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Whoever works with you kills you or raises you

Don't ignore the damage a bad element can cause in your company or social circle.

In work teams, a “polluting element” is any factor that, Although it may seem harmless at first, negatively impacts dynamics and productivity. For example:

  • A collaborator with a toxic attitude.
  • Lack of clarity in communication.
  • Processes obsolete ones that slow down the workflow.

The damage is not always immediate, but its effect is progressive. Like a rotten orangeThis element contaminates morale, performance and even organizational culture.

The domino effect: when you don't detect the "rotten orange" in time

Imagine a collaborator who:

  • He constantly criticizes his colleagues.
  • Arrives late, complains, or evades responsibilities.
  • He lies or minimizes his mistakes.

At first, the team tries to make up for it. Over time, appear:

  1. Demotivation: The work becomes exhausting.
  2. Loss of confidence: Conflicts erode cohesion.
  3. Poor performanceEnergy is invested in protecting oneself, not in innovating.

Result: A functional team becomes a disconnected group.

Keys to maintaining a healthy environment

Leadership is key to identifying and acting. Concrete actions:

  1. Culture of continuous feedback: Talking openly prevents problems from growing.
  2. Early signs: Negative attitudes or recurring complaints are alarm bells.
  3. Supportive environment: Resources for personal and professional development.
  4. Timely decisions: Train or, in extreme cases, remove the toxic element.

A healthy team doesn't happen by chance; it's built through intentional actions.

Final reflection

  • What toxic elements are you ignoring?
  • What changes you can implement today to protect your team?
  • How much does your team's inefficiency cost you daily?

If you want to go deeper, request a proposal for your team: Leadership that Integrates.

I love reading your blog! Thanks for sharing this space.

— Dr. Roch