The term “Wild Hunt” (Wild Hunt), derived from mythology, metaphorically describes a destructive, chaotic, and often collective process of targeting, harassment, and “bullying” of an employee, department, or even a specific idea in the modern corporate context. It is not just a conflict or harsh management, but a complex socio-psychological phenomenon where fear, group dynamics, and broken communications intertwine. Understanding its mechanisms is the first step towards neutralization.
Unlike the mythical archetype, office hunting is not always apparent. It can be identified by a set of signs:
Collective and anonymous nature of the “pack”: The pressure comes not from one leader (this is more of a “duel”), but from an informal coalition — a group of colleagues, adjacent departments, or even senior management, acting with silent approval or under an unwritten script. Responsibility is blurred (“everyone thinks so”).
Building an atmosphere of chaos and emergency: The process is accompanied by permanent emergencies, unclear priorities, sudden changes in tasks (“burning” deadlines, emerging out of nowhere). This creates an environment where criticism and aggression are masked as “concern for the result”.
Target of the hunt — “outsider” or “scapegoat”: The goal is someone perceived as a threat to the system: an innovator proposing risky changes; an employee pointing out a systemic error; a new manager changing established orders; or simply someone standing out from the crowd (an introvert in an aggressively extraverted collective, a dissenter). They are stigmatized, creating a narrative about “incompetence”, “disloyalty”, or “difficult character”.
Ritualized harassment: Actions have the character of a ritual: public “whippings” at meetings, degrading comments in group chats, systematic ignoring of initiatives or achievements, labeling, deliberate information blockade.
“Wild Hunt” arises at the intersection of personal fears and systemic failures:
Reaction to uncertainty and fear of change. During periods of reorganization, crises, or changes in strategy, the collective unconscious of the organization generates a “hunt” for a culprit to symbolically regain control and alleviate anxiety. The victim acts as a lightning rod for general stress.
“Groupthink” and conformism. The phenomenon described by Irving Janis, where a cohesive group strives for consensus at any cost, suppressing dissent and critical thinking. Those who stand out become targets for restoring group unity.
Toxic culture and leadership. A culture where fierce competition, whistleblowing, and success measured solely by KPI at any cost is a fertile ground. If a leader (whether consciously or not) delegitimizes an employee (sarcasm, distrust), they give the “green light” to the pack.
Projection and envy. A group may unconsciously project their own suppressed fears (of failure, inadequacy) onto the “victim”. A successful employee may become an object of envy, masked as professional criticism.
Phase of mythologization: Creation of a negative narrative. Example: “Petya from IT always delays updates, because of him all our deals are burning” (although delays are caused by outdated software, for which the leadership does not allocate money). Petya is mythologized as a “parasite”.
Phase of pack cohesion: Formation of a coalition. Criticism of Petya becomes a social norm in the collective. His opinion is no longer taken into account, complaints about him start to be copied higher.
Phase of active harassment: Ritualized attacks. Petya begins to be publicly called “on the carpet”, required to account for any minor delay, his explanations are ignored, blame is assigned to him for related failures.
Phase of expulsion or “absorption”: Outcome. Variants: the employee resigns (voluntarily or by article), goes into emotional burnout (psychologically “devoured”), or completely breaks down and accepts the rules of the game, becoming the same aggressor.
Real case (adapted): In one retail network, a new commercial director (CD) began a reform of procurement, threatening corrupt schemes of an informal group of managers. In response, the group launched a “hunt”: they started to deliberately sabotage his instructions (“misunderstood”, “technical failures”), leaking false analytics to him, leading to losses, and simultaneously forming the general director's opinion about the CD's “unprofessionalism and chaos”. After 8 months, the CD was fired “by mutual agreement” as not fulfilling his duties.
For those who have become the target of the “hunt” (survival tactics):
Documentation and formalization. Against chaos — absolute clarity. All tasks, instructions, criticism should be documented in writing (email, corporate messenger). Go to meetings with aggressors with an agenda and a protocol. This deprives the hunt of its main weapon — uncertainty and rumors.
Seeking external allies and appealing to facts. It is necessary to go beyond the toxic circle. Turn to HR business partners (not to a regular specialist), an internal ombudsman, a higher-level manager (if not involved), relying on documented facts of violations of processes, missed deadlines, unconstructive behavior, and not on emotions.
Refusal to be emotionally involved. “Hunters” feed on emotional reactions — confusion, anger, justifications. The answer should be kept in a business-like, non-emotional, factual key. The technique of the “worn record” — calmly repeating one's position based on facts.
Evaluation of the cost of the battle. It is necessary to realistically assess: is there a chance to change the system or culture? If not, and the price of psychological health has become too high, planned departure (with a new offer in your pocket) is not a defeat, but a strategic evacuation.
Creating transparent procedures and channels of feedback. Implementation of systems of anonymous surveys about the climate, working ethical committees, guarantees of the inevitability of investigations of complaints. The goal is to deprive the “hunt” of dark corners.
Cultivating psychological safety. This concept, introduced by Amy Edmondson, means an environment where it is possible to ask questions, make mistakes, and express ideas without fear of punishment. It is achieved through leaders' modeling behavior (acknowledging their own mistakes, gratitude for feedback).
Training management and combating groupthink. Training on conflict management, facilitation of meetings where diversity of opinions is encouraged. Introduction of the practice of meetings with the role of the “devil's advocate” — a person who specially criticizes the proposed solution.
Strict reaction to mobbing and bullying. Inclusion of relevant provisions in the ethical code and real, not decorative, sanctions for their violation, up to the dismissal of initiators, regardless of their status.
“Wild Hunt” in the office is a symptom of deep malaise in the organizational culture. It cannot be defeated by one-time teambuilding. It requires systemic work to replace the culture of fear and conformity with a culture of psychological safety, transparency, and responsibility. For an individual employee, the key to survival lies in the transition from an emotional reaction to a cold, documented strategy and a realistic assessment of one's strengths. Ultimately, the fight against this phenomenon is not a battle with individual “hunters”, but the creation of such an ecosystem where the mythical “forest” of the office ceases to be hostile and unpredictable and becomes a space for cooperation and growth.
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