Weekend Herald

5 signs you have a toxic boss

- Tom O’Neil

Over my 25-year recruitmen­t and HR career, I have always been amazed at how quick an organisati­on was to promote the highest performer in a field into a leadership role. For example the top sales representa­tive automatica­lly gets promoted to the position of sales manager, even though they have almost zero communicat­ion skills and are universall­y despised within their team.

This is an example of the “Peter Principle”. This principle states that people tend to rise to their “level of incompeten­ce” in their organisati­on. Employees are promoted based on their success in previous positions, until they reach a level at which they are no longer competent, as skills in one job do not necessaril­y translate to another.

Different skillset

Leadership is a key set of skills that people don’t just “automatica­lly gain” when they suddenly have responsibi­lity for a team. You don’t automatica­lly become excellent at plumbing because you are a great electricia­n … Because of this, many managers lack basic leadership skills and that can quickly decimate their teams. What are some of the signs of a toxic leader within the workspace?

● Always negative

A poor leader never gives constructi­ve feedback and will just pick away at issues. They always take the opportunit­y to make comments that pull down, rather than build up, which means you won’t get recognitio­n for your hard work or constructi­ve advice on how to improve your own skills.

● Terrible communicat­ion skills

Unclear goals, mixed messages and poor response times all mean that your boss lacks quality communicat­ions skills. Over time this can really impact the business, as team members may end up working against each other to achieve competing objectives that have not been clearly defined.

● Awesome micromanag­er

Always on your case and demanding to know your project status on an hourly/daily basis, these bosses remain constantly involved in every step. They don’t allow you to make your own decisions without clearing it with them first, or allow any sense of independen­t thought in your role.

● They’re always right

Any thoughts you have are wrong, and they are the main “font of knowledge” within the department. They believe they have all the answers, and play favourites with those who validate they’re correct, and exclude people who challenge them and their ideas.

● They lack integrity

You can forgive almost any failing in a manager, however this is the biggie. It is impossible to have genuine respect for a leader who has no integrity. Trust is the greatest asset a leader can command, however when their own decisions undermine this foundation­al quality, the rot sets in. The worst part is that this lack of integrity then poisons others in the team, tacitly approving the ability to “cut corners”.

If you have a boss displaying some or all of these “qualities”, maybe its time to look around for other career opportunit­ies, working the leader you deserve.

Contact Tom O’Neil and the team at

CV.CO.NZ for a free CV or LinkedIn assessment or to be your personal career coach. Visit www.cv.co.nz or www.CareerCoac­h.nz to find out more.

 ?? Getty Images ?? A poor leader never gives constructi­ve feedback
Getty Images A poor leader never gives constructi­ve feedback
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