By Patrick Lencioni

How Nice Leaders Become Angry

May 18, 2020
Column: Management that Makes a Difference

Anger is a funny emotion. No, check that. It’s not funny. It’s angry. But it is often strange and hard to understand. That’s especially true when otherwise affable or thoughtful people become leaders and start to exhibit anger more and more frequently.

Anger provokes the people being led to question what they thought they knew about their leader—CEO, department head, principal, pastor—and it often causes leaders themselves to wonder whether they’ve suddenly given in to the dark side of power.

It’s all pretty awful.

What’s particularly strange and ironic about this is that in many cases—and I say this from experience—unintended anger on the part of leaders is actually the result of a tendency to want to be, you guessed it, too nice.

 

How can anger be related to trying to be nice?

So many leaders begin their tenures determined to be more likable and beloved than the leaders they’ve worked for in their careers.

And this is where the problem starts.

In their less-than-conscious pursuit of approval, these leaders withhold criticism for a missed deadline here, and overlook a poor decision there—all in the name of empathy and reasonableness.

Over time, the people who work for this leader naturally start to worry a little less and a little less about the consequences of making mistakes….until one day, a slightly larger screw-up occurs and the leader blows a gasket.

 

WHOA! What happened?!

The magnitude of that blown gasket seems so out of proportion to the mistake itself because people don’t realize the extent of the blow-up is actually a function of all the mistakes that were overlooked in the past.

It’s as though the leader is saying, “how could you people not appreciate all those other times that I let you off without saying anything?!”

Trust me. I’m sad to say that I know what I’m talking about here.

And then things can go from bad to worse when the kind-hearted leader feels an onslaught of guilt, which is especially painful given his or her private commitment to being nicer than other leaders.

One might think this guilt would cause the leader to calm down and back off, and sometimes that happens. But sometimes it exacerbates the problem, like gasoline on a fire: “How could you people put me in a position to have to get angry and feel so guilty?!”

I think many of us can relate to this in our roles as parents. (“I said I would never get angry at my children, and here they are making me be angry!”)

In most cases, leaders can recover from these painful moments through genuine ownership of and repentance for their behavior. But if they don’t understand the underlying reason for their unintended and uncharacteristic outbursts, it can become a painful pattern.

 

Perspective

The solution to all this isn’t the ridiculous piece of advice, “don’t get so mad.” That’s like telling a person in the midst of anxiety to “stop worrying.”  Ain’t gonna happen! That train already left the station.

Instead, leaders who find themselves getting angrier over time need to understand that their feelings are not actually the problem.

In fact, there is nothing wrong with having those feelings; they are often a sign that something is wrong and needs to be addressed.

It’s how a leader deals with those feelings that needs to change.

 

Real-world solution

Here’s the best advice I can give for addressing this situation.

Leaders who begin to feel the initial signs of anger or frustration or deep disappointment, need to stop and say something subtle to their direct reports. For example, “Hey, I’m starting to feel angry/frustrated/deeply disappointed here.”

Putting your frustration out there and letting people hear it and begin to deal with it, is precisely what will prevent a leader from having to display it.  This approach also gives people the opportunity to change their behavior or performance rather than be on the receiving end of an irrational tirade.

The only way that a leader is going to be able to do this is if he or she realizes that being perceived as nice or lenient is actually—and I mean this—selfish. It’s about them. Or us. Or me.

Rather than wanting to be seen as nice, choose instead to be fair and firm and clear. And self-controlled. People appreciate those qualities a lot more than nice, anyway.

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Patrick Lencioni is founder and CEO of The Table Group and author of 10 best-selling books that have been translated into more than 25 languages. His expertise is leadership and organizational help, consulting to CEOs and their teams. The Wall Street Journal called him one of the most sought-after speakers in America. Yet he is first and foremost a serious Catholic, husband and proud father of four boys.

 

Patrick Lencioni is the founder and president of The Table Group, and a prolific author of best-selling books on business management, particularly in relation to team... MORE »

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