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Workplace woes - The bane of brilliance

2016-08-23 03:50:28

Some high-performing employees suffer for their success

Aug 20th 2016

WHO wouldn t want to be a star employee? The salary is nice, as is the chance

to climb to the top and tell others what to do. The downside is that your

co-workers may hate you. The notion that jealous managers bully high-performing

underlings, whom they see as a threat to the social order, has been well

researched. But management theorists now say it is not only small-minded bosses

that star workers need to overcome; it is also their colleagues.

A study by Theresa Glomb of the University of Minnesota and Eugene Kim of the

Georgia Institute of Technology suggests that workers have a tendency towards

what Leon Festinger, a social psychologist, defined as upward social

comparisons . They overestimate their ability and judge their standing in the

office against those with more talent. Falling short leaves average Joes

envious and spiteful. Tall poppies, says Ms Glomb, are chopped down in a

variety of ways, including ostracism at social events and humiliation before

the boss.

All this rarely happens in industries such as the technology business, where

outperformance is, by and large, admired by all. It is typically found in

stagnant environments, says Sue Filmer of Mercer, a human resources (HR)

consultancy: the more dynamic the business, the less the scope for peers to sit

and stew. An HR manager at a property firm, employing around 400 staff, says

that when he implemented a talent-management programme, those excluded

immediately came to tell him why the chosen ones were undeserving. In small

organisations, too, there can be little chance of a sideways move to escape the

rut. Ivor Adair, an employment lawyer at Slater + Gordon, a law practice, says

such cases are widespread. In one recent instance he dealt with, a jealous

worker at a professional-services firm was cited for leaning over a desk and

screaming, hairdryer-style, into a talented colleague s face.

High performers have their lives made difficult in other ways, too. A study by

Gr inne Fitzsimons of Duke University showed that the most talented employees

tend to have extra work dumped on them not only the high-powered tasks they

might relish, but also mundane chores, such as organising meetings.

In some cases, the stars have themselves to blame. It can be in the nature of

successful people to display a level of ambition and self-absorption that can

get up colleagues noses. And because high-flyers tend to have better cognitive

skills, they could simply be more adept at spotting slights that stupider

employees would overlook. If you find e-mails terse or colleagues offhand, in

other words, it means you re a high performer.