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Management
Manage & Lead
How to stop being
a people-pleaser
Being a people-pleaser and being an eective
team player are two very dierent things.
BY ANNETTE CLANCY
Does your office have a people-pleaser?
The person who just can’t say no? Every
office has one and regardless of how oen
they say yes, they will rarely be appreciated for
their efforts. People-pleasers yearn for aention,
external validation and the approval of the group.
Their self-esteem is tied up with this effort to be
seen as worthy of inclusion and living up to other’s
expectations. This type of behaviour can get out of
hand and before it does, it is important to ask some
basic questions about how it started in the first place.
How do we become people-pleasers?
More oen than not, it’s a characteristic that goes
back a long time. We learn over time that being
helpful, pleasing, aentive and reliable brings
rewards. Our sense of accomplishment and
achievement becomes tied to the external validation
we receive from others. Being a people-pleaser oen
makes us the ‘go to’ person. It also means that our
colleagues take us for granted and we are viewed as
the office doormat. People-pleasers see themselves as
only existing in the service of other people.
Children learn that they are a good girl or boy
at a very early stage in life. Being ‘good ’ and ‘bad’ is
determined by the emotional effect they have on the
adults in their lives. It is an early lesson that small
children learn very quickly. They know that they can
gain their parents’ aention by being compliant or
defiant. Compliance brings beer rewards.
To stop being a people-pleaser we have to address
the anxiety that pleasing assuages. For many people-
pleasers, the idea of stopping being a pleaser raises
enormous anxiety. At its core, that anxiety relates
to our very sense of self: will I have any function or
worth if I am not externally validated? So what can
you do to stop pleasing and start progressing?
Address the anxiety: put yourself first. Ask ‘why am
I doing this?’ There’s nothing wrong with being
helpful, but it’s not always appropriate.
Practice saying no: imagine a number of scenarios
where you would normally jump in to say ‘yes’ and
then practice saying ‘no’. Observe how this makes
you feel and rather than squashing that feeling
down. Stick with it and try to understand what it’s
tell ing you.
Recognise that your self-worth isn’t tied to other
people: it’s perfectly normal to be ambivalent about
others and it’s equally normal for them to feel
ambivalent about you. It’s not possible to be positive
or helpful all the time.
You will disappoint: you will disappoint others, and
they will disappoint you. If we are not disappointing
and disappointed, then we are not having real,
mature relationships.
The workplace cannot function without real rather
than prescribed emotion: in the fantasy workplace,
everybody is happy. People are kind and helpful, and
our colleagues rarely have an ‘off ’ day. No workplace
is like that (just as no family is like that). Being a
people-pleaser robs individuals of their self-esteem
and reinforces the idea that being ‘nice’ means being
helpful. Sometimes it’s beer to say ‘no’ and stop
being the office doormat. Try it sometime, you just
might like the new feeling!
DR ANNETTE CLANCY
Dr Clancy is an organisational consultant and also
researches organisational behaviour, in particular
emotion in organisation.