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How to Kill Your Company's Idea-Stifling Shame Culture by Brené Brown

Posted on Wed, Sep 26, 2012
 

How to Kill Your Company's Idea-Stifling Shame CultureProposing ideas makes people feel vulnerable--so it's in innovation's interest to create a culture that's secure.

In 2010 I had the opportunity to spend a long weekend with fifty CEOs from Silicon Valley. One of the other speakers at the retreat was Kevin Surace, the then CEO of Serious Materials, and Inc. magazine's 2009 Entrepreneur of the Year. I knew Kevin was going to speak about disruptive innovation so in my first conversation with him, before either one of us had spoken to the group and before he knew about my work, I asked him this question: What's the most significant barrier to creativity and innovation?

Kevin thought about it for a minute and said, "I don't know if it has a name, but honestly, it's the fear of introducing an idea and being ridiculed, laughed at, and belittled. If you're willing to subject yourself to that experience, and if you survive it, then it becomes the fear of failure and the fear of being wrong. People believe they're only as good as their ideas and that their ideas can't seem too ‘out there' and they can't ‘not know' everything. The problem is that innovative ideas often sound crazy and failure and learning are part of revolution. Evolution and incremental change is important and we need it, but we're desperate for real revolution and that requires a different type of courage and creativity."

To reignite creativity, innovation, and learning, leaders must rehumanize work. This means understanding how scarcity--a feeling of never having enough--is affecting the way we lead and work, learning how to engage with vulnerability, and recognizing and combating shame.

Make no mistake: Rehumanizing work requires courage. Honest conversations about vulnerability and shame are disruptive. The reason that we're not having these conversations in our organizations is that they shine light in the dark corners. Once there is language, awareness, and understanding, turning back is almost impossible.

Recognizing and Combating Shame

Shame--the intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed and therefore unworthy of love and belonging--breeds fear. It crushes our tolerance for vulnerability, thereby killing engagement, innovation, creativity, productivity, and trust. And worst of all, if we don't know what we're looking for, shame can ravage our organizations before we see one outward sign of a problem.

A stroll through an office or a school won't necessarily reveal a shame problem. Or at least we hope it's not that obvious. If it is--if we see a manager berating an employee or a teacher shaming a student--the problem is already acute and more than likely has been happening for a long time. In most cases, though, we have to know what we're looking for when we assess an organization for signs that shame may be an issue.

Blaming, gossiping, favoritism, name-calling, and harassment are all behavior cues that shame has permeated a culture. A more obvious sign is when shame becomes an outright management tool. Is there evidence of people in leadership roles bullying others, criticizing subordinates in front of colleagues, delivering public reprimands, or setting up reward systems that intentionally belittle, shame, or humiliate people?

A Bully In The Office

The Workplace Bullying Institute (WBI) defines bullying as "Repeated mistreatment: sabotage by others that prevented work from getting done, verbal abuse, threatening conduct, intimidation, and humiliation." A 2010 poll conducted by Zogby International for WBI reported that an estimated 54 million American workers (37 percent of the US workforce) have been bullied at work. Furthermore, another WBI report revealed that 52.5 percent of the time, bullied workers reported that employers basically did nothing to stop the bullying.

When we see shame being used as a management tool (again, that means bullying, criticism in front of colleagues, public reprimands, or reward systems that intentionally belittle people), we need to take direct action because it means that we've got an infestation on our hands. And we need to remember that this doesn't just happen overnight. Equally important to keep in mind is that shame is like the other "sh" word. Like shit, shame rolls downhill. If employees are constantly having to navigate shame, you can bet that they're passing it on to their customers, students, and families.

Shame can only rise so far in any system before people disengage to protect themselves. When we're disengaged, we don't show up, we don't contribute, and we stop caring. On the far end of the spectrum, disengagement allows people to rationalize all kinds of unethical behavior including lying, stealing, and cheating.

The Blame Game

Here's the best way to think about the relationship between shame and blame: If blame is driving, shame is riding shotgun. In organizations, schools, and families, blaming and finger- pointing are often symptoms of shame. Shame researchers June Tangney and Ronda Dearing explain that in shame-bound relationships, people "measure carefully, weigh, and assign blame." They write, "In the face of any negative outcome, large or small, someone or something must be found responsible (and held accountable). There's no notion of ‘water under the bridge.' " They go on to say, "After all, if someone must be to blame and it's not me, it must be you! From blame comes shame. And then hurt, denial, anger, and retaliation."

Blame is simply the discharging of pain and discomfort. We blame when we're uncomfortable and experience pain—When we're vulnerable, angry, hurt, in shame, grieving. There's nothing productive about blame, and it often involves shaming someone or just being mean. If blame is a pattern in your culture, then shame needs to be addressed as an issue.

Toward A Rehumanized Culture

When the culture of an organization mandates that it is more important to protect the reputation of a system and those in power than it is to protect the basic human dignity of individuals or communities, you can be certain that shame is systemic, money drives ethics, and accountability is dead.

In an organizational culture where respect and the dignity of individuals are held as the highest values, shame and blame don't work as management styles. There is no leading by fear. Empathy is a valued asset, accountability is an expectation rather than an exception, and the primal human need for belonging is not used as leverage and social control. We can't control the behavior of individuals; however, we can cultivate organizational cultures where behaviors are not tolerated and people are held accountable for protecting what matters most: human beings.

We won't solve the complex issues that we're facing today without creativity, innovation, and engaged learning. We can't afford to let our discomfort with the topic of shame get
in the way of recognizing and combating it.

The three best strategies for building shame-resilient organizations are:

  1. Supporting leaders who are willing to dare greatly and facilitate honest conversations about shame and cultivate shame-resilient cultures.
  2. Facilitating a conscientious effort to see where shame might be functioning in the organization and how it might even be creeping into the way we engage with our co- workers and students.
  3. Normalizing is a critical shame-resilience strategy. Leaders and managers can cultivate engagement by helping people know what to expect.

What are common struggles? How have other people dealt with them? What have your experiences been? Tell us about it in the comments below.

This article originally published on FastCompany.com; excerpted from Daring Greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead. Published by Gotham Books. Copyright (c) Brené Brown, 2012.
Dr. Brené Brown is a researcher, writer, and a unique speaker whose reputation is builtDr. Brené Brown on her ability to explore vulnerable topics with tremendous honesty, warmth, and humor. She is a leading expert on Authenticity, Vulnerability and Courage; and the author of Daring Greatly, which debuted at number two on The New York Times Best Sellers. She is also the author of The Gifts of Imperfection: Letting Go of Who We Think We Should Be and Embracing Who We Are.

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To Live a Creative Life - by Dr. Brené Brown

Posted on Mon, May 09, 2011
 

 Dr. Brené Brown, Brene Brown

Before my research on wholeheartedness (and before the 2007 breakdown spiritual awakening), I was completely disconnected from my creativity. My disconnection took the form of judgment, resentment, and fear:

"A-R-T - how nice. I have a J-O-B - I'm doing real work."

"I'm not the creative type."

"Spending time creating is self-indulgent."

Behind all of these emotions was disconnection. I had the creativity scars that many of us have; the ones that come from not being able to draw a still life in middle school and being told that I better stick with writing and reading.

Dr. Brené Brown, Brené Brown, To Live a Creative LifeToday, I'm reconnected with my creativity and it's transforming every part of my life. Creativity brings me joy, helps me stay more grateful, calms me down, and inspires me. It helps me keep my perfectionism in check and has become a powerful way to connect with my family.

In The Gifts of Imperfection, I summarize what I learned from the world of Wholehearted living and loving:

1. “I’m not very creative” doesn’t work. There’s no such thing as creative people and non-creative people. There are only people who use their creativity and people who don’t. Unused creativity doesn’t just disappear. It lives within us until it’s expressed, neglected to death, or suffocated by resentment and fear.

2. The only unique contribution that we will ever make in this world will be born of our creativity.

3. If we want to make meaning, we need to make art. Cook, write, draw, doodle, paint, scrapbook, take pictures, collage, knit, rebuild an engine, sculpt, dance, decorate, act, sing—it doesn’t matter. As long as we’re creating, we’re cultivating meaning.

I'm so grateful for what I've learned and for all of you who are creating and sharing your work with the world.

________________________________________________________________________________

Dr. Brené Brown is a researcher, writer, and a unique speaker whose reputation is built on her ability to explore vulnerable topics with tremendous honesty, warmth, and humor. She is a leading expert on Authenticity, Vulnerability and Courage; and the author of The Gifts of Imperfection: Letting Go of Who We Think We Should Be and Embracing Who We Are.

You can read more articles by Brené in her blog, Ordinary Courage.

 

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Brené Brown’s "The Gifts of Imperfection" National PBS Schedule

Posted on Mon, Mar 07, 2011
 

Brené Brown

My hour-long show, The Gifts of Imperfection, has started airing this month. Below is a list of upcoming cities and dates. Please check your local public television station for exact air times.

Most of the PBS stations have websites that list the dates and times for their pledge programming. We are still adding cities to the list, so if you don't see your local PBS station, I would check their programming schedule or call the station.

If you enjoyed The Gifts of Imperfection or I Thought It Was Just Me or the TEDx talks I think you'll love the show. I cover my research on perfectionism, shame resilience for women and men, authenticity, and wholeheartedness.

This is my first real TV experience and it was pretty scary. I did it for two reasons: I'm passionate about my work and I'm passionate about public television. It's the first time it's airing nationally so many stations are "testing it." Some of the times might require setting your DVR! I'll be live in the studio for the 3/7 airing in Houston, and the 3/22 airing in Seattle!

I've learned that Wholehearted Living is a collection of choices. For our family, one of those choices is PBS. We were proud members before this program and we will continue to support public television. I'm so grateful to be able to turn on Sesame Street or Dinosaur Train and know that Charlie is having fun and learning. Steve and I love NOVA, Masterpiece Theater, and the news programs. Of course, our favorite is Austin City Limits!

I hope you enjoy the show and I invite you to call in and pledge your support for public television! The pledge packages include some items that are exclusive to PBS, including a DVD on shame resilience and downloads for the books.

If you check with your local station and they're airing the program but they're not on the list, let me know! The station list isn't in any particular order!

KLRU Austin, TX 3/19 and 3/20

WTTW Chicago, IL 3/11

KUHT Houston, TX 3/7 - 3/17

WTVS Detroit, MI  3/8

WUSF Tampa, FL  3/14

KAET Phoenix, AZ 3/10, 3/16, 3/22, 3/26, 3/29

KCTS Seattle, WA 3/10, 3/22, 3/26, 3/29 (I'll be live in the studio on 3/22)

KBTC and KCKA Tacoma, WA 3/8 and 3/10

KTCA/KTCI Twin Cities TV 3/9, 3/15

WMVT/WMVS Rocky Mountain PBS, Denver, CO 3/10

WMFE Orlando, FL 3/11

KOCE Los Angeles, CA 3/8

KVIE Sacramento, CA 3/7 and 3/8

WTIU Bloomington, IN 3/13

KCPT Kansas City, KS 3/12 and 3/13

MPTV Milwaukee, WI 3/12

WGVU/WGVC Grand Rapids, MI 3/12 and 3/12

WITF Harrisburg, PA 3/19 and 3/20

KENW Portales, NM 3/13

KETS Little Rock, AR 3/13 and 3/15

WPTD Dayton, OH 3/16

WGCU Fort Meyers, FL 3/12

WCMU Mt. Pleasant, MI 3/11 and 3/18

KPTS Wichita, KS  3/12, 3/14, 3/20

WPT Wisconsin Public Televsion 3/12, 3/13, 3/19, 3/20

KUAT/KUAS Tuscon, AZ 3/7, 3/13

KOZK Springfield, MO 3/16

KHET Honolulu, HI 3/12

WILL Ubrana, IL 3/11

KCOS El Paso, TX 3/10

WTVP Peoria, IL 3/8, 3/9

KUSM Bozeman, MT 3/12

KEET Eureka, CA 3/7

___________________________________________________________________

Brené Brown is a professor and vulnerability researcher at the University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work, focusing her studies on a broad range of topics including shame, courage, compassion, stress management, and authenticity. Brené's work has been featured on NPR, PBS, Oprah and Friends Radio Network and she has given two TEDx talks on her vulnerability research.

 

 

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