Published: September 28, 2009
Belligerent Bosses: National Study Finds Employee Trust Sacrificed in the Financial Crisis
SAN ANTONIO - (BUSINESS WIRE) - Employees report their bosses use threats and intimidation during the
financial crisis, according to a
national study of leadership funded by the University of Phoenix.
"Questions get you written up and/or fired," one worker said. The
study's results also showed employees increasing distrust what their
bosses say.
Belligerent behavior and eroding employee trust are disturbing
leadership trends in the financial crisis, according to Dr.
Ruby Rouse and Dr.
Richard Schuttler. Employees repeatedly described threatening
communication:
-
"Be thankful you have a job."
-
"You can be replaced."
-
"There are lots of qualified people on the street who would love
your job."
Such statements remind workers their jobs are on the "chopping block."
According to Rouse, some supervisors seem to foster a "culture of fear"
to maintain control during the financial crisis.
Despite significant economic changes, leaders reportedly have not
changed the way they communicate with employees.
-
64% of supervisors use a "business as usual" mentality
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82% of employees expressed frustration with supervisors' lack
of adaptation
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Senior leaders were significantly less concerned about employee
issues, such as layoffs and downsizing, than front line workers.
Non-profit and governmental leaders were among the worst
communicators. They received significantly lower rankings than their
counterparts in business, healthcare, education, and manufacturing.
Workers at non-profit organizations were particularly dissatisfied. Over
half the non-profit employees in the sample (51%) characterized their
supervisors' communication as "poor."
In contrast, 41% of participants described their leaders as effective.
Working adults expressed a strong preference for leaders who are
transparent, honest, and visible. The majority (55%) of participants
who shared open-ended comments recommended increased supervisor
openness; 33% wanted more honesty.
Rouse
is an internationally published author whose research focuses on
leadership and communication. Schuttler
is an international speaker, consultant, educator, and author with 20
years of management/leadership expertise. Both researchers are faculty
members at the University
of Phoenix's School of Advanced Studies.
Organizational Troubleshooter
Dr. Ruby Rouse, 210-414-3174
DrRubyRouse@gmail.com
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