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Lucy Kellaway: The seven deadly sins CEOs won't admit

2011-07-01 06:12:13

It's a classic job interview question: "What are your strengths and weaknesses?

" At the top of the business world, people seem to have taken to heart the

advice to admit no negative traits, just positives in disguise, says Lucy

Kellaway of the Financial Times.

Every week for the past year and a half, the Financial Times has asked business

leaders 20 questions including: "What are your three worst features?"

Executive Sins

They are:

Control freaks

Vain

Ditherers

Bad at listening

Bullies

Afraid of conflict

No good at small talk

By studying the replies, I've amassed a treasure trove of data that

overwhelmingly supports a long-held pet theory of mine.

The three worst traits of chief executives are a lack of self-knowledge, a lack

of self-knowledge and a quite extraordinary willingness to give themselves the

benefit of the doubt.

When it comes to describing their dark sides, 58 out of 60 leaders felt bound

by the same rule - any weakness is perfectly admissible, so long as it is

really a strength.

They almost all cite impatience, perfectionism and being too demanding - all of

which turn out to be things that it's rather good for a Chief Executive Officer

(CEO) to be.

What is particularly interesting about this mass outpouring of faux weaknesses

is that there is no difference between men and women, and no difference between

Americans and Europeans. All are as bad as each other.

Psychobabble

Anyone who has ever spent five minutes talking to a CEO can tell you that they

have more faults than the next person, because they are extreme versions of

humanity.

Start Quote

Lucy Kellaway

There is only one senior leader I know who has no obvious faults

Lucy Kellaway

Financial Times

In the past 15 years of studying them, I've drawn up a list of the seven most

common deadly sins.

They are control freaks. They are vain. They are ditherers. They don't listen.

They are bullies. They are afraid of conflict. And they can't do small talk.

Given that most of the 60 interview candidates were probably guilty of at least

one of the above, why did none of them own up?

The first possibility is that they didn't dare.

But I suspect the real problem is worse: they don't know what their faults are.

A decade of psychobabble, coaching and 360-degree feedback has made no

difference.

It has not changed the most basic truth - people never speak truth to power.

Honesty prize

This denial of flaws is a pity. We like people better when they wear their

blemishes openly. It makes them seem more human.

There is only one senior leader I know who has no obvious faults at all.

His lack of weaknesses does not make me think him the most brilliant executive

I've ever met. Instead it makes me think him flimsy and slightly untrustworthy.

I'm sure there is a bad weakness in there somewhere, and it troubles me that I

haven't yet found it.

Find Out More

The BBC World Service's Business Daily programme features regular letters from

contributors around the world

Business Daily

Of the 60 leaders, only two admitted to big faults.

Marcus Wareing owned up to one of the most common yet unmentionable sins - he

doesn't listen.

But then he's a chef, and chefs aren't meant to be listening. They are meant to

be making sure the iles flottantes are taken to table six - now!

My prize for honesty goes to Jon Moulton, the private equity tycoon, who has

made enough money to be able to say what he likes.

His declared weakness is absolutely taboo, yet goes with the territory. Indeed,

it is a weakness the other 59 leaders demonstrated through the self-serving

answers they gave.

His stated fault - "excess of ego".