King Carl Johan by Gerry Scappaticci gerryscappaticci 2547953686 EDIT
King Carl Johan by Gerry Scappaticci gerryscappaticci 2547953686 EDIT
A common feature of organizational life that I observe from my perspective as an executive coach is our collective failure to "empathize up." We talk about "managing up" constantly, and it’s well understood that professional success involves attending to our relationships with those in a position of authority or influence over us. Directors manage their VPs; VPs manage the C-level; C-level execs manage the CEO; and the CEO manages board members and investors. There’s no shortage of managing up.
But what’s often lacking in that process is empathy. What do I mean by this? First, let’s clarify the term: the dictionary definition of empathy is understanding, being aware of, being sensitive to, and vicariously experiencing the feelings, thoughts, and experience of another person. But this misses some important elements, and it includes some unstated assumptions that can be counterproductive in a work relationship. Theresa Wiseman is a medical professor and researcher at the University of Southampton, and her work explores the concept of empathy because of its importance for nursing and medical care. Wiseman identified four defining attributes of empathy:
The ability to understand another person’s perspective and sense their feelings—the dictionary definition—is necessary but insufficient when it comes to the actual expression of empathy in working relationships. In order to convey empathy effectively, we must also be able to suspend our own judgments regarding the other person’s situation and their emotions, and we must be able to actively communicate our understanding to them. We often think of empathy as an intrapersonal state, but it’s really an interpersonal experience.
The commonly understood definition of empathy also includes several implicit beliefs about its nature or its consequences which are problematic in this context. One is that empathy is equivalent to sympathy, a misunderstanding that Wiseman clears up directly:
”Sympathy involves 'feeling sorry' for the other person or imagining how we would feel if we were experiencing what is happening to them. Empathy differs in that we try to imagine what it is like being that person and experiencing things as they do, not as we would.” [2]
Similarly, we typically associate empathy with agreement, and we act as though empathizing with someone entails endorsing their perspective and their feelings, but this need not be the case. Understanding someone’s perspective and their emotions while suspending our judgments about both does not necessarily imply that we agree with that perspective or believe that the resulting emotions are justified. It simply means that we comprehend their perspective and emotions, and we are able to envision ourselves experiencing that perspective and those emotions under similar circumstances. Just as we can empathize with someone without sympathizing, we can empathize with someone while disagreeing with them and considering their perspective inaccurate and their emotions unwarranted.
With this clarity on what empathy is and what it isn’t, let’s consider why we habitually fail to empathize up, the consequences of that failure, and what we might do differently.
The fundamental barrier to empathizing up is that we’re less likely to empathize with people we perceive as different from us, and such difference is an inevitable result (and, at times, an intended function) of organizational hierarchy. Even if we have a good relationship with someone in a superior position, the relative nature of our respective positions can create a sense of “otherness” that makes it psychologically difficult for us to empathize with that person’s perspective and emotions.
Another obstacle is posed by our general unawareness of a dynamic known as hedonic adaptation, and its implications for our view of leaders and others in positions of authority or influence. [3] Human beings are a tremendously adaptable species, and we typically adjust to new circumstances, both positive and negative, much more readily than we imagine. Research on people such as lottery winners and those who’ve suffered traumatic accidents indicates that after a short-lived increase or decrease in happiness as a result of such events, our overall level of happiness returns to its previous levels.
The same is true of leaders and others in positions of power—the status, compensation, and other benefits such positions afford provide a short-lived boost in happiness, but these rewards are soon taken for granted. And yet if we don’t enjoy the same benefits, we find it difficult to conceive that they could fail to yield lasting happiness. “If only I were in that position,” we imagine, “my problems would be solved.” So when faced with an unhappy superior, we’re often surprised that they don’t take greater pleasure in their position and its perks, and we’re less likely to empathize with them.
A consequence of our failure to empathize up is that it becomes easier to misinterpret the behavior of leaders and those in positions of influence. As a species we’ve evolved a negativity bias—it’s safer to assume that what looks like a stick might be a snake than to assume that what looks like a snake is really just a stick—and this bias can heavily influence our perception of others’ behavior, particularly when we’re under stress. Recall that the expression of empathy involves not only comprehending another person’s perspective and emotions, but also suspending our own judgments. In the absence of empathy we lack an explanatory narrative that allows us to make sense of a superior’s behavior from their perspective, so we’re compelled to rely on our own interpretation, which tends toward the negative. [4] As a result, their behavior can easily trigger a threat response, otherwise known as a "fight, flight, or freeze response." [5]
When we’re in the grip of a threat response our own behavior is heavily influenced by a number of physiological, emotional and cognitive factors. We’re primed to act more quickly and forcefully, to feel anger and fear more readily, and to accept snap judgments rather than carefully considering a range of explanations. These characteristics allowed our distant ancestors to successfully survive literal threats to their physical safety, but today they often lead us astray in social and interpersonal situations that we perceive as threatening in some way.
So our failure to empathize up makes it more likely that we experience a threat response when interacting with superiors, even in the absence of overtly hostile behavior on their part, and once a threat response is triggered it becomes even more difficult to empathize with them. At that point we’re deeply attached to the explanation we’ve crafted to explain their behavior, and it’s highly unlikely that we’ll be able to slow down and consider alternative explanations until the interaction is over and we’ve calmed down. (A common theme that comes up in my coaching practice with senior leaders is a client’s surprise at learning that they’re perceived as intimidating or unfriendly by junior employees—my client feels no rancor or displeasure, and they’re not even aware of any negative interactions that might have triggered such perceptions. But in the absence of empathy it’s all too easy for any leader’s behavior that isn’t overtly positive to be misperceived as negative.)