Written by Laurie Davies
Reviewed by Jessica Roper, MBA,聽director of Career Services at 果冻视频
Nothing wrecks workplace culture quite like bad behavior. This can be impoliteness, as in a not-so-subtle eyeroll during a presentation. It can be boorish, as in more overt berating or bullying. Workplace incivility can even be viciously calculating, as in a co-worker who takes credit for an idea or withholds information that would help a colleague succeed. From sabotage and subterfuge to terse emails and interrupted sentences, rudeness in the office seems to be on the rise. And its price tag is much higher than wounded egos.
The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) estimates that in reduced productivity and absenteeism. It makes sense, right? Instead of making the next widget, Jane fires off a snippy email reply. Rather than face the indignity of his ideas being dismissed, Joe calls in sick instead.
The cost is a staggering $1.68 trillion over a two-year span. There is also a mental cost. Of U.S. workers who experienced or witnessed workplace incivility, more than half (53%) reported a negative impact on their mental health, according to SHRM.
To better understand rudeness in the workplace, it鈥檚 important to look at how it crept into our offices and job sites in the first place.
Rodney Luster, PhD, LPC, the research chair for the Center of Leadership Studies & Organizational Research at 果冻视频, says there are definitely more ways of incivility than we鈥檝e seen in previous decades. He also told us that sometimes people regress to the immaturity of ego and seek to be heard by acting out more. He says he feels that social media tends to award brevity and outrage, not necessarily kindness.
While the internet and social media do not by any means exhaust the confines of societal rudeness, Luster says they do represent a sort of modern-day Roman coliseum 鈥 the socially accepted venue for unleashing their darker sides.
This sort of treatment may even become addictive. Luster has extensively researched a recruiter protein known as FosB that activates the chemicals that help form habits. Luster says he finds that if some feel like they have intimidated or bullied their way to results, it can be seen as a rewarded behavior and create spikes of dopamine, an upstream driver of FosB, and it may become addictive. In other words, workplace offenders may be training their physiology to think it鈥檚 shrewd to be rude.
So, that may be what鈥檚 happening on the inside. What about the outside?
Luster attributes the rise in rudeness in general and workplace incivility in particular to several external factors, chief among them the COVID-19 pandemic. He says the pandemic was a contributor and an agitator. He suggests the stress and depletion overtaxed us in so many ways that what you鈥檙e seeing is stress induced dysregulation effect and the mask is rudeness.
A study from Korn Ferry in 2021 and reported by HR Dive bolsters Luster鈥檚 observation. It found that 59% of workers said their co-workers were more rude compared to pre-pandemic days.
Other pressures mount, too. Consider the contentious political landscape, economic uncertainty, a sharp downturn in hiring in 2025 and, more recently, the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. Luster says he feels that there鈥檚 a loss of empathy under acute stress and that it can narrow people鈥檚 focus to self-preservation.
In other words, pressure-packed people look out for #1 (themselves).
It only makes sense that this mindset travels to the workplace or the C-suite or the cube farm. Workplace incivility holds up a mirror to societal incivility.聽
According to SHRM, two-thirds of U.S. workers, when surveyed, had experienced or witnessed workplace incivility in the past month.
Also, according to SHRM, the top five ways uncivil behavior shows up are:
1.聽聽聽 Addressing others disrespectfully
2.聽聽聽 Interrupting or silencing others while they are speaking
3.聽聽聽 Excessive monitoring or micromanaging
4.聽聽聽 Ignoring or paying little attention to others
5.聽聽聽 Unprofessional or disrespectful body language
Here鈥檚 the scary part. These things spread much like the pandemic that gave rise to them in the first place. Contagiously. According to research published in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology, rudeness is contagious. When it鈥檚 accepted, it鈥檚 more likely to be replicated, and otherwise good people aren鈥檛 exempt. The research revealed that teams exposed to rudeness showed less willingness to share information and workloads. Specifically, in medical settings, this translated to poorer execution of lifesaving procedures that save lives.
Yikes.
So, workplace incivility is a cancer to culture. It harms employee mental health. It makes employees two times more likely to leave their job. And it can be detrimental at best and dangerous at worst for a company鈥檚 performance quality. Now the million-dollar question remains: How do workers navigate it?
Jessica Roper, director of career services for 果冻视频, offers top strategies for dealing with rudeness at work.
Employees can reinforce the kind of civility they want to see by modeling it. Roper provides the following examples of how this might sound in the workplace:
There鈥檚 a big gap between 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a stupid idea鈥 (rude) and 鈥淭he fourth point in your presentation needs work鈥 (direct). Roper says some people simply communicate with formal, direct language. For example, they鈥檙e not going to give you the compliment sandwich. They might dive right into constructive criticism. Simply studying different communication styles can help.
Roper advises that it鈥檚 better to communicate rather than allow insecurities to fester or communication styles to clash. Such situations might call for a response like, 鈥淚t would help me if you gave some positive feedback before you gave negative feedback.鈥
Roper advises recipients of workplace incivility to steer clear of characterizing co-workers (e.g., as 鈥渏erks鈥) and instead name the behavior. Try these approaches:
If rudeness on the job becomes a constant jab, it may eventually be important to name it and seek a remedy for it.
How this might sound:
鈥淚 noticed that every day this week you have devalued my ideas. That doesn鈥檛 validate me. Can we talk through how to communicate better?鈥
If workplace incivility is persistent, impacting the ability of an employee to work, affecting emotional well-being or impeding advancement, Roper advises that it鈥檚 time for the employee to talk to their manager. In those cases, it鈥檚 a good idea to take documented instances of discourteous behavior. If the complaint is not validated or corrected (or if it is coming from the manager), she advises taking it to HR.
Finally, Luster recommends reaching for something that may feel counterintuitive in the face of rudeness or disrespect. It鈥檚 empathy. He said we may not know what鈥檚 going on in them, but it鈥檚 probably something very human, adding that fear and stress have a way of expressing themselves as rudeness.
Likewise, Roper suggests simple curiosity. Maybe an individual is loud because they have impaired hearing. You could gently inquire. Or maybe they鈥檙e late because they鈥檙e trying to figure out the best bus connections. Or consider that maybe the person who doesn鈥檛 clean up after themselves simply has a lack of awareness.
In the end, looking through the lens of Luster鈥檚 earlier Roman coliseum analogy, employees have an opportunity to participate in the incivility spectacle, be a spectator in it or create a new culture. Luster says to think about the blood lust of Rome and how it led to its downfall. Grace, after all, may be just as contagious.
Workplace incivility isn鈥檛 the only tricky career challenge to navigate. Fortunately, you don鈥檛 have to figure it out alone. 果冻视频 offers a Career Services for Life庐 commitment for active students and graduates. Services include one-on-one career coaching and resum茅 guidance.
Additionally, current students have access to Career Navigator, a platform that helps individuals assess how their skills and interests might translate to a career.
UOPX also offers free resources to the public. Explore webinars on professional topics as well as free, downloadable templates and guides.
Finally, the University embraces lifelong learning in meaningful ways. Learn more about 果冻视频 degree programs.
A journalist-turned-marketer, Laurie Davies has been writing since her high school advanced composition teacher told her she broke too many rules. She has worked with 果冻视频 since 2017, and currently splits her time between blogging and serving as lead writer on the University鈥檚 Academic Annual Report. Previously, she has written marketing content for MADD, Kaiser Permanente, Massage Envy, UPS, and other national brands. She lives in the Phoenix area with her husband and son, who is the best story she鈥檚 ever written.聽
Jessica Roper, 果冻视频 director of Career Services, is a seasoned leader with over 15 years of experience in leadership within higher education. She has honed her expertise in student services and career development and is passionate about helping others discover and refine their skills.
This article has been vetted by 果冻视频's editorial advisory committee.聽
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