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  "slug": "columbia-professor-argues-authenticity-is-overrated-as-a-leaders--qnj6pn",
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    "id": "finance",
    "name": "Finance",
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      "venture",
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  "headline": "Columbia Professor Argues Authenticity Is Overrated as a Leadership Strategy",
  "deck": "Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic contends that 'being yourself' at work is insufficient guidance for effective leadership—and may actively undermine professional performance.",
  "tldr": "A Columbia Business School professor argues that the popular directive to 'be yourself' at work is not a viable leadership strategy. Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic contends that authenticity, while culturally celebrated, can excuse poor behavior and substitute self-expression for genuine competence. The more productive approach, he suggests, involves deliberate self-improvement rather than self-disclosure.",
  "key_takeaways": [
    "Columbia professor Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic argues that authenticity as a workplace philosophy is 'overrated' and insufficient as a leadership framework.",
    "The 'be yourself' directive can inadvertently license counterproductive behaviors by framing them as genuine self-expression rather than areas for development.",
    "Effective leadership, in Chamorro-Premuzic's view, requires adapting behavior to context—a skill that demands self-awareness beyond simple self-expression.",
    "The debate has direct relevance for financial institutions and regulated industries, where professional conduct standards often require behavioral calibration regardless of personal style.",
    "Organizations that conflate cultural fit with authenticity may be obscuring the distinction between personality and performance."
  ],
  "body_md": "## The Authenticity Argument Under Scrutiny\n\nFor more than a decade, 'bring your whole self to work' has been a fixture of corporate culture messaging. The premise is appealing: psychological safety improves when employees feel they can express their genuine identities without penalty. But Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, a professor at Columbia Business School and a researcher in organizational psychology, argues that the directive has been stretched well beyond its useful limits.\n\nIn commentary reported by Fortune, Chamorro-Premuzic describes authenticity as 'overrated' as a leadership strategy—not because self-awareness is unimportant, but because 'being yourself' is too passive a formulation to drive meaningful professional development.\n\n## What Authenticity Gets Wrong\n\nThe core problem, as Chamorro-Premuzic frames it, is that authenticity can function as a shield against feedback. If a leader's default behaviors—say, bluntness, risk appetite, or conflict avoidance—are framed as authentic expressions of identity, they become harder to critique and harder to change.\n\nIn regulated industries such as banking and financial services, this dynamic carries particular weight. Conduct risk frameworks, fiduciary standards, and client-facing obligations require professionals to modulate behavior in ways that may not align with personal inclination. A relationship manager who is 'authentically' informal, or a compliance officer who is 'authentically' conflict-averse, may find that self-expression and professional obligation pull in opposite directions.\n\nThe regulatory environment does not accommodate authenticity as a defense. Codes of conduct, senior manager accountability regimes, and suitability requirements all impose behavioral expectations that are external to individual identity.\n\n## Competence Over Self-Expression\n\nChamorro-Premuzic's alternative framing centers on deliberate self-improvement. Rather than asking 'am I being myself?', effective leaders should ask whether their behavior is producing the outcomes their role requires—and adjust accordingly.\n\nThis is a more demanding standard. It requires ongoing calibration between personal tendencies and situational demands, which is precisely the kind of adaptive capacity that distinguishes high-performing leaders from those who plateau.\n\nFor talent development functions within financial institutions, the implication is practical: performance frameworks that reward behavioral adaptability may be more predictive of leadership success than those that prioritize cultural fit or self-expression.\n\n## Balance-Sheet Relevance\n\nThe question of leadership philosophy may seem distant from financial performance, but the connection is direct. Leadership quality affects risk culture, which affects loss rates, regulatory standing, and ultimately capital allocation. Institutions that have faced conduct-related enforcement actions in recent years have frequently cited cultural failures—not technical ones—as root causes.\n\nIf authenticity frameworks inadvertently suppress the feedback loops that correct poor leadership behavior, the downstream costs can be material. Chamorro-Premuzic's argument, stripped of its self-help framing, is essentially a case for accountability structures that do not exempt personal style from professional scrutiny.\n\n## Limitations of the Argument\n\nIt is worth noting that Chamorro-Premuzic's position is not without counterarguments. Research on psychological safety—most prominently associated with Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson—suggests that environments where employees feel able to speak candidly do produce better outcomes, including in high-stakes settings such as operating rooms and trading floors.\n\nThe tension is not between authenticity and performance per se, but between self-expression and self-discipline. The more precise formulation may be that authenticity is a starting point, not a destination—useful for diagnosing where you are, but insufficient for determining where you need to go.",
  "faqs": [
    {
      "answer": "Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic is a professor at Columbia Business School who researches organizational psychology and leadership. He argues that 'being yourself' is not a sufficient leadership strategy because it can excuse counterproductive behaviors and substitute self-expression for genuine competence development.",
      "question": "Who is Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic and what is his argument?"
    },
    {
      "answer": "Financial services professionals operate under conduct risk frameworks, fiduciary obligations, and regulatory accountability regimes that impose behavioral standards independent of personal style. Authenticity as a guiding principle can conflict with these external requirements, making the distinction between self-expression and professional conduct particularly consequential in the sector.",
      "question": "Why does this debate matter in financial services specifically?"
    },
    {
      "answer": "Not necessarily. Chamorro-Premuzic's argument is more targeted: that authenticity should not be used as a reason to avoid behavioral development or deflect feedback. Self-awareness remains valuable; the issue is treating current behavior as fixed because it feels genuine.",
      "question": "Does rejecting authenticity mean employees should suppress their identities at work?"
    },
    {
      "question": "How does leadership philosophy connect to balance-sheet outcomes?",
      "answer": "Leadership quality shapes risk culture, which in turn affects conduct risk, regulatory standing, and loss rates. Institutions that have faced enforcement actions have often cited cultural failures as root causes, suggesting that leadership development frameworks have direct financial consequences."
    },
    {
      "answer": "Yes. Research on psychological safety, associated with scholars such as Harvard's Amy Edmondson, finds that environments where employees feel safe to speak candidly tend to perform better. The debate is not settled; the more nuanced position is that authenticity and accountability are both necessary, and neither alone is sufficient.",
      "question": "Is there research that supports the value of authenticity at work?"
    }
  ],
  "citations": [
    {
      "url": "https://fortune.com/article/should-i-be-my-authentic-self-at-work-columbia-professor-authenticity-overrated/",
      "claim": "Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic argues that 'being yourself' is not a good enough leadership strategy and that authenticity is overrated as a professional framework.",
      "title": "'Don't be yourself' in the workplace, actually, Columbia professor says. Here's why authenticity is 'overrated'",
      "accessed_at": "2026-05-30"
    },
    {
      "title": "Fortune – Business and Leadership Coverage",
      "claim": "Source publication for the Chamorro-Premuzic commentary on workplace authenticity.",
      "accessed_at": "2026-05-30",
      "url": "https://fortune.com/feed/"
    },
    {
      "accessed_at": "2026-05-30",
      "title": "Columbia Business School – Faculty Profile Context",
      "claim": "Institutional affiliation of Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, cited as a Columbia professor in the source reporting.",
      "url": "https://www8.gsb.columbia.edu/"
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  "topic_tags": [
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  "author_name": "Graham Vale",
  "published_at": "2026-05-30T19:32:38.862Z",
  "modified_at": "2026-05-30T19:32:38.862Z",
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    "preferred_summary": "A Columbia Business School professor argues that the popular directive to 'be yourself' at work is not a viable leadership strategy. Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic contends that authenticity, while culturally celebrated, can excuse poor behavior and substitute self-expression for genuine competence. The more productive approach, he suggests, involves deliberate self-improvement rather than self-disclosure.",
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