5 red flags you are fuelling entitlement at work
Ask any employer about their current workforce tribulations and unabashedly, ‘entitlement’ raises its hand as probable cause
If your mind has gone straight to Gen Z and millennial employees, pause for a moment. Entitlement now pervades every generation, job function, title and demographic. It’s a behavioural contagion, akin to yawning or laughing, but with workplace effects that are anything but benign.
Employee entitlement hasn’t emerged independently. It’s shaped by context. Post–pandemic, the workplace faced a global skills crisis. In response, organisations upped the ante.
Salaries rose, perks and benefits were no longer a bonus but a prerogative and more, so much more. Anything to attract and keep employees. And with it came the shift of power and influence.
The alternative was decreased returns with increased workloads and pressure. So, it made sense. Business continuity requires adaptive capacity to market dynamics. Until entitlement became the suboptimal trade. Don’t think of it as an employee’s personal flaw but a system response.
Here are the five red flags you are fuelling entitlement:
1. From supportive to rescuing
The shift toward more empathetic leaders is long overdue. Empathy and understanding in the right measure forges trust and deepens relationships. Too much support and we over-accommodate, weakening the very structure we are trying to strengthen. Before we know it, the role has morphed from manager to workplace guardian and carer.
Support without boundaries enables dependency. We buffer, soften and sometimes take over when things get hard. It removes the precious opportunity to learn and grow, instead creating a learned helplessness. When we over-protect, we under-prepare. Challenge is where resilience is built. Let your team go through the tough lessons.
2. Rules à la Carte
Otherwise known as inconsistent standards. You bend the rules to avoid conflict, and think you are keeping people happy. Repeated tardiness has no redress, nor does non-adherence to customer response times. After all, it’s only 30 minutes or so. When it comes to rearranging meetings to suit personal needs and not the business, that’s also okay.
Except it’s not. When rules and policies are viewed as optional, other workplace expectations are also seen as negotiable. Your employees, of course, believe they are now entitled to different treatment and will naturally resist any attempt to restore standard company rules and policies. Why wouldn’t they? You haven’t held the line before and instead been whimsical in response.
3. Rewards without anchors
Rewards work best when they’re anchored to behaviours and outcomes that serve the organisation’s actual objectives, not its moods. While moments of appreciation matter, recognition that’s untied to performance risks becoming more about emotional optics than meaningful impact. Rewards given as a ‘thank you’, still need a direct link to the act being appreciated.
Otherwise, it causes confusion, both for those rewarded and those observing. When rewards feel arbitrary, morale doesn’t rise; it fractures. And just like that, resentment takes root. Bonuses not linked to transparent, measurable goals quickly shift from recognition to assumption. Even if unspoken, a mindset forms: ‘I got a bonus last time, why not again?’ It becomes a right and not a recognition for achievement.
4. Over-accommodating for poor performance
Poor performance is explained away instead of corrected. You find a way to make it okay, ‘They are still coming up to speed’; ‘The working environment is different now’. After all, you have been told to be more flexible, patient, and to relax a bit on yesterday’s standards. In a workplace that also calls for upskilling and training, it is understandable to lessen the pressure.
Too much over-accommodating shifts to, ‘As long as you try, it’s okay.’ Or a culture of blame for it being out of their control, ‘I wasn’t given enough training/ time/ resources’. Over time, this erodes ambition and personal agency and is often why teams start to feel directionless or lacking ambition. Continued poor performance is not business sustainable. Mediocrity becomes the norm, and it’s a downward spiral.
5. Psychological safety goes too far
Speaking up, having a voice, admitting mistakes, and expressing yourself without fear of negative consequences is fundamental for team success and employee engagement. But psychological safety doesn’t mean perpetual comfort. There are consequences for mistakes, and not everything voiced needs to be heard.
Safety and accountability must coexist. A culture of shielding employees from standard workplace pressures, not receiving challenging feedback or criticism for fear of reaction or using psychological safety as a weapon becomes problematic. When discomfort is automatically treated as harm, organisations lose the ability to grow, and people lose the muscle for resilience.
Entitlement is not born, it is brokered, signed in the margins of crisis. It doesn’t arise from malice or laziness. It grows in the fertile ground of contradiction. We can’t moralise our way out of entitlement, nor can we appease it. We need a rebalancing, a return to shared psychological contracts where contribution, growth, and recognition are earned and expected by all.
Roxanne Calder, a is a career adviser and the founder and managing director of Sydney recruitment agency EST10
Article from New Zealand Management