats to bully. The brains try to humiliate and intimidate with their great ideas, and superior work product. There are some very effective tactics in dealing with both types of bullies.

The following article gives some advice on coping with a difficult boss who is a bully.

When the Boss Is a Bully
Bully bosses thrive in small companies. Here’s how to handle them.
By Hara Estroff Marano, published on September 01, 1995 – last reviewed on November 19, 2012
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http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/199508/when-the-boss-is-bully

They verbally abuse you, humiliate you in front of others. Maybe it’s because power hovers in the air, but offices tend to bring out the bully in people. We offer strategies for handling such bad bosses.
If the schoolyard is the stomping ground of bully boys and bully girls, then the office is the playground of adult bullies. Perhaps because power is the chief perk in most companies, especially those with tight hierarchies, offices can bring out the bully in people.
Everyone has a war story. There’s the boss who calls at 2 A.M. from Paris–just because he’s there. The boss who asks for your evaluation of a problem and then proceeds to denigrate you and your opinion in front of the whole staff as you seethe with hopefully hidden rage. “It’s a demonstration of power. It’s demeaning,” contends Harry Levinson, Ph.D., the dean of organizational psychologists and head of the Levinson Institute in Waltham, Massachusetts.

“I haven’t studied office bullying systematically,” he says. In fact, no one has. Despite common perceptions of its prevalence, it’s essentially virgin turf for organizational psychology. Trouble is, organizational psychologists are often called in at the highest level of management; nowadays, most bullies are weeded out before they get to the top.
Nevertheless, says Levinson, 40 years of consulting have given him some idea of what they do and why. They over-control, micromanage, and display contempt for others, usually by repeated verbal abuse and sheer exploitation. They constantly put others down with snide remarks or harsh, repetitive, and unfair criticism. They don’t just differ with you, they differ with you contemptuously; they question your adequacy and your commitment. They humiliate you in front of others.
There are two kinds of bullies, observes organizational psychologist Laurence Stybel, Ph.D., a principal of Boston’s Stybel Peabody Lincolnshire & Associates: “Successful ones and unsuccessful ones. The latter don’t last long in organizations. The successful bullies create problems, but they are competent”
Often they are very bright workers. And therein lies the problem. They make a significant contribution to the company as workers. They get promoted because of their technical expertise. Then they wind up supervising others, and spew on people in support functions, on competitors, perhaps even their own bosses.
They are especially rampant in high-tech companies, engineering firms, and financial organizations–a stock fund manager doing an incredible job with investments, for example. “The typical successful bully thinks, ‘They won’t do anything to me–I’m the best they’ve got,”‘Stybel says. But sooner or later, it’s too costly to tolerate their behavior.
It’s getting too costly much sooner in most companies. Stybel cites the example of a large New England hospital where the bully is a brilliant physician who has been the director of radiology for 11 years. The bullying was an issue over the years–in the exit interviews of departing technical staff.
Why did the hospital decide to do something only now? The administrator told Stybel: “We can’t tolerate the high turnover anymore. It’s too costly in the face of managed care.”
Occasionally, bullies do get to the very top. Levinson points to Harold Geneen, the legendary head of ITT, and coach Vince Lombardi. And then there’s the issue of Fortune magazine devoted every couple of years to America’s “toughest” bosses. Take the female CEO who reportedly yelled at the executives of a division she felt was underperforming: “You’re eunuchs! How can your wives stand you? You’ve got nothing between your legs!”
At least in large corporations, bullying is not as blatant as it once was. “The John Wayne image of a leader doesn’t go over so well in the ’90s” notes Pat Alexander of the Center for Creative Leadership in Greensboro, North Carolina. “It affects the efficiency of the entire organization.” Intimidation tends to be more polished.
While it’s no longer cool to throw around your authority, counterforces are leading to greater tolerance of negative behavior. Stybel points to a growing ‘What can you do for me now?’ stance. “There’s a new generation of CEOs who expect to be in place four years and move on. This fosters emotional distancing from employees, an excessive focus on transactions; it does not foster a positive relationship mode. Companies are growing increasingly performance-oriented; do they care how anyone feels about an executive’s behavior?
“Where I have been retained, it’s not because they don’t like bullies” notes Stybel. “Only the underlying economics make it a dysfunctional behavior.”
While bullies inhabit the middle ranks of large concerns, they are positively thriving at small companies. “There are lots of bad bosses out there,’ says Atlanta-based management consultant Neil Lewis, Ph.D. “In smaller companies the quality of management is not as good as at large companies. They’re not professional managers.”
Stybel warns workers not to focus on where bullying comes from. “When observers see a boss behave as a bully, they attribute it to trait characteristics. That may not be the case. It’s almost always a product of individual history and make-up–and the company atmosphere. But who cares? The most important thing is the behavior.”
Bullies do a lot of damage in organizations. They make subordinates run scared. They put people in a protective mode, which interferes with the company’s ability to generate innovation. They don’t build in perpetuation of the organization, says Levinson. “It keeps you in a state of psychological emergency. And add to it the rage you feel towards the bully and a sense of self-rage for putting up with such behavior.” These are hardly prime conditions for doing your best work–any work.
As with kids, bully bosses have blind spots. They don’t see themselves accurately. They see themselves as better than others–which only acts to justify their bullying behavior–a feeling reinforced by promotion. Another big blind spot: sensitivity to others’ feelings. Often, says Levinson, this arises in competitive settings, where “you learn to focus on your own behavior. It breeds a kind of psychological ignorance.”
Stybel has developed a psychological karate chop to “unfreeze” executives’s attitudes–a customized letter of probation. It essentially tells an executive that, due to changes in market conditions, or some other external factor, his weaknesses now outweigh the strengths he has long displayed. “It spells out desired behavioral changes in a positive way–not ‘people are complaining that you are a bully’ but ‘if you make these changes you’ll have a reputation as someone who is considerate.'” It gives honchos 90 days to shape up–or else.
It’s never easy to make headway with an office bully, observers agree. The first step is to recognize when it’s happening. Repetitive verbal abuse. Micromanagement. Exploitation. Any activity that repeatedly demeans you or is discourteous. “Whenever you’re dissed, you’re dealing with a bully,” says Levinson. “Sometimes it’s inadvertent. We all get caught up in that–once. You apologize and it’s over. But bullies don’t recognize their impoliteness and they don’t apologize.”
Tactics from the Pros
Here are tactics from seasoned organizational consultants:
o Confront the bully: “I’m sorry you feel you have to do that, but I will not put up with that kind of behavior. It has no place here.” It can be startlingly effective. “Bullies lack boundaries on their own behavior. Some external controls may force them to back off” says Levinson. “A bully can’t bully if you don’t let yourself be bullied.”
o Conduct the confrontation in private–behind dosed doors in the bully’s office, at lunch outside the office. The bully won’t back down in front of an audience.
o Specify the behavior that’s unworkable: “You can’t just fire from the hip and demean me in front of my staff or others.”
o Don’t play armchair psychologist. Restrict the discussion to specific behaviors, not theories of motivation.
o Make your boss aware by showing him or her the consequences of his behavior on others. “I’ve been noticing how Jim seems so demoralized lately. I think one of the contributing factors may be last week’s meeting when you ridiculed him for producing an inadequate sales report.” Many executives have no information on how their leadership style impacts others, says Alexander. “Peers don’t tell them they are in competition. Why feed information that may make your competitor more effective?”
o Awareness is not enough; help your boss figure out what to do. Specify the behavioral change you want. “Your boss is likely to brush off criticism with, ‘That’s just my style,'” observes Marquand. “Furnish your boss with an example of desirable behavior-from his or her own repertoire of actions. Jump in with ‘But I can recall a month ago when you were . . . lavish in your praise of that new assistant,’ or whatever.”
o Point out how the boss’s behavior is seen by others. “You embarrass me when you publicly humiliate me in a meeting, but you also embarrass yourself. You’re demonstrating your weakness.” Comparing self-perceptions and the perceptions of others is often a “grabber,” finds Alexander. “The fact of difference gets people’s attention.”
o Try humor. If you point out to your boss that she’s acting like a caricature, that may be enough to make her aware.
o Recruit an ally or allies. Standing up for yourself can stop a bully by earning his/her respect. But it could also cost your job. The higher your boss is in the organization, says Lewis, the more you need allies. “It pays to check out with other workers whether the behavior you are experiencing is generalized or idiosyncratic,” says Levinson. “If it’s generalized, it’s easier for two or three people to confront a boss than one alone.”
o If the company you work for is large enough to have one, talk to the human resources department. Unfortunately, says Levinson, companies often don’t learn about bullying experiences until an exit interview. But the larger the company you work for, the more mechanisms there are in place to deal with bullies. Unfortunately, the corollary is that in a smaller organization you may have little choice except to leave.
o If you are important to the organization, you may accomplish your goal by going to your boss’s boss. But that’s always a chancy move; you’ll have to live with your boss in the morning.

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