Project Management

Is your boss an arrogant jerk?

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Workplace Arrogance is a common phenomenon in all organizations. Arrogance is one of those behavioral attribute that hampers workplace relationship development and causes uncomfortable climate, and negative toxic.

 Workplace Arrogance is a demeaning behavior which an individual exhibits in order to establish or demonstrate their superiority over others. This behavior affects the interpersonal relationships, causes increased stress in the employees, in addition to general occupational stress. Stress is the response to a stimulus or stimuli that causes unbalance in the physical and mental equilibrium. And Occupational Stress is the stress that arises due to the mismatch in the capabilities of the individual and that required to complete the work efficiently and effectively. It is so common that how many of us feel that we are better than our peers, almost 80% feel that way, and this is an illusory superiority, Dunning-Kruger effect is an extreme example of the more generic bias illusory superiority

 Actually there’s nothing inherently wrong with everyone being above average. After all, many individuals who had invested time, money and efforts towards their professional development. They weren’t typical of the industry…and in fact, it is highly believable that they are better than their peers in the industry.

However, a tool named WARS (Workplace Arrogance Scale) for measuring employee / manager arrogance introduced by Stanley Silverman and his colleagues from The University of Akron and Michigan State University.

The most important conclusion resulting from their research with WARS was that arrogant employees were usually less intelligent and skilled, although pretended to be superior to others. Their arrogance was thus completely unsubstantiated.

Arrogance turned out to prevail among employees with low self-esteem. This is typical behavior of trying to compensate the lack of confidence.

Silverman and his colleagues discovered less arrogant employees produced better results and vice versa. It became clear that excess arrogance is a significant obstacle for productive work.

Arrogant workers not only performed worse, but made it hard for the rest of the team to maintain friendly, cooperative relationships, at the same time ruining trust and respect.

Silverman’s study also shows that, if tolerated, arrogance can be a highly negative force, draining energy and motivation out of the others and making daily communication unbearable.

Identifying arrogant bosses and avoiding the headaches caused by them can be as simple as answering the below questions included in the WARS test.  A yes to any of the questions signals arrogance in bosses. 

  • Does your boss put his/her personal agenda ahead of the organization's agenda?
  • Does your boss demonstrate different behaviors with subordinates and supervisors?
  • Does the boss discredit others' ideas during meetings and often make them look bad?
  • Does your boss reject constructive feedback?
  • Does the boss exaggerate his/her superiority and make others feel inferior?

Arrogant bosses often don’t give compliments and mostly condescending, they act like a weasel their concern only about their own neck, they don’t back the team when something goes wrong and they throw people to the wolves

However, encouraging teamwork and humility as well as cultivating a learning-focused culture can lower the degree of arrogance within an organization and contribute to mutually beneficial social interactions between employees and managers.

Now accepting that we all fall victim to the illusion superiority, here are few tips to use the knowledge of illusory superiority to your advantage

  • Be actively realistic
  • Respond by offering padding
  • Embrace failure
  • Assume improvement is possible and remember you are not above average in every category

Posted on: May 19, 2018 10:30 PM | Permalink

Comments (32)

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Sante Delle-Vergini, PhD Senior Project Manager| Infosys Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
I've had a few of those bosses in the past ;-)

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Kevin Drake Perth, Western Australia, Australia
It is so painful when you get an arrogant jerk boss,

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Riyadh Salih Saskatchewan, Canada
Sante, it is hard not to see few of those, with our long history somewhere we have come across those psychopath :)

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Riyadh Salih Saskatchewan, Canada
Kevin, yes indeed it is painful and more painful when you can not do any changes in the workplace

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Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Ive had one or two over the years, they were very arrogant and it makes it very difficult working with them as they believe they are always right.

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Salman Morris, PMP Project Manager| CareCloud Islamabad, Pakistan
i haven't yet ;-)
those behaviors and relations sometimes helps to achieve emotional intelligence.

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Michael Schijns Senior IT Project Manager| WhatUp INC Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Makes work life very uncomfortable, you end up dancing around them or take on a multi year project to get away from them. Emotional intelligence is a mitigation strategy not the solution.

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Karan Shah Bangalore, Karnataka, India
A good viewpoint, Riyadh. But a couple of caveats, please. Arrogance is a very loaded term and it is very easy to misuse this into categorising people and pre-judging them.

The following flags are often cited for flagging someone as arrogant:
- They think differently*: Everyone thinks differently;;
- They reject incorporate feedback*: Non-incorporation of feedback is not necessarily the same as not considering the feedback and rejecting it after evaluation;
- They do not greet other people: Some people have a lot on their plate. Maybe even the small act of saying, "good morning," distracts them from the task at hand.
- They keep to themselves and their tasks: Again, that is a preference - a comfort zone - for some people. Not everyone is gregarious and chirpy even after their cup of coffee
- (... and so on)

(*points from the post)

In each of the above cases, it could actually be argued that arrogance lies on the side that expects (or even demands) these behaviours.

In short, we must remember that we are not trained psychologists (most of whom, themselves, will agree they are not ideally positioned to earmark someone as arrogant on superficial observation of their behaviour). We must take the time and effort to look at such events of perceived arrogance from all points of view before we pass judgement. We must walk a mile in their shoes.

And, of course, resolution of all conflicts should address the issue and not spill over into levels 3, 4, and 5.

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Samuel Berroa de La Rosa Engineer.| Food processing / Construction Management Pa, United States
Most of the time------------ arrogance = low self-esteem...

Thank You

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Joshua Render Product Owner| Cognizant Harrisville, Ny, United States
If you cannot figure out who the arrogant jerk boss is, does that mean it's you?

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Anish Abraham Privacy Program Manager| University of Washington Auburn, Wa, United States
So far I didn't had a boss like that, thanks for sharing Riyadh

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Eduin Fernando Valdes Alvarado Project Manager| F y F Fabricamos Futuro Villavicencio, Meta, Colombia
Thanks, very interesting article

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Cheikh FAYE Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Expert, CEO and owner| Eurêka Technologies Dakar, Senegal
Thanks God Almighty, my former bosses were also my friends.

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Good article Riyadh!

The first step to recovery is acknowledging that there is a problem. The issue for many such afflicted managers is that they refuse to acknowledge where the problem lies...

Kiron

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Sachin Pereira Oracle Solutions Architect Implementation Lead, Project Leader| HB Associates Mangaluru, Karnataka, India
Thank you Riyadh. In my past experience, when you work for a boss for the first time and you notice arrogance, you need to immediately put a stop to the behaviour. Of course politely and gently.

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Riyadh Salih Saskatchewan, Canada
Rami, you are absolutely right the negativity makes it more toxic and uncomfortable for the whole team, mostly you can see higher turn over among employees

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Riyadh Salih Saskatchewan, Canada
Salman, lucky you but make yourself immune you might face in future

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Riyadh Salih Saskatchewan, Canada
Michael , yes good points it is mitigating our target is to treat it and eliminate it from work place

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Riyadh Salih Saskatchewan, Canada
Anish and Cheikh that's really good for you It is not healthy to have boss like that

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Riyadh Salih Saskatchewan, Canada
Kiron, thanks for your valued comments it is true they would talk about other staff but never come cross the root cause of the problem

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