The bully bottom line
By Jay
MacDonald Bankrate.com
How much do bullies cost business? Plenty.
Gary Namie, work doctor and director
of the Workplace
Bullying and Trauma Institute, says cases of employee
leave brought on by prolonged stress cost North American companies
between $150,000 and $200,000 per case, and that 60 percent
of all disability claims are stress-related.
"All it takes is one bully
to drive two or three people out, and they drive them into
long-term disability," he says. "These clowns can
cost a company half a million hard dollars just in stress
disability claims. That doesn't even factor in turnover or
any intangibles -- morale, productivity, risk of sabotage,
loss of prestige and reputation."
David L. Weiner, chairman and CEO
of Marketing Support Inc., a Chicago brand agency, wrote "Power
Freaks" after working with his share of bullying clients.
He found out firsthand the damage a bully boss can do to an
organization.
"I had one working here,"
he recalls. "What a wonderful smile, what a wonderful
person, but jeez, she went through here like a scythe! I finally
had to let her go. This woman was really charming and the
clients loved her, but before long, there was blood all over
the place.
"She would pick somebody out
and pick on them and quietly cut them right down to where
nobody wanted to work with her. I didn't recognize it until
about three or four months," says Weiner. "We had
lunch and she told me that everybody in this place is unhappy,
she went on and on. I walked out of that lunch depressed and
went around and talked to people. I hired a company to do
an employee survey and found out she was totally wrong. This
was one of her Machiavellian techniques to try to gain status."
Weiner had his hands full rebuilding
trust and morale among his 100-plus workforce.
"Oh, it brings down an organization,"
he says, "especially for a company like us, a brand marketing
agency. You can't have people down in the mouth."
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