Stop Toxic Managers Before They Stop You
by Gillian Flynn
You've been there. We've all been there. The manager who
bullies, threatens, yells. The manager whose mood swings
determine the climate of the office on any given workday.
Who forces employees to whisper in sympathy in cubicles and
hallways. The backbiting, belittling boss from hell. Call it
what you want -- poor interpersonal skills, unfortunate
office practices -- but some people, by sheer, shameful
force of their personalities, make working for them rotten.
We call them toxic managers. Their results may look fine on
paper, but the fact is, all is not well if you have one
loose in your workforce: It's unhealthy, unproductive and
will eventually undo HR's efforts to create a healthy, happy
and progressive workplace.
Why are some managers toxic -- and why should HR care?
The looming question surrounding toxic managers is: Why are
there so many? In these days of enlightened management, with
so much emphasis on communication, interaction and valuing
people, why does this breed still exist? In large part, it's
because our bottom lines allow it. Companies often don't
have a means of rating managers outside of productivity. If
a supervisor is churning out the widgets, the questions are
kept to a minimum.
"The biggest single reason is because it's tolerated,"
says Lynne McClure, a Mesa, Arizona-based expert on managing
high-risk behaviors and author of Risky Business (Haworth
Press, 1996), a book on workplace-violence prevention. She
believes if a company has toxic managers, it's because the
culture enables it -- knowingly or unknowingly through plain
old apathy (see sidebar, "Eight Toxic-Manager Behaviors --
and the Cultures That Nurture Them").
Certain work situations foster toxic managers. When a
company has gone through downsizings, pay freezes or other
financial crises, negative management tends to thrive. The
emphasis is often on get-tough turnaround, and as such
higher-ups often turn a blind eye to crude management as
long as the numbers are good. Similarly, employees are less
likely to speak up about their rotten bosses -- they don't
want to sound like whiners or risk their jobs.
Of course, some people are just going to be miserable to
work for no matter what. Yet they end up as managers because
they're good employees whose companies lack another way of
rewarding them. "There are some people who simply should not
be promoted to management," says Deb Haggerty, head of
Orlando, Florida-based Positive Connections, a consulting
firm that teaches employees how to deal with personality
differences. "Just because someone is a brilliant engineer
doesn't mean they'll be a brilliant manager. Yet that's too
often how a company demonstrates status."
So a person is difficult to work for -- is that really an
HR concern? Of course it is, and for several reasons. At the
very least, there's the morale issue. Bad managers tend to
infect their departments with bad attitudes. It's like a
disease: They spread despair, anger and depression, which
show up in lackluster work, absenteeism and turnover.
Workplace guru Tom Bay has written an entire book about how
ideas and moods can aid or sabotage the workplace, Change
Your Attitude: Creating Success One Thought at a Time
(Career Press, 1998). He believes it's toxic managers -- and
the cultures that enable them -- that are at the core of
today's job-hopping phenomenon. "Turnover is the highest
it's ever been," he says. "Employees don't feel
appreciated."
Obviously, turnover, absenteeism and uninspired work cost
a company money, even if a department's output remains
level. But there are other dangers of toxic management.
Intense bullying over a period of time can cause emotional
damage to employees. Says Haggerty: "In addition to being
problems in themselves, toxic behaviors create a hostile
work environment and can easily escalate to real violence,
harassment and intimidation -- all of which end up landing a
company in court." And you can imagine how sympathetic a
jury would be toward a company that allowed its employees to
be terrorized in order to keep a tidy bottom line.
So how does HR address the situation? Help those that can be
helped, and excise those who can't -- or won't. But first
comes what's often the tricky part: finding them.
Every company has them: Identify the bad apples
Toxic managers don't always stand atop your building,
wearing a black hat and holding a placard telling you
they're the bad guys. HR has to do a little detective work,
particularly when employees are often loath to complain
about personality differences, no matter how justified.
Certainly, there are some warning signs. Check for instance,
turnover in every manager's department -- are employees
transferring or quitting a particular area? If so, that's
cause to ask further questions.
"Being communicative and being observant is vital," says
Bay, also a former HR director. "Don't wait for massive
turnover, that's like realizing you've had a heart attack
after you've died." At the first increased trickle of
turnover or transfers, Bay says, start asking employees
what's happening.
Have discussions both individually for those who need
privacy to speak their minds and in groups to appeal to
employees who like peer support. Listen for key words or
notions; don't expect employees to explicitly say they hate
their boss. Do ask follow-up questions. For instance, one
common flag is for an employee to say their job is fine, but
that they're under a lot of strain or pressure. Ask them why
-- it's often an interpersonal problem, and a good way for
you to get more information.
At Wescast Industries Inc. in Brantford, Ontario, Wayne
Phibbs, vice president of HR, uses a monthly "report card"
meeting for employees, designed to measure their job
satisfaction. "Picture a union person frustrated with his
boss -- he's not listening, he's not helping," says Phibbs.
"Every month there's this opportunity to force your leader
to be honest. He can't go in there and buffalo people; it
won't work." Phibbs thinks such open talks and constant
forums contribute to his workforce's high satisfaction level
-- even among the Canadian Auto Workers Union, a group
notorious for its scrappy members.
Of course, not all employees are going to be publicly
forthcoming. So keep the lines of communication open in as
many venues as possible. "Exit interviews are helpful, but
they're too late," says McClure. "I wouldn't stop doing
them, but you need to do other things."
Anonymous hotlines are helpful, and can be set up as
cheaply as dedicating one phone line with voice-mail or,
more elaborately, through an outside agency that refers
issues to HR or an EAP, depending on which is appropriate.
"HR has to be careful not to get into counseling issues, and
that's hard because we know how fuzzy that line is," admits
McClure. HR can also encourage employees to send email.
Employees need not use their work account; many Internet
sites offer free email with anonymous user names (hotmail.com,
for instance).
Using multisource performance reviews, in which employees
can give feedback on their bosses anonymously, is also
enormously helpful. At Spring Engineering Corp. in Livonia,
Michigan, Tim Tindall, president in charge of HR issues,
instituted a 360-degree survey based around "servant
leadership," the theory that the best managers are those who
serve their employees. In that mode, the questionnaire
covered qualities like listening, empathy, awareness and
healing. "The culture in this area is somewhat adversarial
between labor and management. It's a long tradition and one
that's hard to break, so this helped us get at some issues."
Tindall included himself in the reviews, which were
discussed openly, and used to plot next steps.
One word of warning about multisource reviews: These
don't need to wait for a manager's yearly review, but they
do need to be given to all managers in a department. It's
key, says Haggerty, not to target one particular supervisor,
even if turnover and comments have identified that person as
problematic.
Finally, talk to your supervisors, says Bay. When you ask
a manager how things are going in his or her department and
you hear a lot of "I" rather than "we" or a lot of blame
being dispensed, that can be a flag. So can constant griping
about employees in general. Finally, keep your ear to the
ground, even if a manager doesn't strike you as toxic. Says
Sharon Keys Seal, a Baltimore job coach: "They're not going
to treat you the way they treat their workers."
Put your managers into detox
So now you know who -- and what -- you're dealing with.
What do you do next? First comes the confrontation: Sit down
with this person, and tell him or her about the problem. Be
as specific as you can. Don't couch it in vague terms, like
saying the manager has "interpersonal issues." If the
manager is perceived as a bully, say that. If she tends to
explode at employees, tell her that. Then explain that it
must be stopped and why. Don't come down too hard: This may
be the person's first whiff of a problem. However, do be
firm, and tell the manager that future performance will be
noted.
Also set a time period for improvement. "Addressing this
during a goal-setting session might be good," advises
Haggerty. "It really has to be done in a positive fashion,
because those kinds of individuals tend to take criticism
and harbor it and nurture it."
After the intervention comes training. In many cases, the
manager simply doesn't have the correct tools, particularly
if the person's background is field-specific rather than
managerial. "You have to give them alternatives for their
behavior," says McClure. "Say not only ‘You can't do this,'
but ‘You have to do this.'" If that means they need to go to
seminars on employee relations, that's what they need to do.
If the person is a poor manager simply because he's in over
his head, give him some educational opportunities.
Collaborate with the supervisor -- ask her what she thinks
the problem is and what might help. There are seminars and
classes for everything from anger management to accounting.
Also offer EAP counseling -- sometimes a person's main
issues are emotional, alcohol or drug related, and a good
therapist can help.
If, after the intervention and follow-up period, the
behavior hasn't changed, HR must decide what to do. If the
person has skills useful to the company and is a good
worker, you may consider transferring him out of a
managerial position but keeping him at the company. Some
people just don't work well with others, but may blossom
when working in a more narrow sphere of interaction.
If that's not the case -- if you actually need to
terminate the manager -- this can be done carefully. It's
iffy grounds to fire someone strictly for personality
issues. You need to define those issues as work-related
performance problems, says Harold M. Brody, chair of the Los
Angeles labor and employment practice of Proskauer Rose LLP.
That means you don't just say a person is a bully, but that
the person's bullying management techniques thwart
productivity in the department. Once it's defined in this
manner, you can discharge the person the way you would for
any other performance problem. Keep a record of the
incidents, document that you've given the employee time for
change and make the termination. This is actually one case
in which, if it should reach a jury, the employer has an
advantage. "You get this rare opportunity, if you have the
right record, to show you had the guts to go to a manager
who's producing the widgets but driving everyone crazy, and
saying, ‘You can't do that, and if you do, you're going to
lose your job,'" says Brody.
Prevent future problems
Once you've addressed your current toxic managers, you
have to make sure more don't sprout up. To begin with, make
sure job descriptions include treating employees in a
dignified and appropriate manner. Include behaviors that
won't be tolerated and hold them accountable for turnover.
This not only makes the company's stance very clear, it also
emphasizes the importance of treating people well. "Behavior
has to become part of the job description," says McClure.
"That way you can no longer say that manager X is a great
manager because they really produce, but they're terrible
with how they treat their people. That way, manager X can no
longer by definition be called a great manager."
Once the job description includes behavior, HR can
effectively reward or discipline managers through
performance reviews. "Tell them they're going to be
evaluated, compensated and possibly disciplined based on
their ability to effectively meet HR objectives -- relating
to employees and managing them in positive ways," says
Brody. Although Phibbs of Wescast says he uses performance
ratings more as a discussion tool than as a punitive pay
measurement, if a manager gets poor reviews and doesn't
improve, he'd take the next step. "If someone kept messing
up, we wouldn't give them an increase." Adds McClure: "Make
it a pocketbook issue; that gets their attention."
Finally, make sure management isn't the only way to
advance in your company. Build in pay increases or title
changes to reward good work without forcing people to assume
positions they're not suited for and won't enjoy.
You've been there. We've all been there. But if you're in
HR, you have the power to help toxic managers, their
employees -- and ultimately, your company.
Reprinted from Workforce Online (www.workforceonline.com),
August 1999.
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