I hope you werenโt drinking tea when you read that as it might now be all over your laptop or device. Seven years later, Iโm not all that certain our workplaces have completely eliminated โ or even partially eliminated โ workplace bullying. To me, itโs another term for โcommand and controlโ. Leaders who believe itโs their managerial right to flash the โI have a more senior title than youโ card in favour of getting a decision to go in their favour are in fact corporate bullies. Leaders who poach internal employees from your team without being proactive and discussing the opportunity or situation in advance with you are corporate bullies. Leaders who ridicule or berate employees in open meetings โ whether on a conference call or face-to-face โ are corporate bullies. Leaders who make impossible demands on deadlines, who set up their staff for inevitable failure, are corporate bullies. Leaders who take credit for the positive results an individual or team created without said leaders involvement, are corporate bullies. Iโm in the midst of writing the second book. You can see where this is going. Corporate bullying is a problem. We might coin these types of leaders as โPuppetry of the Meanestโ.Based on qualitative data gathered from focus groups, narrative interviews, and target drawings, the analysis describes how bullying can feel like a battle, water torture, nightmare, or noxious substance. Abused workers frame bullies as narcissistic dictators, two-faced actors, and devil figures. Employees targeted with workplace bullying liken themselves to vulnerable children, slaves, prisoners, animals, and heartbroken lovers.