Your Team Isn’t Family; Create Workplace Belonging Instead
Carolyn Swora
Trauma-Informed Facilitator, Consultant, Coach | ?? Certified Dare to Lead? Facilitator | ??2x best-selling author | Evolve podcast Host
I get annoyed when I hear leaders say, “engagement and purpose aren’t a problem here, we treat everyone like family.”
Most of the time, a family dynamic at work is code for operating in a less formal way, where people should believe they are as important as profit.?
But often, once there are financial pressures or “changes in direction” that lead to downsizing or temporary layoffs, all of a sudden, certain people aren’t considered to be family anymore.
We use family language as a communication shortcut. When leaders say, “we want to be able to rely on each other, just like a family,” it’s meant to convey that we want people to put work obligations ahead of their true family. “We are here for each other, just like family … which means I’ll need you to work late on short notice.” Or we ask people to forgive terrible behaviour because “as a family, we need to move past this.”
It’s a metaphor that is unfair, inconsistent, and not creating the outcomes leaders expect.
The Problem With Blurring The Boundaries Between Work and Life
Describing your team or company as a family blurs the line between professional and personal. It’s implied that you’re asking people to go above and beyond, or expecting more loyalty than is appropriate.
In some cases, it can stop people from raising concerns because they worry about the repercussions of being honest.?
Hmm, almost like a family.?
But, the big difference is, unlike avoiding your Mom’s phone calls, we can’t avoid issues or tension at work. We need the skills to work through tension and solve issues.
“Like a family” also implies a lifelong bond and ignores the fact that work is a transaction, something we evaluate and opt into (and can also opt out of if needed). Work is something we opt into, bound by contracts and defined by the exchange of services for compensation. It's a choice, complete with rules and expectations that are distinctly transactional.?
How can we encourage commitment at work without trying to play the “just like a family” card?
Instead, Create Belonging At Work?
There are lots of definitions; I think of belonging as feeling heard, valued, respected and not judged —qualities that require intentional effort and courage from leaders.??
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As research from Deloitte highlights, belonging is what 93% of leaders believe is a key driver of organizational performance in today’s workplaces.?
It takes active work from leaders to create environments that support belonging, but it’s critical to the success of the team. Without it, team members are holding back, not comfortable sharing their ideas, questioning the status quo, and other actions that will have a considerable impact on the future success of the team.?
Belonging is one of the building blocks of agency—the ability to have input into how we complete our work, something workplace OD expert and psychotherapist Angie Dairou considers to be critical for success at work in the next decade. Work will be changing too rapidly for leaders to micromanage their way through it; they’ll need team members to step into greater levels of ownership, which only comes if they feel they belong.
What This Means For Leaders
If you need to let go of the family shorthand, there are a few ways to still connect with your team in a meaningful way that helps support and encourage them to bring their highest levels of dedication and commitment to the work you’re doing together.
Consider taking some time to reflect on your thoughts about belonging:
??What’s your take? Should we stop using “we’re like a family” at work, or do you like hearing it? Please share your thoughts in the comments.
If you want to hear more from Angie Dairou, listen to episode 52 on the Evolve podcast, where we dig into it in detail. (You can listen to the Evolve podcast on your favourite podcast app, or check it out here .)?
#leadershipdevelopment #vulnerability?#workplaceculture
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Carolyn Swora is a leadership consultant, team coach, certified Dare To LeadTM facilitator, and two-time bestselling author. Her award-winning book, Evolve: The Path to Trauma-Informed Leadership, brings new focus to an often ignored, yet critical leadership component: the nervous system. In her work with organizations, from pharma to non-profits, Carolyn focuses on driving change through leadership focused on compassion and humility. She is also the host of Evolve, a Top 50 Management podcast about leadership at work.
Entrepreneur with a vision to solve the world's most complex problems through community and collaboration.
9 个月Thank you for this article. I agree completely. The notion of "we're like a family" in the workplace definitely needs reevaluation. There is a thin line between fostering a sense of belonging and inadvertently overstepping personal boundaries. It's about time we focused on creating environments that encourage belonging through respect, value, and open communication, rather than relying on familial metaphors that might set unrealistic expectations.
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9 个月Yeah, this one always bothered me too. It always seems like it’s used when times are good, and forgotten when times are tough.