The Complete Idiot's Guide To Handling Difficult Employees,
released in June, 2000, and written by Robert Bacal is
written for people who work with difficult employees.
While the book presents solutions from the manager's point
of view, the principles and realities presented in the
book are sure to help anyone stuck with working with a
difficult employee. Coming in in excess of 300 pages,
it is a hands-on practical guide, with just enough theory
to help you make intelligent decisions about how to handle
those difficult people.
We've provided some chapter excerpts and table of contents
for your convenience. The final book version may differ
slightly from the information presented here. You can
purchase this book in most bookstores or order it at amazon.com
by clicking
here.
It’s natural to label people
as difficult, or even unbalanced when we perceive their
behavior to be difficult, particularly when it seems to
be chronic. But there’s another consideration.
Often, the people we label
as difficult just don’t know any better. Think about these
folks as not knowing how to deal successfully with a situation
they face. They are not bad people, any more than a poor
baseball player is a bad person, or a poor writer is a
bad person. They may not know how to act differently,
or how to deal with a specific situation that is causing
them discomfort.
Watch
Out
It’s easy
to mistake a lack of social skills or communications skills
for something that is intentionally hurtful or damaging.
Be alert to the fact that some people just don’t know
how to act more appropriately.
Let’s
use an example. You have just told John that one or two
aspects of his work performance need some improvement
(heck, nobody is perfect, right?). You explain—gently—what
could be improved, and tell John that you will help him
in the improvement process. You think you’ve handled the
situation really, really well.
John becomes sullen and clams
up in front of you. At the staff meeting held a week later,
John, normally a productive team member, doesn’t say a
word and sits, looking bored (obviously intentionally).
Later you also hear that John has made some comments about
you to other employees.
There’s a lot of ways you could
interpret this. John could be some psychotic nut case
in development, waiting to explode. John could be just
plain angry and out to get you (so it seems). Maybe John
has trouble with authority figures because they remind
John of his abusive father.
Speculating in this way, however,
is not going to help you deal with John’s behavior. In
fact doing this might very well interfere with handling
this situation well. Here’s another more constructive
way to think about this.
Is it possible that John is
upset about the critical (but well intended) comments?
Perhaps his feelings are hurt? Of course that’s possible.
Does that solve the problem? No. But what does help is
to realize that John may be upset and not know how to
deal with it constructively. John may not know how to
express that feeling in a constructive way, or how to
approach you to talk about his reaction and what should
be done next.
Stop Creating Conflict
It's better to prevent unnecessary conflict than to manage conflict once
the flames have started. Click
here to preview Conflict Prevention In The Workplace - Using Cooperative
Communication
Simply, John may be like
a baseball pitcher who doesn’t know how to throw
a curve ball. He’s still got to throw something,
so he continues to go with what he does know how
to do, which is to sulk, express his feelings in
destructive ways. He is
going to get his message of being upset out. He
is going to communicate his unhappiness. He’s just going about it
the best way he knows how, and that isn’t a very
constructive or useful way.
Also, while it may seem that
that John isn’t getting rewarded for his behavior, think
again. By acting in his own difficult way, he is likely
focusing attention on himself (usually a reinforcing thing),
and most importantly, he feels he is expressing his feelings
in the way that makes the most sense to him. And that’s
definitely reinforcing, at least psychologically.
From
the Manager’s Desk
Be alert
to rewards or reinforcements a person might receive for
bad behavior. People sometimes find odd things rewarding,
for example, any attention (even negative attention) or
getting easier assignments due to poor performance. Make
sure your reaction doesn’t turn out to reward the behavior
you want to stop.
Stop Letting
Conflict Control YOU
Learn to manage conflict by "using your head",
rather than your heart. Find out about pro's and con's of different conflict
methods. Click
here to preview Using Your Head to Manage Conflict Helpcard.
Where
does all this leave you, the person having to experience
all this. First, if you think of John as confused or not
knowing what to do, you can be more positive and helpful
than if you see John’s behavior as “evil intentional behavior.”
Second it helps you address part of the problem here and
that is that John just may need to learn more effective
ways of expressing his concerns.
An Innovative Approach To Conflict!
Conflict
Prevention In The Workplace - Using Cooperative Communication
is one of the few books that explains how to prevent
conflict rather than manage it. Learn how to modify
what and how you communicate to reduce unnecessary personality
conflicts. Available in print or electronic format you
can preview or get more information by clicking
here.
Learn
To Use Your Head When Dealing With Conflict
The
choices you make when involved in conflict determine
whether good comes from it or bad. Using Your Head
to Manage Conflict Helpcard explains your various
conflict management options, and when to use each
one.
Stop
reacting and start thinking and making the right conflict
management decisions.