TSLA400.62011.72%
GM81.3203.27%
F12.8700.43%
RIVN17.2300.34%
CYD43.2600.9381%
HMC25.0000.64%
TM217.2004.34%
CVNA387.50025.26%
PAG161.3205.3%
LAD283.0408.17%
AN207.9909.7%
GPI349.94014.46%
ABG211.4407.35%
SAH70.7003.33%
TSLA400.62011.72%
GM81.3203.27%
F12.8700.43%
RIVN17.2300.34%
CYD43.2600.9381%
HMC25.0000.64%
TM217.2004.34%
CVNA387.50025.26%
PAG161.3205.3%
LAD283.0408.17%
AN207.9909.7%
GPI349.94014.46%
ABG211.4407.35%
SAH70.7003.33%
TSLA400.62011.72%
GM81.3203.27%
F12.8700.43%
RIVN17.2300.34%
CYD43.2600.9381%
HMC25.0000.64%
TM217.2004.34%
CVNA387.50025.26%
PAG161.3205.3%
LAD283.0408.17%
AN207.9909.7%
GPI349.94014.46%
ABG211.4407.35%
SAH70.7003.33%


Preventing “toxic achievers” through values-based accountability

High-performing organizations do not separate results from behavior. Leadership expert Dave Anderson says the strongest cultures hold employees equally accountable for achieving performance targets and living the company’s core values.

On the latest episode of Lessons in Leadership, Anderson emphasized the thirteenth trait of high-performing cultures, which focuses solely on metrics, can create what he describes as “toxic achievers,” or individuals who deliver results but undermine team dynamics and long-term culture.

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“Certain outcomes are non-negotiable,” Anderson said, noting that how those outcomes are achieved matters just as much as the results themselves. “One doesn’t substitute for the other.”

Anderson explains that high-performance cultures establish clear expectations around both results and behavior, ensuring that employees understand they will be evaluated on both. When organizations fail to enforce this balance, they risk allowing negative behaviors to persist as long as performance numbers remain strong.

To prevent this, leaders must be willing to address behavioral issues directly, even with top performers. Anderson said these conversations should reinforce that success is measured on two dimensions: performance outcomes and alignment with core values.

“When you hold people just as accountable for the behaviors as you do the numbers and the outcomes, the behaviors start to change, the culture is strengthened, there's fewer distractions, less toxicity, and more leadership credibility for actually reinforcing what you stand for...”

He notes that when leaders consistently hold employees accountable in both areas, behaviors begin to shift. Teams become more aligned, distractions decrease, and workplace toxicity is reduced.

This approach also strengthens leadership credibility. By enforcing the same standards across all employees, regardless of performance level, leaders demonstrate a commitment to the organization’s stated values.

Ultimately, Anderson said, the most effective cultures are those where results and values are inseparable. Organizations that prioritize both create stronger teams, more consistent execution, and a foundation for sustained success.


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