When Nice is Not Kind (nor Effective)
Fri Feb 06 2026
Consider the dark side of niceness: the kind that smiles, nods, and says “Great job!” while anxiety and avoidance hums underneath and the real issues never see daylight.
Social psychologist Tessa West considered anxious niceness—when politeness becomes a coping strategy rather than a leadership skill. Instead of honest feedback, we get:
Vague praise
Avoided questions
Festering conflict
And meetings where everyone agrees… then complains later
Unfortunately, harmony and effectiveness do not always go hand in hand. Thoughtful disagreement is where creativity and effectiveness are more likely to occur.
We know about the likability labor women carry - the emotional load at work:
56% of women feel pressure to be likable (vs. 36% of men)
Half hold back their real opinions
Many feel compelled to “smile more” or soften statements with “I might be wrong, but…”
Being agreeable may feel safer—but it comes at a cost. Agreeableness means people don’t get the information they need to improve; high performers feel invisible or stuck and confidence and growth stall. Teams are also affected because problems stay underground until they explode; a nice culture quietly bleeds talent and psychological safety drops—even if everyone is kind.
How do we trade niceness for kind honesty - being specific; making candor routine, not dramatic; addressing conflict early and using simple structures that protect honesty. Do away with nice and bring on kind honesty and candor.
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Consider the dark side of niceness: the kind that smiles, nods, and says “Great job!” while anxiety and avoidance hums underneath and the real issues never see daylight. Social psychologist Tessa West considered anxious niceness—when politeness becomes a coping strategy rather than a leadership skill. Instead of honest feedback, we get: Vague praise Avoided questions Festering conflict And meetings where everyone agrees… then complains later Unfortunately, harmony and effectiveness do not always go hand in hand. Thoughtful disagreement is where creativity and effectiveness are more likely to occur. We know about the likability labor women carry - the emotional load at work: 56% of women feel pressure to be likable (vs. 36% of men) Half hold back their real opinions Many feel compelled to “smile more” or soften statements with “I might be wrong, but…” Being agreeable may feel safer—but it comes at a cost. Agreeableness means people don’t get the information they need to improve; high performers feel invisible or stuck and confidence and growth stall. Teams are also affected because problems stay underground until they explode; a nice culture quietly bleeds talent and psychological safety drops—even if everyone is kind. How do we trade niceness for kind honesty - being specific; making candor routine, not dramatic; addressing conflict early and using simple structures that protect honesty. Do away with nice and bring on kind honesty and candor.