American Association for Physician Leadership

Self-Management

How Some Smart People Sabotage Their Success

Harvard Business Review

December 6, 2018


Summary:

Here are five ways intellectually gifted workers torpedo their career trajectories.





When you understand these shortcomings, you can turn them around. Here are five ways intellectually gifted workers torpedo their career trajectories.

Raw intelligence is a huge asset, but it isn’t everything. Sometimes, when intellectually gifted people don’t achieve as much as they’d like to, it’s because they’re subtly undermining themselves. Here are five issues smart people struggle with:

They devalue relationship building. Very smart people sometimes see their success as inevitable because of their intellect and might see workplace diplomacy as an irritation rather than a core skill.

Solution: Start by identifying three workplace-diplomacy behaviors that would improve your success.

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They find teamwork frustrating. For someone who grasps concepts quickly, it can be difficult to work with people who take longer to process information. Smart people also sometimes find it difficult to delegate because of a sense that they can do a task better, regardless of whether this is actually true.

Solution: Learn to appreciate what diverse minds bring to a team.

They attach a lot of their self-esteem to being smart. This can make it difficult to receive critical feedback or take a risk.

Solution: Develop relationships with people you trust to give you constructive feedback.

They get bored easily. If you’re smart and curious, you might quickly lose interest in anything once you’ve figured it out.

Solution: Try taking a 30,000-foot view of when it’s worth tolerating a few hours of boredom to collect easy wins toward your overall success.

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They see in-depth thinking as the solution to every problem. Bright people are accustomed to succeeding through their thinking skills, and they might overlook when a different approach would be more beneficial.

Solution: Notice when thinking becomes an unhealthy obsession. Experiment with taking breaks to get unstuck, and allow yourself to learn by doing rather than through exhaustive advance research.

Copyright 2018 Harvard Business School Publishing Corp. Distributed by The New York Times Syndicate.

Harvard Business Review

Harvard Business Publishing (HBP) was founded in 1994 as a not-for-profit, wholly-owned subsidiary of Harvard University, reporting into Harvard Business School . Our mission is to improve the practice of management in a changing world. This mission influences how we approach what we do here and what we believe is important.

With approximately 450 employees, primarily based in Boston, with offices in New York City, India, and the United Kingdom, Harvard Business Publishing serves as a bridge between academia and enterprises around the globe through its publications and multiple platforms for content delivery, and its reach into three markets: academic, corporate, and individual managers. Harvard Business Publishing has a conventional governance structure comprising a Board of Directors , an internal Executive Committee , and Business Unit Directors.



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