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Competent Jerks and Lovable Fools: The Likeability Factor at Work

Heidi LaFleche

September 03, 2009




Photo: shearforce/Flickr (CC)

Do your coworkers like you? Or do they avoid you like day-old conference-room bagels? Does it matter, as long as you’re getting the job done?

You betcha, says a Harvard Business Review report on “Competent Jerks, Lovable Fools, and the Formation of Social Networks” by Tiziana Casciaro and Miguel Sousa Lobo. Like it or not, likeability matters.

The study identified four workplace personality types:


Lovable star
Lovable fool
Competent jerk
Incompetent jerk

Managers and coworkers clearly prefer the first and avoid the last. But it gets more interesting when you must choose between the middle two. While managers say “competence trumps likeability,” the reverse seems true in practice. The report states: “Faced with a choice between a ‘competent jerk’ and a ‘lovable fool’ as a work partner, people usually opt for likeability over ability.”

What Makes a Workplace Jerk?

Jerks can turn your workplace into a “Survivor” rerun. “If you punched somebody in the parking lot, you’d be fired,” says career coach Laura Tully. “But if you withhold information from others, if you’re difficult to work with, if you obstruct others from doing their jobs, management doesn’t know how to deal with it.”

“Competent jerks are people who feel under a lot of self-imposed pressure to be the best, to get the credit, to win,” says Sharon Melnick, PhD, a professional coach and corporate trainer. “They need to prove their worth. Jerk behavior is a driven behavior, and often the person isn’t consciously aware they’re being a jerk. It seems like a do-or-die situation, because their whole self-esteem is on the line.”


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  • Logosm_max50

    Justen

    2 months ago

    212 comments

    It's a fine balance. Is the lovable fool dragging down performance more through his incompetence than the competent jerk is dragging down performance in aggregate by being hard to work with? In the end, why would you want either? Generally likable and competent should be the bare minimum hiring criteria; anyone lower than that wastes human energy and either needs to go back to school or lighten up a bit.

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    aceofdiamonds63

    2 months ago

    4 comments

    I'm a loveable star or competent jerk depending on who you talk to. Co-workers who are at least capable of handling their own responsibilities think I'm a great guy. Those who are mediocre and expect me to carry them find me to be a jerk when I tell them to step up their game. Since managers find it easier to manage the successful than the unsuccessful, guess who has to change their behavior? I've learned how to say "no" with a smile, and that's not a bad thing, but alot of the reason for competent people being abrasive is because they're taken advantage of, and if you don't push back, pretty soon you're doing several person's jobs. And that screams "poor management". Which is redundant :o)

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