News

BULLYING AS A SYSTEMIC ORGANISATIONAL PHENOMENON
By: Prof Frans Cilliers, Unisa

Frans Cilliers

Bullying in organisations is mostly seen from an individual psychology stance as an isolated episode. We may be inclined to empathise with the individual victim and to avoid the bully. Using a systems psychodynamic consultancy stance, acknowledging the role of collective and unconscious behaviour, we will be able to understand bullying as an individual, interpersonal and organisational phenomenon.

On the organisational level, bullying often occurs in the face of large scale performance anxiety, for example in times of change and transformation. This means that the collective anxiety erupts in the relationship between a significant and powerful person and another significant and less powerful person. Thus the destructive relationship between the bully and the victim becomes the place where the organisation's performance issues are contained in a representative manner. It is as if the bully-victim dyad becomes the decoy of the larger system anxiety.

Bullies and victims have probably both been bullied in childhood. They tend to repeat the patterns of splitting the good and the bad in themselves and are then being seduced by the organisation to repeat their childhood behaviours on behalf of the organisation. The bully holds onto the good and projects the bad onto and into the victim in a sadist manner. Thus, the bully can live in the fantasy that the victim is the bad one. The victim identifies with the bad being projected by the bully and becomes what the bully needs him/her to be by masochistically accepting the bad and containing that on behalf of the bully and the organisation. Therefore, both roles need the other in order to sustain the projection of badness. It is argued that both bully and victim have valences (or a predisposition) for their specific behaviours and that the organisation will unconsciously search for and use their valances to act out the organisation's emotional toxicity.

Thus, when bullying occurs in the organisation, the role of the organisational development consultant is to ask critical questions about the manifesting macro level splitting and projections as defence mechanisms against organisational anxiety. Next, critical questions need to be asked about why this specific bully is taking up the role as the sadist and this specific victim the role of masochist - and what that represents in the organisation at this time. This may help to understand the complex and dynamic interpersonal and macro organisational dynamics about emotional toxicity around change.

Capturing the Imagination

Introducing IMAGINE – a fresh, new and holistic approach to Team Development.
Read more...


Latest News

  • Conference
    Positivism creates extraordinary employees.

    Based on my personal experience, the interview process can be as daunting for the interviewers as it can be for candidates.
    Read more...

  • Conference
    Do's and don'ts for interviewers - what the books don't tell you!

    Social Intelligence has been a progressive topic for many academics and organisations. It is simply...
    Read more...

  • Conference
    Social Intelligence in a Candy Crush world

    Social Intelligence has been a progressive topic for many academics and organisations. It is simply...
    Read more...

  • The importance of getting job evaluation right
    The importance of getting job evaluation right

    As evidenced by the ongoing strikes on platinum mines by AMCO union members, remuneration is always...
    Read more...

  • Building leadership together
    Building leadership together

    Work Dynamics’s Hazel Dunbar was one of the key note speakers at a recent Virgin Active Leadership Summit...
    Read more...

  • Interpersonal Intelligence Programme
    Happy employees have more oomph

    Who is responsible for employees’ well-being? Employees are increasingly under pressure to learn new skills...
    Read more...

  • 20 Years on
    20 Years On

    Work Dynamics recently celebrated its 20th anniversary. We spoke to CEO and founder Francois Wilbers about the years gone by and times to come...
    Read more...

  • Enhancing the profession
    Enhancing the profession

    Work Dynamics psychologist appointed as SIOPSA chair...
    Read more...

  • Conference
    Capturing the Imagination!

    Work Dynamics introduced IMAGINE – a fresh and holistic approach...
    Read more...

  • Conference
    Reach your candidates, anywhere, any time

    PageUp People, a leading multinational talent management solutions provider...
    Read more...

  • Conference
    The difference that makes the difference?

    One would think that organisations that make the largest financial returns...
    Read more...

  • Conference
    HR EVOLUTION
    5 minutes with Teresa

    New Executive Consulting Psychologist at our Pretoria office...
    Read more...

  • Conference
    MADIBA DAY
    Paying it forward

    Work Dynamics spent their 67 minutes on Madiba Day...
    Read more...

  • Conference
    Conferencing at its best

    It was a busy week for Work Dynamics at the 33rd ACSG conference...
    Read more...

  • Executive Pay
    Is there anything wrong with executive pay?

    Over the last six months South Africa witnessed unprecedented strikes...
    Read more...

  • L'oreal case stud
    L'oreal case study: A bespoke online assessment

    World leading Cosmetics Company first established over a century ago...
    Read more...

  • Coach
    Coaching interventions - What's the questions?

    Coaching has become a widely used leadership development intervention...
    Read more...

  • Conference
    33rd Annual ACSG Conference

    Visit us at Stand 17 where we'll be exhibiting at this exciting event!...
    Read more...

  • Interpersonal Intelligence Programme
    Year-end message from Work Dynamics's CEO

    Francois Wilbers shares some insight on what shaped HR in 2012...
    Read more...

  • Interpersonal Intelligence Programme
    Hire for culture, train for skill

    In a recent survey of 55 large organisations Cubiks....
    Read more...

  • Interpersonal Intelligence Programme
    Bullying as a systemic organisational phenomenon

    Bullying in organisations is mostly seen from an individual psychology....
    Read more...

  • Interpersonal Intelligence Programme
    Don't be surprised when the dog barks

    It's that time of year again to put up Christmas trees....
    Read more...

  • Interpersonal Intelligence Programme
    Changing Change Management

    We don't have the time, energy or budget for change....
    Read more...

  • Interpersonal Intelligence Programme
    Interpersonal Intelligence Programme

    Interpersonal Intelligence is one of the primary determinants...
    Read more...

  • Interpersonal Intelligence Programme
    Die Burger

    Vind gesonde balans in jou lewe. Moenie dat ambisie jou blind maak vir mooi van die lewe nie...
    Read more...

  • Talent Management
    Talent Management

    Much like the next large-scale war is likely to be over securing water, the organisational war will.....
    Read more...

  • Interpersonal Intelligence Programme
    Interpersonal Intelligence Programme

    Interpersonal Intelligence is one of the primary determinants...
    Read more...

  • CUBIKS - The new online Etray
    CUBIKS - The new online Etray

    So who is Cubiks? Cubiks is an international assessmen....
    Read more...

  • CUBIKS - The new online Etray
    New approach to performance management

    Is it time you considered a
    NEW approach....
    Read more...

  • CUBIKS - The new online Etray
    Job Evaluation &
    Work Dynamics

    Job evaluation is regarded as "best practice" in developing fair...
    Read more...

  • CUBIKS - The new online Etray
    Paterson method of job evaluation

    Who should attend? Senior Managers, Employee Representatives...
    Read more...

Work Dynamics on TV
KykNET's Dagbreek

Work Dynamics on radio

Work Dynamics presenting Executive Pay
University of Stellenbosch Business School