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Fear in the Workplace: The Bullying Boss

June 22, 2004
 By BENEDICT CAREY 



 

Every working adult has known one - a boss who loves making
subordinates squirm, whose moods radiate through the
office, sending workers scurrying for cover, whose very
voice causes stomach muscles to clench and pulses to
quicken. 

It is not long before dissatisfaction spreads, rivalries
simmer, sycophants flourish. Normally self-confident
professionals can dissolve into quivering bundles of
neuroses. 

"It got to where I was twitching, literally, on the way
into work," said Carrie Clark, 52, a former teacher and
school administrator in Sacramento, Calif., who said her
boss of several years ago baited and insulted her for 10
months before she left the job. "I had to take care of my
health." 

Researchers have long been interested in the bullies of the
playground, exploring what drives them and what effects
they have on their victims. Only recently have
investigators turned their attention to the bullies of the
workplace. 

Around the country, psychologists who study the dynamics of
groups and organizations are discovering why cruel bosses
thrive, how employees end up covering for managers they
despise and under what conditions workers are most likely
to confront and expose a bullying boss. 

Next week, researchers and policy makers from many nations
will convene in Bergen, Norway, to discuss the issue. 

"What we're finding," said Dr. Calvin Morrill of the
University of California at Irvine, who studies corporate
culture, "is that some of the behaviors that we think most
protect us are what in fact allow the behavior to continue.
Workers become desensitized, tacitly complicit and don't
always act rationally." 

Bullying bosses, studies find, differ in significant ways
from the Blutos of childhood. In the schoolyard,
particularly among elementary school boys, bullies tend to
pick on smaller or weaker children, often to assert control
in an uncertain social environment in which they feel
vulnerable. 

But adult bullies in positions of power are already
dominant, and they are just as likely to pick on a strong
subordinate as a weak one, said Dr. Gary Namie, director of
the Workplace Bullying and Trauma Institute, an advocacy
group based in Bellingham, Wash. Women, Dr. Namie said, are
at least as likely as men to be the aggressors, and they
are more likely to be targets. 

In leadership positions that require the exercise of sheer
violent will - on the football field or the battlefield -
this approach can be successful: Consider Vince Lombardi
and George Patton. But in an office or on a factory floor,
different rules apply, and bullying usually has more to do
with the boss's desires than with the employees' needs. 

A manager might use bullying to swat down a threatening
subordinate, for example, said Dr. Harvey A. Hornstein, a
retired professor from Teachers College at Columbia
University and the author of "Brutal Bosses and Their
Prey." Or a manager might be looking for a scapegoat to
carry the department, or the supervisor's, frustrations. 

But most often, Dr. Hornstein found, managers bullied
subordinates for the sheer pleasure of exercising power. 

"It was a kind of low-grade sadism, that was the most
common reason," he said. "They'd start on one person and
then move on to someone else." 

The mystifying thing about this pattern is that it does not
appear to undercut productivity. Workers may loathe a
bullying boss and hate going to work each morning, but they
still perform. Researchers find little relationship between
people's attitudes toward their jobs and their
productivity, as measured by the output and even the
quality of their work. Even in the most hostile work
environment, conscientious people keep doing the work they
are paid for. 

At the same time, some employees withhold the unpaid extras
that help an organization, like being courteous to
customers, helping co-workers with problems or speaking
well of the company. Yet this falloff in helpfulness and,
indirectly, in performance is smaller than might be
expected, because fear motivates different people
differently, said Dr. Bennett Tepper, an organizational
psychologist at the business school of the University of
North Carolina, Charlotte. 

In April, he reported the results from a study of 173
randomly chosen employees in a wide range of work. He found
that in situations where bosses were abusive, some
employees did little or nothing extra, while others did a
lot, partly covering for less helpful peers. 

"This is not what we expected," Dr. Tepper said. "And we
speculate that one reason people keep doing extra in these
abusive situations is to advance themselves at the expense
of others. It makes them look good and the others look that
much worse." 

So tyrants spread misery, and from the outside it looks as
if they are doing a fine job. It does not help matters,
psychologists say, that people who enjoy abusing power
frequently also revere it and are quick to offer that
reverence to the even-more-powerful. Bullying bosses are
often experts at "managing up." 

Subordinates know viscerally the high cost of going around
a boss, even if it is simply to file a complaint with the
human resources department. You are trouble. You are a
whiner. You have called out the manager behind his back. 

One reason management researchers do not know how effective
it is to take on a cruel boss directly is because so few
employees do it. 

For many people, run-ins with a supervisor stirs up old
conflicts with parents, siblings or other larger-than-life
figures from childhood. Dr. Mark Levey, a psychotherapist
in Chicago who consults with corporations, said that nasty
bosses often elicited from subordinates defensive habits
that they first developed as children, like reflexive
submission and explosive rage. 

"Once these defensive positions lock in,'' Dr. Levey said,
"it's like people are transported to a different reality
and can no longer see what's actually happening to them and
cannot adapt." 

Emelise Aleandri, an actress and a producer in her 50's who
lives in New York, said she was forced out of a producing
position by a bullying boss, who replaced her with an
underling. 

"Some people were afraid to do anything,'' Ms. Aleandri
said. "But others didn't mind what was happening at all,
because they wanted my job." 

Ambition, experts say, is the bully's most insidious
deputy. Dr. Leigh Thompson, an organizational psychologist
at Northwestern University, and Cameron P. Anderson, of the
New York University business school, are studying the
effects of varying management styles on the behavior of
small groups. 

In one simulation, business students gather in teams of
three, acting out the parts of company managers meeting to
divvy up resources. The students are randomly assigned to
one of three roles, the top manager of a large company, a
middle manager and a lower-ranking manager. 

After the negotiations begin, the researchers find, the
heavyweights quickly dominate and, with regular meetings,
they also transform the behavior of the No. 2 managers. 

"If the person in charge is high energy, aggressive, mean,
the classic bully type,'' Dr. Thompson said, "then over
time, that's the way the No. 2 person begins to act." 

She added that this holds true no matter how low-key and
compassionate the No. 2 person looks on personality tests
outside the simulation. Working to please and impress a
more powerful figure, the second-tier managers are
temporarily transformed into carbon copies of the alpha
dogs, and in the simulation, they tend to corner the money
and cut out the lowest-level players. 

It works the other way, as well. A top manager with a
gentler nature softens the edges of more aggressive
midlevel managers, Dr. Thompson said. The third player is
entirely at the mercy of this dynamic. 

In another study, Dr. Michelle Duffy, a psychologist in the
University of Kentucky business school, is following 177
hospital workers. At the beginning of the study, the
employees answered detailed questions about their work and
relationships with managers. They also took a test of moral
disengagement, a measure of people's sensitivity to others,
for example, their views on the appropriateness of jokes,
put-downs and coldness toward colleagues. 

Six months later, the workers took the same test again.
Those who worked for bosses they found intimidating had
become less sensitive, according to a preliminary reading
of the responses. Those who worked for managers whom they
perceived as supportive or fair, Dr. Duffy said, scored the
same or better. 

"It looks like if there's a strong leader in the group,
then that person's behavior is contagious," she said. And
if that leader is nasty, "this moral disengagement spreads
like a germ." 

Psychologists who study obedience say subordinate status
itself causes people to defer to a supervisor's judgment,
especially in well-defined hierarchies. It's the boss's job
to make decisions, after all, and co-workers may think
there is some legitimate hidden reason for the boss's
behavior. 

Selfishly, too, workers who witness a boss humiliating a
colleague are relieved that the sword has fallen elsewhere
and are secretly pleased that they look more competent by
comparison. In earlier work that involved interviews with
500 employees in Europe and the United States, Dr. Duffy
found that workers were delighted to receive praise from a
boss, but even more delighted when the praise was
accompanied by news that another colleague is struggling. 

This occupational schadenfreude is evident when employees
observe a co-worker being bullied. After watching in
silence, they then begin to resolve their guilt. 

"They do this by wondering whether maybe the person
deserved the treatment, that he or she has been annoying,
or lazy, they did something to earn it," Dr. Duffy said. 

The brutal behavior goes unchallenged, and the target feels
a sudden chill of isolation that is all too real. By doing
nothing, even people who abhor the bullying become
complicit in the behavior and find themselves supplying
reasons to justify it. 

"The people in my office eventually started blaming me,"
said Sherry Hamby, 42, of Tulsa, Okla., an advocate of
family mental health who said she was fired after repeated
verbal abuse from a boss. "This was a man who insulted me,
who insulted my family, who would lay into me while
everyone else in the office just sat there and let it
happen." 

The most common form of resistance to a cruel manager
remains the old-fashioned grousing session. Sharing the
misery over lunch or a drink can makes everyone feel a
little better and signal the first step in jointly
responding to the abuse. Sociologists who study dissent
within large organizations like factories and hospitals
find that informal kvetching sessions may evolve into
effective resistance when workers are united, well
connected with others in the organization and trust the
company's higher-ups to hear their case. 

More often, though, grousing simply feeds on itself,
sometimes devolving into elaborate self-contained
gatherings in which the central activity is bad-mouthing
and mimicking the boss, said Dr. Morrill of the University
of California. 

He and Dr. Corinne Bendersky, an associate professor at the
University of California, Los Angeles, are studying 150
M.B.A.'s in human resources departments to determine which
kinds of employees are most likely to file complaints
against abusive bosses and under which circumstances. 

"We hypothesize, based on a preliminary read of our data,
that employees in tight-knit informal groups may ironically
be less likely to think about confronting their bosses,"
Dr. Morrill wrote in an e-mail message. "Instead, they may
retreat to their informal groups to let off steam." 

It is those who are not part of a tight group, who feel
truly desperate and in danger of losing their jobs, who
appear most likely to speak up, he said. Most others learn
to perform an elaborate dance, trying to preserve their
status while being careful not to forfeit their sense of
decency, all the while looking for an escape hatch. 

One of the best strategies to manage a bully, Dr. Hornstein
of Columbia has found in his research, is to watch for
patterns in the tyrant's behavior. Maybe he is bad on
Mondays, maybe a little better on Fridays. Maybe she is
kinder before lunch than after. If the Mets lost the day
before, it is not a good day to ask for anything. If some
types of assignments spook the person more than others,
avoid them, if possible. 

When the nostrils quiver and the lip tightens, Dr.
Hornstein said, all is not lost. Ignore the insulting tone
of a boss's attack, he said, and respond only to the
substance of the complaint. If it is a deadline problem,
address that. For an attack on a particular skill, discuss
ways to improve. 

"Stick with the substance, not the process,'' he said, "and
often it won't escalate." 

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/22/health/psychology/22bull.html?ex=1089019572&ei=1&en=1bbe8b0c004b4e03


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