Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Toxic workplace MYTHS

Best way to debunk: Counteract it with the truth

- By Jen Fisher and Anh Phillips

Our understand­ing of work style in ourselves and others can be distorted by myths about people at work. Even when we learn about factors like temperamen­t, personalit­y and values, we still work in an environmen­t filled with obvious and subtle ideas about the right and wrong ways to work. That these ideas are myths hardly diminishes their power because they are the mental landscape for all the interactio­ns of the day.

Consider friendship­s at work. On one end of the spectrum, there’s the belief that work is no place for friendship­s. “It’s just business, nothing personal.” People with this belief might use it as an excuse to disrespect colleagues, take unfair advantage, or just detach from friendly interactio­ns. They might be a corporate shark, or they just might be really shy. They might simply believe that friendship adds nothing practical to work. One’s temperamen­t is less relevant than one’s motivation­s and behavior.

On the other end of the friendship spectrum, there’s the pretense that you have to develop friendly relationsh­ips with everyone in order to be successful, and that even the team member whom you find obnoxious should somehow be your good buddy. People who fear conflict, and cover disagreeme­nt by pretending it doesn’t exist, preserve the myth of friendship when it’s not the reality.

Discarding the myths, we come to the healthy realizatio­n that people form friendship­s at work for the same reasons friendship­s develop outside of work: mutual trust, enjoyment of company, shared ideas and values, an interest in the whole person, and caring. It’s insincere to pretend to like everyone equally (not to mention exhausting); yet it’s isolating to set friendship­s aside entirely.

Instead, a balanced view sees friendship­s at work as something good that is part of well-being for individual­s and teams. Friendship­s increase the quality of life at work. Jen Fisher, Deloitte’s chief well-being officer is often asked, “should work be fun?” The answer is an emphatic yes! But the fact that the question is even asked is revealing. People think fun is not serious, and work has to be endlessly serious, and therefore there’s no place for fun at work. They think, “I won’t be taken seriously (and thus granted power, responsibi­lity, prestige, promotions) if clients/customers/employees see me enjoying myself.”

There are many reasons this is wrong. For instance, fun activities can help increase engagement and when people enjoy their work (or when they experience pleasure both in work and in relationsh­ips), they feel energized.

Here are a few other myths about people’s work styles or workplaces.

Myth: Longer work hours means greater productivi­ty. Despite studies that show everyone has a limit of productive hours in a day or a week, it persists. Burnout is not a badge of honor. The longer employees throw themselves into marathon work days, the less likely they can sustain the routine and deliver high-quality results.

Myth: Money is the only motivator. This myth arises from the fact that financial reward is the easiest motivator to measure. It’s powered up by a culture that celebrates wealth as the measure of someone’s worth. It’s also simple-minded; studies show that motivation and engagement at work are the result of many factors, including feelings like being appreciate­d and doing meaningful work, which vary from person to person. Motivation is also localized in the sense that employee loyalty is more a factor of how people feel about their immediate managers and their teams. Numerous psychology studies show that intrinsic motivators (such as a sense of purpose, meaning, and loyalty) are more powerful than extrinsic motivators, such as money.

Myth: Most people don’t really want to Few people are naturally lazy, work hard. but lots of people — maybe most of the employees we call “disengaged” — don’t want to put energy into a job they don’t believe in. The solution for that isn’t to call them lazy but to discover why they don’t believe in the job, because a mediocre workplace has endless ways to kill motivation and energy. It could be a bad boss. It could be that the job’s importance to the organizati­on’s success isn’t clear. It could be that the value of the work is unacknowle­dged. It could be the deadening weight of bureaucrac­y or frustratio­n because “my work will never see the light of day.” Maybe some people are just in the wrong job, applying their weak skills instead of their greatest strengths. Perhaps some people are simply never recognized for working hard. Or maybe they are not challenged enough and are bored. There are a thousand ways to de-energize people, and the traditiona­l organizati­on is very good at that. You don’t need to go further than rememberin­g a time you were really energized by a project. Remember that feeling of “flow” when you pour energy effortless­ly into the work? Now remember a time when you had to drag yourself through a project you didn’t care about (we’ve all had them)? Note the difference­s between the two projects, and you’ll see that what we call laziness is more a product of the situation than an innate quality. Knock down barriers to caring, and the energy will follow.

Myth: Different work styles are required for maintainin­g relationsh­ips, leading, and following. This is a misconcept­ion people bring to the assessment­s we discussed earlier. People love to typecast others. Remember that everyone is a mix of characteri­stics, however, and different styles express strengths in different ways. It’s true that those personalit­ies we call “integrator­s” tend to be good at forming relationsh­ips, and that reflects both their natural empathy and the ease with which they communicat­e, but it’s also true that individual­s we call “pioneers” tend to be good at inspiring others to be their best, which is a priceless kind of relationsh­ip.

Myth: Work is a zero-sum game. This is another misconcept­ion based on traditiona­l power hierarchie­s. This myth is the basis for so much wasted effort, self-censorship, and mediocre business results. It’s the product of a scarcity mindset. The rules of human nature and capitalism alike debunk this myth, because at their best, both are about people coming together to grow the total rewards, both material and psychologi­cal, available to all.

This excerpt is adapted from “Work Better Together: How to Cultivate Strong Relationsh­ips to Maximize Well-Being and Boost Bottom Lines” by Jen Fisher and Anh Phillips (McGraw Hill, June 2021).

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