The Problem With Being Too Nice

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    EADERSHIP

    The Problem with Being Too Nicey Michael Fertik

    PRIL 07, 2014

    Leaders are placed under a tremendous amount of pressure to be relata

    human and nice. Many yield to this instinct, because it feels much ea

    to be liked. Few people want to be the bad guy. But leaders are also

    expected to make the tough decisions that serve the company or the te

    best interests. Being toonice can be lazy, inefficient, irresponsible, and

    harmful to individuals and the organization.

    Ive seen this happen numerous times. A few years ago, a senior staff

    member of mine made the wrong hire. This can happen to anyone, and

    best way to remedy the situation is to address it quickly. Despite my ur

    to cut the tie, this staff member kept trying to make it work. While I lau

    the instinct to coach, fast forward two months later, and we were

    undergoing a rancorous and unnecessary transition process. Theres

    key lesson here for any leader. Nice is only good when its coupled with

    rational perspective and the ability to make difficult choices.

    Here are a few other other recognizable scenarios where being nice isn

    doing you or anyone any favors:

    urning to polite deception. Youve been in these brainstorming meetings everyone is trying to hack a particular problem, and someone with pow

    aises a ridiculous idea. Instead of people addressing it honestly, brows furrow, heads nod like puppets on strings, and noncommittal murmurs go

    round. No one feels empowered to gently suggest why that particular idea wont work. At my company, rejecting polite deception is a big part of h

    we do business. When something isnt right, we call each other out on it respectfully, then and there, without delay. Why? Its not helpful to foster

    veryone-gets-a-trophy mentality; you have to earnthe honors to getthe honors.

    he long linger. Sometimes a hire just wont cut it in a certain role. It might seem easier to keep an employee in place rather than to resolve the

    mismatch but it actually is not. Resist the temptation to prolong confrontation, to see if things will get better. It is more of a disservice to let some

    ounder, especially when its clear that he or she just isnt hitting the mark. Be kind and communicate clearly, but dont be nice. Be surgical about it

    Make the clean cut. Help the person transition somewhere he or she can succeed. Handling employee issues immediately helps your culture and

    roductivity over time, youll attract employees with similar values and convictions.

    Dont be a doormat. When youre too nice to suppliers who cant deliver on time, to colleagues who dont do their work, to customers who refuse

    ay youre actually letting others take advantage of you and your business. When youre overly generous with your allowances for others, you cre

    ertile atmosphere for contempt to spread. Imagine the reactions of your most talented, focused, and motivated employees as they watch lackluste

    oworkers get pass after pass. Anger and resentment take root, morale plummets, and turnover starts to go up, up, up. Think of how loyal customer

    will react if they see how easy it is for others to take advantage of your services. Your reputation will surely suffer. These problems become more

    ifficult to solve as they pile up. You dont need to be severe to be respected, but you do need to hold your organization to certain standards and

    must be firm about people meeting them. Setting rules will help you when decisive action is needed. No more delays, no demurring, no debating.

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    ailing the introspection test. Are you too nice to yourself? Introspection is a powerful leadership tool, but we often forget to use it. When you ask

    ourself what behaviors hold you and your team back, you can recalibrate your leadership style for the better. When you give employees the space

    ive you the hard truths, without fear of repercussion, youll get valuable perspective and make a giant leap forward in maturing as a leader.

    Of course, this doesnt mean managers get a free pass to be disrespectful, cruel, or a bully in the workplace. Theres a world of difference between b

    n effective leader with high expectations and dealing with problem after problem caused by milquetoast management. Beware of confusing being

    or being liked with being a good leader.

    Michael Fertikis a repeat Internet entrepreneur and CEO with experience in technology and law. He founded Reputation.com in 2006. You can follow him

    Twitter at @michaelfertik.

    elated Topics: MANAGING PEOPLE

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    5COMMENTS

    ISA PASBJERG 8 months ago

    ood article, Michael! People quickly lose respect for leaders who don't seem to have the courage to do the things that are not easy to do, and, in turn, cease to be inspired

    heir leadership no matter how many great ideas they have.

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