Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Overlooking abusive leaders: The psychology of blind spots in the workplace

employee
Credit: LinkedIn Sales Navigator from Pexels

Many employees have experienced the unfortunate but pervasive reality of working under an abusive leader. In a , almost 90% of respondents reported having at least one abusive boss during their careers, with 30% reporting that they had worked for more than one. Yet, toxic bosses are rarely called out. Why?

One obvious reason for the failure to expose abusive leaders is the . Victims as well as the "bystanders" worry that exposing the perpetrator could jeopardize their own job or even their career. The result is silence.

Companies have attempted to address that challenge by implementing discreet . However, these systems are premised on the assumption that victims and witnesses to leader abuse can immediately understand and comprehend when an abusive situation has arisen.

The problem lies in the social dynamics of the workplace that can muddy the waters. The result is that what constitutes abusive behavior can often appear ambiguous or even acceptable in the eyes of observers and victims. There are mechanisms at play that serve to normalize leader abuse, making it hidden in plain sight. Whistle-blowing systems are useless when no one recognizes that abuse is occurring.

What are those that can render entire groups of employees incapable of acknowledging that their boss has perpetrated acts of abuse?

In our ongoing research, we have been interviewing people who describe their past experiences with abusive bosses. We have found that, in many cases, individuals were blind to the abuse at the time they were subjected to it. It was only in retrospect that they recognized the true nature of their abusive leader.

In addition to the interview-based data we are collecting, our recently published identifies specific group and leader dynamics that can impede a work group's capacity to accurately assess instances of abusive leader behavior. This can allow such abuse to persist.

How groups can miss signs of abuse

Even entire groups can .

Under certain conditions, group . This can happen when a group's collective sense-making process—through which the group generates a unified understanding of the situation—is corrupted.

One reason this occurs is that we often rely on our peers to make sense of unexpected or unclear situations. Social psychologists note that groups exert a powerful influence on our individual perceptions. We tend to see what our peers see. A found that individuals possess a strong desire to conform to the popular opinion in a group. As a result, we may doubt our own perception if it differs from the group.

Those who influence the group's sense-making process can create or reinforce blind spots. If an influential group member downplays or ignores abusive leader behavior—by suggesting the leader's behavior is legitimate and by accusing others of being "overly sensitive," for example—that interpretation can spread to other .

In other words, what a group notices or recognizes depends on how its .

Workplace culture can hide abusive leadership

The broader social context . Workplace culture can blur the line between aggressive and abusive leadership.

Individuals who work in high-achievement cultures, for instance, are compared to those working within less aggressive cultures because the former rewards aggressive behaviors. Though a high achievement culture doesn't necessarily foster abuse, such cultures run the risk of minimizing behaviors that otherwise might be considered unacceptable.

The iconic provides just one example of a culture where bosses could make unreasonable demands of their subordinates, including exhorting them to engage in corrupt business practices. A leader may within a culture that focuses solely on the ends and not the means.

Charismatic leadership can hide abuse

The interplay between and leader charisma can also generate blind spots that obscure . This is especially true in groups that have cult-like identities in which individuals matter less than does the collective.

In these groups, there is a powerful sense of solidarity that shapes members' identities in ways that align with the leader's agenda. This makes it more difficult for group members to even when it crosses the line. That means when group members strongly identify with their group and its leader, it reduces the members' capacity to scrutinize abusive behavior.

Individuals who are members of a highly cohesive group with a well-respected leader will self-censor any negative insights about the group or its leader. Further, the group norm discourages members from evaluating their leader in a negative way, since .

Silence is not golden

Questioning a leader's legitimacy can threaten a fundamental feature of healthy-functioning groups: that of . This is the level of security group members feel to express their thoughts without fear of negative consequences.

When members feel that their psychological safety is threatened, they are more likely to suppress any discontent or concern with the leader. An individual who feels otherwise .

Over time, this silence can become self-reinforcing. When criticism is suppressed and no one speaks up, individuals may believe they're alone in their concerns. In the absence of information sharing, members question their beliefs and assume they are overreacting. This leads to cognitively minimizing what might otherwise be unacceptable behavior.

Organizations can combat blind spots by creating an environment where , and by ensuring the corporate culture is not unwittingly encouraging bad behavior. Organizations should also monitor their culture to understand the types of messages it may be sending to employees and their leaders in terms of rules of interpersonal conduct and respect.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.The Conversation

Citation: Overlooking abusive leaders: The psychology of blind spots in the workplace (2025, May 26) retrieved 17 August 2025 from /news/2025-05-overlooking-abusive-leaders-psychology-workplace.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Horrible bosses cause 'race to the bottom,' study finds

0 shares

Feedback to editors