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| Brought to you by Liz Hilton Segel, chief client officer and managing partner, global industry practices, & Homayoun Hatami, managing partner, global client capabilities
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| | Horrible Bosses. The Devil Wears Prada. Tyrannical managers are often the subject of office comedies. But behind the satire lies a darker reality. Despite some improvements in workplace practices, many leaders may still set unreasonable expectations, display favoritism, steal credit, use inappropriate language, or discriminate against employees who exhibit specific characteristics. Leaders who indulge in or condone toxic behavior can erode employee performance and morale, harm customer relationships, and expose the organization to litigation. Here are some ways to ensure that your workplace remains civilized and respectful.
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| | “Fundamentally, leaders need to make other people better,” says business psychology professor Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic in a conversation with McKinsey senior partner Brooke Weddle and partner Bryan Hancock. “There should be less focus on individualistic, selfish, egotistical, and career-enhancing traits and dispositions and more focus on those that make other people better.” Unfortunately, some leaders may be “overconfident, narcissistic, and incompetent” because traditional corporate culture is likely to favor these traits, says Chamorro-Premuzic. To counter this tendency, bosses could consider honing their intrapersonal and interpersonal skills. “If you’re managing people, it’s important that you also manage yourself,” he says. “It’s important that you evoke and display the right emotions. It’s important that you can empathize with others and connect with them on a human level.”
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| During his 11-year tenure as CEO of Merck, Ken Frazier gained widespread respect for spurring organizational performance without compromising his strong personal values. “I thought it was important to be humble,” the former executive chairman says in a conversation with McKinsey senior partner Vik Malhotra and senior partner alumnus Steve Van Kuiken. “My dad was a janitor, and he was ten feet tall in my eyes. I also knew that when I was in that [CEO] chair, my job was to serve my employees and patients; it was not about me.” Rather than exerting his power, Frazier adopted an equitable approach to leadership that involved nurturing and promoting top talent, delegating key decisions, and exhorting teams to work toward the common good. “When a company is successful, the CEO gets a lot of credit for what I call the big moments, but leadership is in the many small, quiet moments with the team,” he says. “You have to assemble the right talent and figure out how to work together, making sure the company has the right intensity, operational cadence, and accountability.”
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| | Lead by being a good boss. | | | | — Edited by Rama Ramaswami, senior editor, New York
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