Gossip is as old as humanity itself. Around campfires, over coffee, and – these days – in office hallways and Slack threads, people talk about each other. At work, it often appears in whispers and side conversations: “Did you hear what happened in that meeting?” or “I can’t believe she got that promotion.”
It may feel harmless – sometimes even bonding. But when gossip becomes the primary way people connect, it’s more than just idle chatter. It’s a symptom of something deeper: a workplace culture lacking healthy, meaningful ways to build connection.
As a workplace culture consultant, I’ve seen this dynamic in organizations across industries. People want to connect. If they’re not given intentional, purpose-driven ways to do so, gossip rushes in to fill the void. Fortunately, that’s something leaders can change.
What gossip really Is
Workplace gossip refers to informal, often speculative or critical conversations about people or events – typically shared without full context or consent. While it isn’t always malicious, it’s rarely productive. It thrives in environments where communication is opaque, trust is fragile and people feel disconnected from purpose.
Gossip is no longer a background annoyance – it’s a daily feature of many workplace cultures.
Research shows 58% of employees hear workplace gossip weekly, 1 in 3 hear it daily and more than 90% admit to participating in it.
Why gossip feels good – but hurts more
Gossip has upsides. It’s a social tool that helps people bond, process stress, and make sense of ambiguous workplace dynamics. But these benefits are short lived and come with long-term costs.
- It erodes psychological safety. When people hear others being gossiped about, they fear they’ll be next. That leads to silence and self-censorship.
- It spreads negativity. Gossip often centers on judgment and blame, fueling resentment instead of resolution.
- It divides teams. Gossip creates cliques and in-groups, leaving others feeling excluded.
- It derails productivity. When energy is spent speculating, focus, innovation and collaboration suffer.
So how do we break the cycle?
Replace gossip with purposeful connection
The solution isn’t to police every conversation – it’s to cultivate a culture in which people feel connected, valued and aligned around something meaningful. Here’s how:
1. Make purpose practical. Mission statements on the wall aren’t enough. Leaders should consistently tie everyday work to shared purpose:
- Start meetings with real stories about how the team’s work made an impact.
- Remind people how their role supports the bigger mission.
- Invite team members to share their personal “why” for doing this work.
2. Use core values as everyday tools. Most organizations have core values—but few use them well. To bring them to life:
- Highlight when someone demonstrates a value in action.
- End meetings with “value shoutouts.”
- Discuss how key decisions align with your values.
3. Foster curiosity over judgment. Gossip thrives on assumptions. Replace those with a culture of curiosity:
- Train teams to ask questions instead of jumping to conclusions.
- Normalize respectful, direct communication.
- Equip people with ways to check in – rather than check out – when confused or frustrated.
4. Create micro-moments of connection. Teams that know each other beyond job titles gossip less and support more. Build in opportunities to connect:
- Rotate project teams to break silos.
- Start meetings with light personal check-ins.
- Schedule regular peer appreciation or “get to know you” moments.
Gossip is a signal, not just a problem
When gossip is rampant, don’t just try to silence it – ask what it’s revealing. Often, it points to disconnection, unclear communication or unmet emotional needs.
When leaders prioritize purpose, transparency and connection, gossip loses its grip. Because in those cultures, people are too busy building something meaningful together to waste time tearing each other down.