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#WorkTrends Recap: Overcoming the Symptoms of Destructive Management

During today’s first #WorkTrends show, we discussed how to overcome the symptoms of destructive management. #WorkTrends Founder and Host Meghan M. Biro was joined by Shawn Murphy, a well-respected author, keynote speaker, and CEO/Founder of the consultancy Switch & Shift.

Destructive management has been percolating in organizations for some time. Its adverse effects have become commonplace and too little is being done about it. Our guest, Shawn Murphy, discussed his debut book, The Optimistic Workplace, which defines the symptoms and many antidotes to overcoming destructive management. He also shared why and how to move towards building an optimistic workplace.

It was an extremely lively #WorkTrends podcast and Twitter conversation. Participants had a lot to share about the topic at hand, making for a successful first #WorkTrends show.

Want to learn more from today’s event? Listen to the recording and check out the highlights below:

Thank you to all the TalentCulture sponsors, partners and supporters!

The TalentCulture #WorkTrends Show is all new on Wednesday, February 17, 2016, from 1-2 pm ET (10-11 am PT). Join TalentCulture #WorkTrends Show Founder and Host Meghan M. Biro as discusses LIFEworking Experience with Tim McDonald and Ayelet Baron.

Join our social communities and stay in the know! The TalentCulture conversation continues daily. See what’s happening right now on the #WorkTrends Twitter stream, in our LinkedIn group and on our Google+ community. Engage with us anytime on our social networks or stay current with trending World of Work topics on our website or through our weekly email newsletter.

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Overcoming the Symptoms of Destructive Management

A problem has been percolating in organizations for some time. Its adverse affects have become common place and too little is being done about it: The problem is destructive management.

A Workplace Gasping for Air

Today’s workplace is hardly a reflection of our best work. Choking the workplace and creating intolerable work environments are outdated manager mindsets about the role work plays in people’s lives and in society. Making matters worse, moldy cultures and climates linger. Workplace fulfillment is absent.

Strategy firm Root found in their research that 68 percent of survey respondents believed managers are more interested in their own success than inspiring their direct reports. It’s no surprise that TellYourBoss.com found that 65 percent of employees in their study would prefer a new boss over a pay increase.

It’s not just management malaise at the middle-layer of the hierarchy holding back organizations and its employees. It’s also low trust in senior management’s business intentions. Consider the findings in last year’s Edelmen Trust Barometer report. 54 percent of participants said that business growth or greed is the real reason behind innovation.

Symptoms of Destructive Management

The swirl of problems identified above makes it tough to identify their causes. Today’s managers need to look for symptoms in their own work environment. What’s more, they need to look for symptoms caused by them.

Symptom 1: Blind Impact. This is when managers are unaware of how their actions, attitudes, and words impact others. These managers consistently underestimate the value people have on the business.

Symptom 2: Antisocial Leadership. An antisocial leader doesn’t have the skills to encourage, build, and evolve a community of people united by a shared purpose.

Symptom 3: Chronic Change Resistance. This is a manager’s resistance to adapt to change, initiate it, or support it. It’s also an organization’s naivety or arrogance in recognizing how changing business conditions affect strategy and operations.

Symptom 4: Profit Myopia. Managers with this symptom habitually look to profit as the best measure of success. These managers don’t know of other ways to measure their team’s or the company’s impact on those whom they serve.

Symptom 5: Constipated Inspiration. This symptom infects managers’ leadership styles and prevents them from learning how to inspire their team.

Symptom 6: Silo Syndrome. A manager afflicted with silo syndrome cannot see beyond his immediate responsibilities and has no awareness of the impacts his decisions have on others.

Antidotes to Overcome Destructive Management

The keys to prevail over destructive management is to double down on how you relate to people and personally focus on your leadership style.

  1. Cultivate workplace optimism

Workplace optimism gives hope to employees that good things will come from their hard work. It’s a description of how it feels to work on a team.

  1. Magnify meaning

Three areas of meaning are important to people: social, work, and personal. Help your employees find meaning in the relationships they have and develop in their work (social). Connect your employees’ efforts to a bigger picture (work). We all want to be part of something bigger than ourselves. Talk with your employees about what is meaningful to them in their careers and in life (personal).

  1. Know your impact

Your leadership style has the greatest impact on your employees’ work experience. Spend time talking with a trusted few to learn how your style enables and creates barriers to performance.

  1. Increase connection

As human beings, we crave connection with others. We’re social animals. Develop ways to intentionally help your team connect. A great tool is HopeLab’s Check-in Cards.

While organizations struggle to find ways to counter the influences of destructive management, you can act and improve your team’s work environments. Focus your work on creating energizing, positive work environments. It’s the context that significantly influences how people feel about work and go about doing it.

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#WorkTrends Preview: Overcoming the Symptoms of Destructive Management

The TalentCulture #WorkTrends Show is all new on Wednesday, February 10, 2016, from 1-2 pm ET (10-11 am PT).

Destructive management has been percolating in organizations for some time. Its adverse affects have become commonplace and too little is being done about it. Our guest, Shawn Murphy, will discuss his debut book, The Optimistic Workplace, which defines the symptoms and many antidotes to overcome destructive management; he will also share why and how to move towards building an optimistic workplace.

Shawn Murphy is an author, keynote speaker, and the CEO/Founder of the consultancy Switch + Shift. Connect with Shawn on Twitter and read his weekly Inc.com column, “Positive Business.”

#WorkTrends Event: Overcoming the Symptoms of Destructive Management

#WorkTrends Logo DesignTune in to our LIVE online podcast Wednesday, February 10 — 1 pm ET / 10 am PT

Join TalentCulture #WorkTrends Show founder and host Meghan M. Biro as she talks about Overcoming the Symptoms of Destructive Management with Shawn Murphy.

#WorkTrends on Twitter — Wednesday, February 10 — 1:30 pm ET / 10:30 am PT

Immediately following the radio show, the team will move to the #WorkTrends Twitter stream to continue the discussion with the entire TalentCulture community. We invite everyone with a Twitter account to participate as we gather for a dynamic live chat, focused on these related questions:

Q1: What are some symptoms or impacts of destructive management you’ve witnessed?#WorkTrends (Tweet this question)

Q2: How can an organization overcome destructive management? #WorkTrends (Tweet this question)

Q3: What can leaders do to create workplace optimism and positivity? #WorkTrends (Tweet this question)

Until then, we’ll keep the discussion going on the #WorkTrends Twitter feed, our TalentCulture World of Work Community LinkedIn group, and in our TalentCulture G+ community. Feel free to drop by anytime and share your questions, ideas and opinions. See you there!

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