Dealing with Your Difficult People
For leaders managing constant change, conflict is built into the very
fabric of their organizations. When conflict is not dealt with well, it
can create strained relationships and grow to sap the time, energy, and
productivity of even the best teams. Dealt with positively, conflict can
also be a catalyst that sets the stage for needed changes. You will
never deal with conflict perfectly, but here are a few tips worth using
in dealing with your most difficult people:
1. Talk to people instead of about them. Dealing with conflict directly
may be uncomfortable and lead to some disappointment, but it cuts down
the mindreading and the resentment that can occur when problems are not
dealt with directly. Timing, tact, and taking distance will always have
their place, but make sure you still keep conflict eyeball to eyeball.
2. We are taught from childhood to avoid conflict and often vacillate
between the pain of dealing with unresolved problems and the guilt over
not dealing with them. Such vacillation saps energy and time; it can
affect morale and turnover. Be a problem solver not a problem evader.
Problem solvers avoid avoidance; they learn to deal with conflict as
soon as it even begins to get in the way.
2. Dispute catastrophic thoughts by checking fears against the facts. Optimism can be learned. Recognize that people often have catastrophic thoughts — feelings that everything is wrong and that nothing is going to change. Think of these thoughts as if they are being said by some external enemy whose mission in life is to make you miserable. Then dispute those thoughts. Try using cold, impersonal facts to maintain a reality-based perspective. If you struggle with the fear of flying, you note that the National Safety Council reports that you're 37 times more likely to die, mile for mile, in a vehicle crash than on a commercial airline.
3. Develop a communication style that focuses on future problem solving
rather than getting stuck in proving a conviction for past mistakes. You
want change, not just an admission of guilt. Winners of arguments never
always win, because consistent losers never forget. You want results,
not enemies seeking revenge. By focusing on future problem solving, both
can save face.
4. Problem solvers deal with issues, not personalities. It's all too
easy to abuse the other party instead of dealing with issues. Be
assertive but affirm the rights of others to have different positions,
values and priorities. When you personalize disagreements and attack
back, you invite escalation. Keep the focus on mutual problem solving
not name-calling.
5. Honor, surface and use resistance. Attempts at threatening, silencing
or otherwise avoiding criticism of change will only force resistance
underground and increase the sabotaging of even necessary changes.
Explored resistance helps build clarity of focus and action. Push for
specific suggestions. If criticism is extensive and continues even after
facing it, it may not be resistance—know when to admit that you are
wrong!
6. Redefine caring to include caring enough to confront on a timely and
consistent basis. Avoid labels that give you or others excuses for not
confronting a problem—They are too sensitive or too nice, scene makers
or people who have contacts, too old or too young, or the wrong race or
gender. If you believe people cannot change or benefit from feedback,
you will tend not to confront them. Instead, treat all equally by caring
enough to be firm, fair, and consistent.
7. Avoid forming "enemy" relationships. The subtle art of influence is
often lost in the heat of organizational battle. When interaction
becomes strained or bias exists, the negative interaction coupled with
the distance that often results invites selective scanning and
projection. We see what we want to see to keep our enemies "the enemy."
If a relationship is limited to polite indifference and significant
negative interaction, expect polarization and an "enemy" relationship.
In such relationships everyone loses. Take seriously the words of
Confucius, "Before you embark on a journey of revenge, dig two graves."
Even your most difficult people usually have some people they work well
with. Make one of those people you. Don't look for the worst; learn to
look for the best in even difficult people.
8. Invest time building positive bridges to your difficult people.
Abraham Lincoln reportedly said, "I don't like that man. I must get to
know him better." Don't be insincere; look for ways to be sincere. It
takes a history of positive contact to build trust. Try building a
four-to-one positive to negative contact history. Give specific
recognition and ask for assistance in the areas you respect their
opinions. Work together on a common cause and search for areas of common
ground. By being a positive bridge builder, you build a reputation all
will see and come to respect even if a few difficult people never
respond.
Finally, don't forget to spend some time looking in a mirror. Ron Zemke
put it well when he said, "If you find that everywhere you go you're
always surrounded by jerks and you're constantly being forced to strike
back at them or correct their behavior, guess what? You're a jerk."
Influencing others starts by making sure that you're not being difficult
yourself.
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Copyright © 2006 Terry Paulson
All Rights Reserved(www.terrypaulson.com, 800-521-6172)
ARTICLE TAGLINE FOR Terry Paulson PhD, CSP, CPAE
Copyright © 2006 Terry L. Paulson. All rights reserved.
You can visit Terry's website at http://www.terrypaulson.com
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