The 8 Signs Of A Bad Leader

The 8 Signs Of A Bad Leader

It’s an interesting conundrum. Say you’re a manager, a senior-level executive, or a human resources employee; your job is to be a leader, yes, but also to pick out leaders, to select who will be promoted, given extra responsibility, head up a project or team. How do you know who will make a great leader in a given circumstance?

There are loads of articles floating around about attributes that make great leaders great, but what makes a poor leader? We can all pick them out after the fact (hindsight is 20/20 after all), but what traits set these people apart even before they assume a leadership role?

I propose that any one or more of the following traits would be a red flag that a person might not be ready for a leadership position:

  • Lack of empathy. I realise I just wrote a post about the importance of empathy as a leadership skill, but the lack of empathy is a key indicator of a poor leader. If the person cannot seem to put him or herself in another person’s shoes and see things from a different perspective, they will never be a truly great leader.
  • Fear of change. Hey, change is scary for everyone, especially when it involves loads of money and/or people’s jobs. But leaders who cannot embrace change are destined to be left behind.
  • Too willing to compromise. The ability to find a win/win situation is a gift for a leader, but anyone who is too quick to compromise his or her ideas or ideals is not going to be a benefit to the team. It’s a fine balance between understanding when to give in and when to stand your ground.
  • Too bossy. It’s a common misconception that bossy people make good bosses. Actually, the opposite is true. Someone who simply orders others around is unlikely to engender any loyalty or make subordinates feel empowered. True leaders have followers who want to be led by them.
  • Wishy-washy. Leaders must make decisions, and so if a person always seems to vacillate on choices big and small — from who should handle a certain client to where to go for lunch — they will probably have difficulty in a leadership position. It indicates a lack of self-confidence.
  • Poor judge of character. A person who has a blind spot when it comes to friends and coworkers, making excuses or being unable to see another’s true character, won’t surround himself with the kinds of people who will help him rise to the top.
  • Out of balance. Someone who is the first into the office every day and the last to leave might seem like a great candidate for promotion, but ask yourself if they have any balance in their lives. A lack of balance can be a precursor to burnout, and can also signal that they may have unreasonable expectations of the rest of the team.
  • Lack of humility. The person who acts as though they can do it all — and are the only one who can do it right — is unlikely to rise to be a great leader, because they’ll be too busy doing everyone else’s job. Micro-managers need not apply.

This is not to say that having one of these characteristics automatically bars anyone from assuming a leadership position. In fact, I believe people can learn to overcome any of these bad habits and become a better leader.

But if someone exhibits more than one trait on this list, it’s a good bet that they’re not ready to lead at this time. If you are in a position to help them grow, take the time to constructively point this out to them, and give them the opportunity to improve. You’ll be modeling how a great leader really works.

What characteristics do you think indicate someone is or will be a poor leader? I’d love to discuss them in the comments below.

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About : Bernard Marr is a globally recognized expert in strategy, performance management, analytics, KPIs and big data. He helps companies and executive teams manage, measure and improve performance.

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Benedicte Joan

Programs Development | Women’s Rights| Empowering Communities

7 年

How can a leader can be bad? Do you mean manager?

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Natacha CARNIOL

Chef de service-Hutchinson

7 年

I never promote people, I never develop them. I managed to get a chair and I want to keep it. How? I just exploit my experts, trying to get their know how and show up their work as MINE. I get the credit and kick them out by harassing them. I assign them utopic projects asking them to make it possible or leave! I apply discrimination, bullying, mobbing, defamation towards all those who are competent, skillful and talented. Nobody can do anything to me, I can not be fired but I can dismiss employees “constructively” keeping my chair. I oppress my subordinates, I overwork them and impose them to be sleepless aiming to damage their brain, to burn them out. I violate their personal lives making them to work at home changing the deadlines. I also order others to harass them, to collude and fabricate lies for reporting to HR. Your articles about bad leaders can not change me and my chair can not be taken as the bosses above me share my “values”. Weak fearful bosses promote weak people in order to feel powerful. Only confident, strong leaders promote competent people, but this is utopia. We do not want to “engender any loyalty” but to make competent people leave the company "constructively”. I have much more bad traits than those you stated and I hold a leadership position for over a decade even if I do not really lead. The ones who have the "positive " traits are kicked off the corporate world. So again, all those articles about leaders vs bosses DO NOT CHANGE ANYTHING. We are nasty and we win. The leaders are unemployed or resort to guns. We survive and keep SUCKING.

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Brian Rood

Customer Service Manager Payments at Oracle

7 年

What do I do if that person has all 8???? :(

Chantel de Beer

Functional Area Expert - Business and Enterprise Development - Northwest University

9 年

Gosh, saw one that applies to Me, will have to make some changes.

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