
Ask anyone to tell you about a toxic boss, and you might as well sit down for a while.
There are a LOT of stories about bad bosses.
And even though good bosses — those like you, of course — outnumber toxic bosses, it’s the bad leaders that employees talk about, remember and curse most often.
But toxic bosses don’t just make fodder for watercooler talk; they hurt business.
Toxic Bosses Harm Business
Half of the employees who work for toxic bosses say it messes with their mental well-being, according to a CIPD study. And 70% of employees working for toxic bosses aren’t satisfied or engaged at work.
“Workers who serve a bad leader experience helplessness, lack agency to affect change, feel that they are underpaid and underappreciated, don’t like their colleagues — no surprise: bad leaders hire bad people — don’t respect their leaders, and are looking for a side hustle. They do not feel like the best version of themselves at work,” says Laura Gassner Otting, a #1 Mindset Coach and author of Wonderhell and Limitless.
So who are the worst — and how can you NOT be that boss?
When I asked colleagues, friends and family for toxic boss stories, they were quick and eager to share. Their personal experiences are examples of the typical toxic bosses out there.
The Bully
Unfortunately, bullies exist in the workplace nearly as much as they did in school. Worse yet, they get promoted to management.
Case in point from a colleague: “I had one boss that would tell me, ‘I would never have picked them,’ or ‘I would have picked them last in gym class,’ in nearly every meeting. It was incredibly awkward.”
Awkward is the understatement. It’s cruel to tell people you don’t want them on your team!
The Plow
Some toxic bosses plow $#!^ up and down the line to make themselves look better.
Meanwhile, the Plow also likes to push BS up the ladder, either exaggerating wins or downplaying losses so they look successful, often at the expense of their team.
Take this as an example: “A supervisor in the company tried to get me to hire someone from their team into mine. I flat out refused because I knew the person had problems — drinking at lunch and was not able to perform in the current role. I was told I wasn’t a team player because I didn’t take someone who wants to stay in the company. The supervisor also said he needed to move the employee somewhere that he didn’t have to think. So, thanks for calling my team dumb!”
The Cheat
Some toxic bosses will try to get blood from a stone. They might demand more from employees rather than jump in to help. Or they steal ownership of good ideas from employees. Some might take credit for work and successes that were a team or another individual’s.
Then there’s this guy: “I once had a boss who just didn’t pay me despite working as a paid intern. He eventually paid, but not the full amount.”
The Diva
Another breed of toxic bosses is the Diva — the manager who looks the part, but doesn’t play it well (kind of like the golfer who has the all the latest equipment and clothes and shoots a 106).
Example from a friend: “This manager was sharp and dressed well. But he wasn’t a team player. He never stepped up to help when we needed it. It was so bad, there was a petition to get him fired.”
Mutiny at its best! (Or is that its worst?)
Divas tend to keep themselves in the limelight — and cast a shadow over their people.
The Nitpicker
The Nitpicker finds fault, however small and unimportant, in everything around them — most especially their employees’ work.
If you think you’ve worked for a nitpicker, this probably sounds familiar: “He nitpicked and made changes to everything, questioning minor details and wasting everyone’s time. And he took turns on who he would nitpick — me one week, someone else the next week. It was basically demoralizing.”
Don’t Be a Toxic Boss
That’s pretty much what all toxic bosses do — suck the morale out of their teams.
But you want to continue being a good boss who’s talked about at the watercooler for the right reasons.
How? First and most obviously, avoid all the toxic boss behaviors mentioned in the five examples above here.
“You can determine if you are a good boss by asking your team if they feel empowered to ask for feedback, have agency/influence about how they work, and understand why their work matters. And if your promises are tied to date-specific deadlines or metric-specific outcomes, on which you follow through,” says Gassner Otting.
Try to incorporate more of these everyday great boss behaviors:
- Greet your people. Say, “Good morning” or “Hello” or even “What’s up?” When you acknowledge your people early, daily and often, you let them know you’re there, ready to work alongside them and appreciate them.
- Point your finger in the right direction. Give everyone credit for wins, especially when you’re praised for them. Be hesitant to blame others for losses. While you don’t have to take sole blame for what goes wrong, you don’t want to point at anyone for that either.
- Give constructive criticism. It leads to opportunities for learning and growth. Cryptic criticism without reason — which toxic bosses are notorious for giving — leaves fellow employees guessing and resentful.
- Set the example. Keep your work-life balance in check. And encourage your employees to do the same. Don’t send requests after hours, and don’t expect employees to respond or act outside your normal business work norms. A team is only as strong as the example its leader sets.
- Roll up your sleeves. Help employees get the work done when they’re under a group deadline or lack the resources to achieve the goal.
“Acknowledge your team, ask about their weekends, share a bit about yours; you can be friendly without being friends, and fill in the cracks with personable relationship-building anecdotes,” says Gassner Otting. “Criticism should be timely, prompt, and constructive, pushing toward the future, not wallowing in the past.
“Finally, spreading credit and sharing the spotlight is free, and makes people feel seen and appreciated because (spoiler alert!), our research told us that every generation wants to get gold stars and feel important, wanted, needed, and appreciated.”