Can You Be Friends At Work?

Episode 483 | Author: Emilie Aries

Where do you draw the line between work and play when it comes to office friendships?

We all know how difficult it can be to make friends as adults. Childcare responsibilities, conflicting work schedules, household chores—it’s so much harder to pursue and develop relationships when you can’t just meet at the mall every day after class. No wonder we get so excited when we meet someone awesome at work. Finally, shared experiences and built-in hangout time! 

Lots of research supports the benefits of workplace friendships. Numerous Gallup polls have indicated that business besties are key to job success. People who are friendly with their coworkers are more likely to engage and innovate, be more productive, and have more fun. 

Of course, making friends at work also comes with unique challenges, and keeping these potential conflicts in mind is important. In this episode, I cover some issues that could crop up and how the research suggests we navigate them as we nurture those cherished office friendships.

Two tips for being friends with a teammate

It’s wonderful to have work friends! Just keep a couple of things in mind as you explore these proven happiness-increasing relationships:

  1. Be proactive about setting boundaries. Before there’s an awkward situation, have a chat about how you’ll navigate any serious work-related discussions. Maybe you agree to keep your work relationship separate from your friendship so that both can continue to thrive.

  2. Make it about more than just work. Everyone needs to vent now and then, but if your friendship is nothing but griping about long hours, bad bosses, and stingy pay, it’s not much of a friendship. Talking about only work stuff gets even more tedious if one of you hopes to grow at the company and the other plans to move on. If you want to pursue this relationship beyond weekday lunches and sharing memes on Slack, make an effort to involve your work bestie in your life beyond the office, from double dates to dinner parties to movie nights. 

Navigating a shift in power dynamics

I don’t need to tell you there’s a big difference between being friends with a teammate and being friends with someone above or below you in the company hierarchy. 

Not surprisingly, some of the biggest challenges to work friendships stem from this inherent power imbalance. It might have been there from the start, or one of you got promoted after your friendship solidified. Either way, this imbalance means navigating a new relationship: the boss–employee one.

ResumeLab surveyed 1000 employees about this very phenomenon. Given that 44% of them reported that either they or their friend was promoted to manage the other, there’s a good chance this will happen to you one day if it hasn’t already.

The good news is that despite half of the respondents confirming they felt some jealousy over a work friend’s promotion, almost 70% said the friendship persisted (and 14% said it improved)!

The danger—arguably even more significant than losing the friendship—is the impact that handling such situations the wrong way could have on your career. If you’re the one who becomes your friend’s manager, you need to tread carefully, doing everything you can to avoid the appearance of playing favorites. Missteps here don’t just mess up your team. Research by the London School of Economics reported that they erode trust across the entire organization.

I get into this further in the episode, but here’s the main takeaway: if you manage people you consider friends, make sure you have your procedures for performance reviews and task allocation firmly in place so that your decisions are objective and fair. That’s the best bet for keeping your friendship, and your career, on track.

Let’s keep this conversation going. I want to hear how you navigate workplace friendships! If you’ve experienced a shift in power dynamics with a work bestie, head over to the Courage Community on Facebook or our group on LinkedIn to fill us in on what happened and what that friendship looks like now.

Related Links From Today’s Episode:

Episode 329, Female Friendships: Why We Need Them and How to Keep Them

Episode 458, Establishing Your Personal and Professional Network in a New City

Stuff Mom Never Told You Episode 105, Can We Be Friends?

That Moment When One Friend Is Promoted—And The Other Is Not, Forbes

Does Organizational Cronyism Lead to Lower Employee Performance?, Frontiers in Psychology

Cronyism and Nepotism Are Bad for Everyone: The Research Evidence, Cambridge University

Workplace Friendships: the Double-Edged Sword, London School of Economics

What to Do When You Become Your Friend’s Boss, Harvard Business Review

Friends Without Benefits: Understanding the Dark Sides of Workplace Friendship, Academy of Management Review

The Limits To Workplace Friendship: Managerialist HRM and Bystander Behaviour In the Context of Workplace Bullying, APA Psych Net

Gossip in Evolutionary Perspective, Review of General Psychology

Are Workplace Friendships a Mixed Blessing? Exploring Tradeoffs of Multiplex Relationships and their Associations with Job Performance, Personnel Psychology

Social Undermining in the Workplace, Academy of Management Journal

Crossing The Line: Boundaries of Workplace Humour and Fun, Employee Relations

Why work friendships are critical for long-term happiness, CNBC

Should You Be Friends With Your Boss?, Forbes

The Increasing Importance of a Best Friend at Work

From BFF to Your Boss, ResumeLab

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