5 Tips for Surviving an Unfair Boss
Every job has stress, but the workplace environment can seem
almost unbearable when working for an over-demanding or unfair
boss. You don't have to like your boss, but you do need to be
able to co-exist and co-operate with him for you to be
productive and successful at your job.
Other than a change taking place, as I discussed in the article
'Unhappy at Work? A Change is Coming,' there is no perfect
solution for dealing with a difficult boss, but here are five
suggestions that might make your situation a little less painful.
#1) Think of your boss as a parent and you as his teenage child.
This sounds silly at first, but the relationship between you
and your boss is very similar to that between a parent and
child. Teenagers often have problems with authority and
experience disagreements with their parents. Meanwhile, parents
often create rules the child believes to be unfair. If the
situation gets bad enough, as soon as the child is old enough he
finds a way to move out and make it on his own. Parents aren't
perfect and neither are bosses - both will make mistakes.
#2) Do the absolute best job you can.
Sometimes the child misbehaves.
J. Paul Getty once said, "The employer generally gets the
employees he deserves."
Make sure you are the type of employee you would want working
for you if you were the boss. I know this goes against the
notion of revenge and tucking it to an unfair boss whenever
possible, but by doing the best job possible you give the unfair
boss less ammunition he can use to make your life miserable. He
also might think twice about upsetting one of his better
employees when there are plenty of other, easier targets he can
take aim at.
Don't draw attention to yourself. Unless you are the only one
your boss has it in for, there should be plenty of others to
draw his wrath away from you. Let someone else wear the target
on their back.
#3) Learn all that you can from an unfair boss.
We can learn something from everyone we come into contact with.
While from a good boss we can learn good management techniques,
it is also true that from a poor boss we can learn how not to
act. Don't just suffer, gain something from the situation that
will benefit you in the future. Watch how your boss handles
different situations and make a mental note of which techniques
worked and which failed.
#4) Forget about yesterday.
Yesterday is history, it's over with. Try not to let your
issues from yesterday spoil today. Instead, start each day with
a new, positive outlook, telling yourself that today is going to
be better.
Sometimes we get into a rut, expect the worse and act
accordingly - we subconsciously force a person (in this case,
our boss) to act the way we expect him to act. Make sure you are
not unintentionally adding fuel to the fire. Starting each day
with a fresh slate is the best way to get past previous
differences. Holding onto a grudge only hurts yourself.
#5) Take responsibility.
Don't expect someone else to end your suffering.
Complaining is easy, but it accomplishes very little. Worrying
about a problem won't make it go away while losing sleep and
dwelling on an issue only makes it seem worse. You will never be
happy if you are focusing on worry. If you are truly in a
situation that is causing you pain, you need to begin taking
steps to improve the situation.
The Roman Philosopher Sallust said, "Every man is the architect
of his own fortune."
Have you actually looked for another job? Have you tried to
improve your skills through in-house training, adult learning
centers, books or correspondence courses? Even the smallest step
in the right direction is progress. An obstinate boss won't
change his ways, but you can improve your own skills. Why not
let your difficult boss be the motivation you use to better
yourself?