Thoughts On Being Authentic
- 06
- Nov
What does it mean to be “authentic” and does it matter? Over the past few years this has
been a topic of a lot of conversation, especially in the workplace. Being authentic is
about being whole to the person that you are, whole in mind, body and spirit. I liken it to
the clothes we each have in our closet. Even when they are odd or outrageous, the
clothes we have are uniquely ours, and we are comfortable in them. Put on someone
else’s clothes and even if they fit you know right away they are “not you!” And so it is
with authenticity. Being authentic is being comfortable in your own skin, not seeking or
choosing to be someone or something you are not. Frequently being authentic means
being able to bring your whole self to work. There is so much anxiety and fear these
days over being judged for who you are, what you look like, how you dress, the color of
your skin, your sexual orientation, your cultural identity, marital status, personality style,
and your age among a host of common discriminators, that many chose to hide part of
who they are and often trying to appear to be someone they are not in order to “fit in”.
While no one is immune from feeling left out, I have found it to be especially important
to women and people of color seeking the same basic access and privilege that white
males acquire without qualification. I was in denial about this for decades until I was
offered the chance to attend a conference on white males as full diversity partners hosted
by the WMFDP organization (see wmfdp.com). The fact that I did not want to believe in
it did not make it untrue. This conference gave me a chance to learn from women and
people of color and to experience their perspectives rather than being wedded to my own
uninformed, but well-intentioned, prejudice. Yet this was just the beginning of my
diversity journey into the world of work-place inequalities, all based on someone in
power judging someone not in power over one or more of the characteristics described
above. Left to their own devices, such leaders create hostile work environments,
diminishing those not like them, and inhibiting the performance of their teams. To
survive, you “fit in” or you perish. We all know this happens more that we care to admit.
Rather than appreciating diversity for the beauty and richness that it can bring to any
team or organization, these leaders and the organizations they belong to tend to be
abusive and ultimately, poor performers over time. They gain unenviable reputations,
lose quality team members, and are unable to recruit the quality that they seek because
they create environments where it is not possible to bring your whole self to work. They
create insiders and outsiders, strangely similar to the concept of givers and takers that I
wrote about in previous blogs (see Ishmael by Daniel Quinn if this is new to you). This
loss of human capital is a singular result of bosses who practice and encourage
discrimination, usually under the radar and practiced with nuanced subtlety. So the
question here – are these leaders who judge others and who prevent them from being
whole in the workplace just being “authentic” to the person that they are? It appears that
being “authentic” is also insufficient, at least as a measure of human goodness.
I have thought about this a lot in my subsequent years in the work place and it’s a bit
more complicated than it may seem to be. On reflection I hold the view that bringing less
than your whole self to work is bad for you, bad for your teams, and ultimately bad for
the business. Motivating yourself to perform at the highest levels of your potential is not
possible when you are spending part of that potential on shielding who you really are and
living in fear that who you are is somehow less than good. But fear of rejection, of not
fitting in, of being isolated at best and discriminated against at worst are very real and
powerful motivators for most people. From our earliest years we all come to experience
such negative emotions, real or imagined. High school years can be particularly brutal
for a host of obvious reasons, and these fears do not magically disappear in college or
later in the work place. Cross-generational work forces have magnified the importance of
this conversation. Watch what happens every time a new leader moves into a team. Odds
are, the behavior of some if not all of the team members will change, some subtly, some
overtly, but always toward the “preferences” of the new leader. It is both fascinating and
curious at the same time as each team member jockeys for favor with the new boss. It is
not long before there is a clear picture of what the boss likes and doesn’t like, and team
behavior will often closely align with those preferences unless the leader is developed
and perceptive.
So this conversation is about two poles – the leader, and the led – and authenticity plays a
role in each. For the leader, my caution is to value diversity over sameness – resist the
temptation to surround yourself with sycophants because if you do that you will never get
any answer other than the one you already know. Encourage diversity. Seek it out. Be
careful about the prejudices your display in the workplace. Especially if you are a white
male. Get yourself a diversity accountability partner who will support you as you learn
and grow. Make sure when you are hiring that you do not create the image that you only
hire in your image and likeness. In your meetings with your team, encourage dissent and
reward those courageous enough to speak their minds (respectfully of course). Be open
to understanding your blind spots – they exist whether you choose to see them or not.
Focus more on what you do not know than on what you do know. Above all, make it
clear that you do not want “yes men or women” on your team and back up your words
with actions. Attend diversity training. No matter how developed you are, you NEVER
arrive at a destination on this journey of life. Ask yourself what it is that you are afraid of
and make an intentional effort to inform yourself and your fears. Walk the talk – nothing
is more meaningful. Be authentic, but that is not license to be an abusive leader. Where
your authenticity is hurtful to others, grow up and recognize your responsibility to set the
proper example. Make sure you have plenty of checks and balances in place to help you
differentiate the real from the unreal, the truth from the convenient falsehood.
For the led, remember that you are in control of the situation. No one can make you do
anything you do not want to do or be anything you do not want to be. Help your boss and
your team be successful by communicating authenticity in all you do, and being authentic
in all your actions. Hold yourself, your boss and your team accountable for fair treatment
regardless of circumstance, sex, race, color, creed, sexual orientation, age or any other
possible discriminator. Follow as you would like to lead, and lead where opportunity
presents itself. There are many kinds of leadership – positional leadership is the least
effective. If you are working in a hostile environment, make sure you are not
contributing to it by appeasing bad behavior. Walk the talk. Seek mentors who can help
you navigate these challenging waters. Above all, know yourself, be courageous, set the
right example, and know that it is better to leave an abusive boss who is unwilling to
change than it is to try to be less than the person that you are.
And so we circle back to the beginning. What does it mean to be authentic? Is it carte
blanche to be abusive, to discriminate, to surround yourself with those most like you?
That is certainly being authentic if you are the one in charge, but it is also being an awful
leader and you deserve it if your team abandons you. Clearly, being authentic is only part
of the requirement. I have used the word “developed” elsewhere in this post, and I think
that is the best adjective I can come up with. A developed leader is a self-aware leader,
sensitive to his/her impact on others, aware of their own blind spots, and humble enough
to accept help and support from the rest of the team. To be self aware and authentic as a
leader at the same time seems to be good. This is about life-long learning and
improvement no matter how educated or accomplished you are. And that will always
form the best foundation for a productive team.
For the led, to be authentic and dysfunctional in the name of being “who you are” is also
clearly bad behavior. We all know teammates we steer clear of because they are difficult
and that is “just the way they are!” How sad. Just as with the leader, being “authentic” is
only part of the equation. Being “developed” as a human being seems to fill in the
missing pieces here as well. Self-awareness, humility, actively seeking mutual support,
openness to improvement and selflessness all contribute to team effectiveness and
ultimately to team results. High performing teams understand this. They hold one
another accountable – they are authentic and developed as individuals AND as teams.
Once you serve with one you will never forget the experience. They understand that the
major competitive advantage any team has over another lies in its human capital. They
invest in self-learning. They have internal and external integrity and accountability– and
in so doing, they are both authentic and developed.
So the next time you are tempted to use the word “authentic” in the context of the
workplace, consider these other equally important characteristics that characterize the
best teams and take the time to reflect on the perspectives of authenticity both as leader
and as led, and as functional as well as dysfunctional. Authentic is only good when the
end it seeks is good!
Note: If you enjoyed this post I encourage you to check out my two books. These posts are part of a series of thoughts, observations and tools related to my original work, “Growing Mentor Intelligence™ – A Field Guide To Mentoring,” and the sequel, “Growing Mentor Intelligence™ – Companion Workbook.” Happy Mentoring!!!