Events such as the massive Gulf oil spill have demonstrated an extremely murky game of blame. Playing the blame game never works. Research shows that people who blame others for their mistakes lose status, learn less, and perform worse relative to those who own up to their mistakes – and organisations with a rampant culture of blame have a serious disadvantage when it comes to creativity, learning, innovation, and productive risk-taking.
That’s why creating a culture of psychological safety is one of the most important things a leader can do. A recent study by the Stanford Graduate School of Business (published in the Harvard Business Review) showed that merely being exposed to someone else making a blame attribution for a mistake was enough to cause people to turn around and blame others for completely unrelated failures. The findings mean that blame can spread virally, and it appears that all you have to do to “catch” the blame virus is to be exposed to someone else passing the buck.
They also, thankfully, offer some insight into how to prevent the spread of blame in organisations. Here are a few practical steps you can take:
• Don’t blame others for your mistakes. The temptation is huge to point the finger elsewhere when you make a mistake. Resist it. Not only will you gain respect and loyalty from your followers, you’ll also help to prevent a culture of blame from emerging.
• When you do blame, do so constructively. There are times when people’s mistakes really do need to be surfaced in public. In these cases, make sure to highlight that the goal is to learn from mistakes, not to publicly humiliate those who make them.
• Set an example by confidently taking ownership for failures. Our findings showed that blame was contagious, but not among those who felt psychologically secure. So try to foster a strong sense of inner security in order to reduce the chances that you’ll lash out at others.
• Always focus on learning. Creating a culture where learning - rather than avoiding mistakes - is the top priority, will help to ensure that people feel free to talk about and learn from their errors.
• Reward people for making mistakes. Some companies are actually starting to incentivise employees to make mistakes, so long as the mistakes can teach valuable lessons that lead to future innovation.