“Will I be able to do this and will someone else not take advantage of me if I make myself vulnerable and admit my mistakes?”
People are afraid of colleagues and afraid of vultures in middle management. They are afraid of aggressive career‐makers who want to rocket up the corporate ladder leaving the bodies of their colleagues in their wake. Indeed, many people strive for power. It’s in our nature just as the pecking order in the hen house, the alpha male, and the hierarchy in a group of gorillas. And how do we gain power? How do we move higher up in the hierarchy? By being stronger or smarter than everyone else. By preying on the weakness of others.
Three examples with a common thread running through them. Each example is about the desire for power and hierarchy. The strong versus the weak.
The father in the first example wants to harden his son and arm him against the enemy lying in wait by placing extremely high expectations on him and proclaiming him, as it were, the best. “You must be the best and cannot make any mistakes.” The fathers that roar the loudest often do this because they associate their son’s failures with themselves. They consider them their own. The bully in the second example does nothing more than poke at the weaknesses of his victims. He tests to see how he can affect them and when he sees that it is working, he relishes in his power. And finally, boys do not cry because it is a sign of weakness. If you make yourself vulnerable, the vultures will swoop in.
By working from a solid foundation of trust and clearly communicating that the apprehensions are unfounded.
The only way to remove someone’s fear is to build a solid foundation of trust. We dare to open up and be ourselves around people we fully trust. We dare to expose ourselves and have less difficulty acknowledging and admitting our mistakes. Here lies one of the most important keys to successful improvement management. Create an organization where people can trust each other.
As we all know, management is an important role model. They must demonstrate to their organization that they fully support this approach. But this is not enough. With change management, you also need to explain to the people what will happen, how it will happen, and, above all, why it should happen. Keep in mind that this communication must be provided right from the start. If we cannot win the people’s trust, we may never get a second chance. And when trust is lost, it is very difficult to recover.