• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Why Employees Stay Silent When They See Warning Signs of a Problem

daftandbarmy

Army.ca Fossil
Reaction score
37,376
Points
1,160
When the troops stop complaining, that's the time to start worrying ;)


Why Employees Stay Silent When They See Warning Signs of a Problem

Summary.


To address challenges posed by ambiguous threats, employees need to speak up at the earliation is cognitive overload. Employees juggle multiple responsibilities, and ambiguous threats require significant mental effort to assess. As a result, they may shift their focus to more manageable tasks.

Additionally, traditional workplace structures reinforce the assumption that decision-making is a leadership responsibility, while employees are expected to execute rather than question. Thus, by relying on leaders to make sense of the threat, employees offload the burden of grappling with ambiguity themselves.

This reliance is problematic because even the most capable leaders may overlook ambiguous threats or misjudge weaknesses in their team’s products and processes. Meanwhile, employees—who interact with these products and processes daily—may have critical insights that could help navigate uncertainty. The authors recommend targeted actions at three levels.

At the organizational level, companies should foster a mindset of proactively analyzing even the smallest errors. At the leadership level, managers should prepare employees for uncertain situations and provide them with the skills needed to recognize and respond to threats. Finally, employees themselves should be enabled to challenge leadership when necessary.

Why Employees Stay Silent When They See Warning Signs of a Problem
 
When the troops stop complaining, that's the time to start worrying ;)


Why Employees Stay Silent When They See Warning Signs of a Problem

Summary.


To address challenges posed by ambiguous threats, employees need to speak up at the earliation is cognitive overload. Employees juggle multiple responsibilities, and ambiguous threats require significant mental effort to assess. As a result, they may shift their focus to more manageable tasks.
Because we're told we don't know all the info despite us being the ones that work the floors. And senior management haven't been on a floor in 10 years and if they are its to ask you why you're wearing your issue hat.
 
One company I worked for cared about what you had to say even if you were at the bottom provided it was a real concern. Lots of issues caught and rectified before they became major.

The next one I worked for wanted you to shut up and not speak about any issue whatsoever. Then it was the blame game whenever something went wrong because they didn’t want to fix anything.

Two very different mindsets, one which makes employees more invested, the other just creates employees which shut up and do the bare minimum well management wonders why no one is motivated.
 
Back
Top