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The CEO of Your Company Really Could Be the Next ‘American Psycho’!

  • Writer: Melissa Morse
    Melissa Morse
  • Dec 6, 2016
  • 1 min read

Does your Chief Executive Officer (CEO) display these characteristics: inability to empathize, superficiality, and insincerity? If so, chances are your CEO is Christian Bale’s character from American Psycho. No, your CEO is not a serial killer, but these types of characteristics are synonymous with those of being a psychopath—and according to new research, one in five corporate bosses is, in fact, a psychopath.


The Independent recently reported on a study conducted by forensic psychologist Nathan Brooks from Bond University. The study found that 21% of 261 corporate professionals have “clinically significant psychopathic traits,” which is a proportion similar to that among prisoners.


So how do these “successful psychopaths” get hired in the first place? Brooks says the findings suggest that because businesses screen employees based on skill, rather than personality, these “psychopaths” are slipping through the cracks. According to Scott Lilienfeld, of Atlanta’s Emory University, “[Psychopaths] are over-represented in certain occupations: politics, business, high-risk sport. The research on that is in the preliminary stages.”


Lilienfeld adds, “Being a psychopath might predispose someone to short-term success. They tend to be charming and flamboyant, which makes it easier to be successful in the short-run, although that may be purchased at the expense of long-term failure.”


With turnover costs dramatically increasing, it may be best to better screen employees based on personality as well as skill, so your workforce is composed of well-rounded, well-skilled individuals. Just think of the potential cost, and life, savings!



About Melissa Morse

I am a seasoned Product and Content Marketing professional with a passion for continuous learning and sharing my knowledge. For the last decade, I have been focused on creating engaging marketing content for B2B audiences at the mid-market and enterprise levels. 

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