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Spotting signs of a toxic workplace

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A delayed response to bullying, a pattern of exclusion or a fear of speaking honestly in meetings, these are the early symptoms of something deeper: A culture out of balance. (Courtesy pic)
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Toxic workplaces rarely announce themselves with drama. They often begin quietly in small behaviours that over time reshape an organisation’s culture. A delayed response to bullying, a pattern of exclusion or a fear of speaking honestly in meetings, these are the early symptoms of something deeper: A culture out of balance.

A toxic workplace isn’t defined by one difficult person. It’s a systemic issue that develops when poor behaviour becomes normalised and when policies exist on paper, but not in practice. In such environments, gossip becomes the main communication channel, innovation slows and employees operate in survival mode rather than collaboration. The result? Declining performance, disengaged teams and ultimately, reputational and financial loss.

The roots often lie in three key drivers: Leadership behaviour, unclear values and fear. Leadership sets the tone. When managers model fairness, transparency and accountability, those behaviours cascade through the organisation. However, when leaders use intimidation, favouritism or micromanagement as tools, toxicity spreads just as fast often without a single raised voice.

Fear is the second driver. When people feel unsafe to question decisions, admit mistakes or suggest improvements, the culture slowly shifts from trust to silence. That silence is expensive. Research by Gallup consistently links disengaged employees to 18 per cent lower productivity and higher turnover. Toxicity, therefore, is not just a moral concern it’s a measurable business risk. The third driver is inconsistency. Workplaces that preach equality, but reward politics send mixed messages. Employees learn quickly which rules apply and to whom. Over time, performance takes a back seat to alignment and approval.

Recognising toxicity early allows for intervention. Honest climate surveys, confidential feedback channels and leadership coaching can reveal patterns before they escalate. For employees, documenting issues, seeking mentorship or using internal reporting systems can help restore a sense of agency.

Importantly, not every conflict signals a toxic culture. Disagreement, handled respectfully, is healthy.

Toxicity emerges when conflict becomes personal, unresolved or punished. The goal isn’t to create ‘perfect’ workplaces, it’s to build psychologically safe ones, where accountability and empathy coexist.

Healthy workplaces aren’t accidental. They’re designed through daily choices: How leaders respond, how teams communicate and how fairness is enforced. When these align, productivity rises, absenteeism drops and trust returns.

Ultimately, toxicity is not just a people issue, it’s an organisational one. Like any system problem, it can be diagnosed, treated and prevented when leadership is willing to look honestly in the mirror.

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