Move over quiet quitting, bare minimum Mondays, and career cushioning. A new workplace behavior is on the rise: the self-aware underperformer. Contrary to hustle culture, these workers are knowingly underperforming and not doing anything about it.
It used to be the delusional underperformer—the employee who thought they were doing a great job—that gave HR headaches. The self-aware underperformer, on the other hand, is aware that they’re underperforming and not taking any actions to rectify it.
As leaders, this isn’t something you can afford to ignore. After all, underperformance doesn’t just materialize. The culture has been brewing and cultivating on our watch. Unfortunately, far too many companies prioritize optics over results, turn to placating instead of coaching, and compensate instead of addressing. In some cases, they’ve repurposed authenticity and transparency (both of which are positive attributes) to serve as convenient excuses.
This dynamic leads to the self-aware underperformer.
Subscribe to the Daily newsletter.Fast Company’s trending stories delivered to you every day
Privacy Policy
|
Fast Company Newsletters
Many have hailed self-awareness as the holy grail of performance. It’s often tied to superior decision-making, enhanced team dynamics, and thriving leadership behavior. Despite the admissions, true self-awareness appears to be in short supply. According to a 2018 article by Harvard Business Review, 95% of people think they’re self-aware, yet only 10% to 15% actually are. This is the confronting dilemma. The perceived claim of awareness without the change is a disguise for the underperformer’s illusion of responsibility.
It feels like accountability. Yet when employees repeatedly demonstrate awareness, apologies, and empathy but fail to change, it’s no longer just their performance that suffers.
Here are five signs you are working with a self-aware underperformer
1. Underperformance as an identity
These employees wear their underperformance like a badge. They deliver the bare minimum. Previously, people would have seen their behavior as complacent. Now, they’ve reframed it as a kind of delusional authenticity. “I know I might not be the best, but I’m steady.” By leaning into this identity, they transform underperformance into their personal brand.
As a leader, you need to separate awareness from accountability. Remember, awareness isn’t a deliverable. A useful response is, “Thanks for raising that. What’s your plan to fix it this week?” This keeps the conversation future-focused and signals that it’s not enough for them to recognize they’re underperforming.
2. Self-deprecation
Some employees deflect by making light of their shortcomings. They might say the following statement with a smile or a joke. “You know I’m hopeless at numbers.” They disarm criticism. Managers might even laugh along. But six months later, the reports continue to be late. What feels like humility in the moment is a shield that protects a lackluster effort to improve.
advertisement
To address this, anchor evaluations to progress, not personality. Self-aware underperformers often rely on charm, humility, or likability. That means grounding assessments to measurable outcomes. What matters is not how self-aware they appear, but whether their output improves quarter to quarter.
3. Passively reframing underperformance as a moral issue
They position self-awareness as a conscious decision to reject the hustle culture. They might make excuses like “why should I extend myself?” or “we’re not saving lives.” They might champion underperformance as a moral cause.
Tackling this attitude requires managers to raise the bar on that employee’s comfort zone. If someone openly settles for less, it’s on you as a leader to decide whether that’s an acceptable plateau. In high-expectation roles and cultures, make clear that comfort is not a contract. Performance standards exist for a reason, and you can’t suspend them simply because someone is candid about not aspiring higher.
4. Your narrative becomes theirs
You want to be “that supportive manager.” In the beginning, you might be patient and give them the benefit of the doubt. “They are still coming up to speed,” or “they need more training, resources, and help.” But there comes a point when it becomes over-accommodating. You might find yourself allocating their work to others, extending deadlines, and making continual allowances. Before you know it, their performance is no longer their responsibility, but yours.
You need to interrupt the rationalization loop. Shift the discussion from causes to choices. Ask, “Given these constraints, what can you still control and improve?” This reframes the narrative from circumstance to agency, which puts responsibility back in the employee’s hands.
5. An abundance of excuses
Self-aware underperformers rarely run out of explanations: outdated systems, shifting market trends, and unclear mandates. These rationalizations are often factually correct, but function as shields. Rather than moving from problem to solution, employees stay stuck in the narrative of why things couldn’t be done. When they appear to show empathy, it becomes harder to confront. “I know this must be frustrating for the team, and I really appreciate everyone’s patience.” It’s a clever move because it’s a neat redirect away from the issue.
Instead, redefine empathy as action. Empathy is valuable only when it translates into behavioural change. Encourage employees to pair recognition with repair. “You’ve named the impact on the team, now let’s agree on what you’ll do differently.”
The real leadership test isn’t spotting underperformance. As leaders, you need to see through the packaging of awareness without improvement. Awareness without change is simply underperformance in more eloquent clothing. The best leaders know how to thank people for their honesty, and then hold them to the change that honesty demands.