Believe it or not, I found an article in Harvard Business Review that I really hate. It’s not that I have liked every article in there—the ones on supply chains really bore me. Others make points that I don’t think are terribly powerful. But I think this is the first one that I have found that takes a position about leadership with which I fundamentally disagree.

It’s called “The Great Intimidators,” by Roderick Kramer. As the teaser says,

We hear a lot of praise for emotionally intelligent, even humble leaders. But change is scary, and sometimes you need scary leaders to steer you through. Those with bold political intelligence can creatively push followers to overperform.

The article argues that “political intelligence” is valuable and characteristics of intimidating leaders can get you results. I suppose I would agree with this, but only in certain contexts, and only over the short term. So to present the characteristics as if it were a list of leadership traits to develop really bugs me.

For example, one of the characteristics of “great” intimidators is their mastery of facts—or apparent mastery, at least:

Often it doesn’t even matter all that much whether the “facts” are right. When it comes to making a good impression or anchoring an argument, the truly great intimidator seizes the advantage. Even the misleading or inaccurate factoid—when uttered with complete confidence and injected into a discussion with perfect timing and precision—can carry the day.

Is it just me, or is suggestion of “hey, if you lie at the right time, you can really win an argument” not the kind of advice one would hope to find in HBR?

Jamie Notter