Sunday 2 March 2014

IS FEAR EVER A USEFUL SUBSTITUTE FOR RESPECT?


Following on from a recent blog about the benefits of acknowledging weakness , a blind alley that individuals, managers and organisations need to be aware of is when fear is confused for respect. 

Actually, such confusion should never arise as they are so completely different, but alas it is all too common. Fear, if unchecked, can create and spread a sense of malaise within a corporate body that can, at best, impede growth and at worst will wreak havoc within the entire structure of an organisation. Pretty soon, management and staff can find themselves operating in the blind: a culture of fear.

HARD TIMES, TOUGH CALLS
In recent times, many companies and organisations, large and small, have found themselves in a position when difficult decisions needed to be taken in order to ensure survival and growth (albeit modest). Such measures impact in a very personal way on the lives of individuals be it restructuring, cost savings, maximising on synergies etc. That is not in question here - a good entrepreneur at some point will have to take decisions that require a strong stomach - they are there to lead, even in the teeth of the storm.
  
FEAR IS NOT FAST TRACK RESPECT
Managing through fearful times is not the same as using that fear as a tool of management. That is a poor substitute for leadership, in fact, it indicates a lack of any leadership at all. If management by fear becomes a de facto policy, we should ask on which planet would a negative, vulnerable and scared workforce operate better than one that is positively motivated, focused and inspired - recession or no?


A kingdom founded on injustice never lasts


SENECA

WHEN THE TIDE TURNS
When the ethos of excess pressure and fear (aka bullying) exists then this is a sign that troubled times lie ahead – and such a culture will begin to display structural flaws most particularly when an economy begins to emerge from recession: 
  • An organisation's strongest and most able people will be gone at the earliest opportunity (if it has not already happened) – with predictable results
  • The chances of enticing high achievers will be jeopardised. How can a business take full advantage of increased opportunities when it's most able people work for the competition? 
  • Leadership through fear is like 'one club golf' and has no inbuilt flexibility and a very limited life span. 
  • Shaking off the effects of a fear culture takes time and radical change – but since when did the world of business and opportunity proceed at a leisurely pace?
      If fear runs through an organisation there is very little that can be done without a radical and imaginative approach from the executive. This has to come from the top and starts with the core values of the boardroom. A good executive can lead it's people through the toughest times but once opportunities become more plentiful, the whole corporation will come into its own.

In the depth of winter 
I finally learned that there was in me 
an invincible summer

ALBERT CAMUS, French Nobel Prize winning writer

In the next blog we shall look closely at how individual managers, regardless of the scale of their responsibilities, can maintain awareness of their performance and in doing so ensure that their people are lead and not pushed.


Alan Keyse is a fully qualified Business and Life Coach who now applies his 30 years of experience as a sales executive to coaching helping business leaders, executives, managers and their staff to create a healthy, stress free environment so boosting their bottom line.

Alan Keyse
email Alan


2 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi Alan,
I agree managing through fear is a poor substitute for respect and the productivity which come with that respect.

In my experience such managers are not aware that fear has become their default 'style' of management. It is a blind spot and that is it's biggest danger.

For most part we believe we are the 'good guy' and see the problem as stemming from 'out there'. This feeling of disempowerment in the organisation or life is a very fearful place to be. When we are living from a place of fear it is the only way we can manage. We cannot give what we do not have.

As Yves Morieux (TED Talks) says, the only failures are:
1. Not asking for help
2. Not providing help

We all need help from time to time we are human. It often takes a lot of courage to ask for that help. Yet when they did, they almost always say it was the best thing they ever did for themselves.

I would love to know how you feel about asking for help. It can still press my buttons sometimes.

Unknown said...

I could not agree more with what you say about asking for help and the courage it sometime requires. Especially among men in the workplace. If they ask for help at all it often long after the alarm bells first started to ring. Overcoming the 'weakness' stigma is one of our greatest challenges as therapists and coaches.

Many thanks for taking the time to comment on this issue