Workplace Bullies Are Acting Up During the Recession
Workplace Bullies Use Intimidation to Try and Hold on to Their Jobs
Have you seen workplace bullies in action recently? Seems some people have.
If you have to deal with workplace bullies at the office, you mostly chalk it up to one of the annoyances of the job and not let it affect your work. In some cases when it turns into a you-go-or-I-go situation, some people do walk away from the office, the department or the company. You know the old cliché - people don't leave jobs they leave managers and the people they work with. Well that is easier said than done when there are more people than available jobs.
It is becoming the you-go-before-I-go .
That was the essence of the conversation by the couple in the check-out line behind me at Trader Joe's yesterday! One shopper was telling the other about the undue pressure she was feeling from an office bully who was intimidating newer staff to push them out. She stated that this bully was telling junior staff about positions in other departments for which they should apply. The bully had apparently gone so far as to tell two newer employees, that she had not been in agreement with them being hired since she knew that they would unnecessarily stress the company financially.
I guess I have been so focused on encouraging folks to stay positive and pay kindness forward, that I wasn't thinking about workplace bullies who try to intimidate others out of a job in an effort to keep their own.
One of the newer employees was afraid to take the issue to management, for fear it put a spotlight on him as a troublemaker.
It crossed my mind that the person telling the story may have been misreading the situation. Is it really bullying or is someone just strategically trying to manage their own career? Is it an unsophisticated attempt to try the if-you-go-then-maybe-I-don't-have-to-go strategy?
It sounds like the real possibility does exist that in a tight job market, the workplace bully in some people might be rearing it's ugly head.
Published by Marcia Robinson
Marcia has been writing about work, employment, careers, education, entrepreneurship and related political issues for thirteen years. She has a strong commitment to supporting the personal and professional... View profile
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1 Comments
Post a CommentLiked your story. There is sometimes an incentive to "clean house" that can make a new manager look good or pretend to be looking good. There's a tremendous difference between a mean boss and a sadistic boss. Dr. Gary Namie stands out among researchers on this topic. Sociopaths (aka psychopaths) often appear innocent of any wrong doing, while targeting vulnerable workers one at a time. Some actually thrive on persecuting good or well-liked workers. A worker may start out as a target: management's irresponsibility and our own lack of understanding often seal the worker's fate as a victim. I'm grateful to Yahoo Contributors' Network for giving us a venue to educate other workers about a topic management would rather sweep under the rug.