Manager Self-assessment

Description
Management style * Command and control major contributor to bad attitudes * You cannot threaten take away what you cannot promise or guarantee.

1
I BAD ATTITUDE SURVIVAL GUIDE - OUTLINE
- Generally
• You cannot change someone else’s attitude.
• Bad attitudes must be described as behavior.
• Change behavior and attitudes may follow.

- Poor Performance
- Organizational change
• The change strategies implemented by management ultimately determine
the success or failure of the intended change.
• We all want the positive results of change, we just don’t want to make the
trip to get there.
• Yesterday’s behaviors will not support tomorrow’s growth.

- Looking ahead in our journey
- Why does this all matter

• Just doing your best isn’t good enough anymore. Today we have to get it
right.
• Management may be difficult, but it doesn’t have to be painful.

II BAD ATTITUDES, ROOT CAUSES
- Low self-esteem
- Fear
- Boredom
- Unresolved conflict
- Inability to accept change
- Resentment
Secondary contributors
- Stress/burnout
- Physical conditions
- Lack of understanding of organizational goals, mission, vision
- Past experience
- Lack of feedback
- Lack of recognition
III BAD ATTITUDES, MORE ROOT CAUSES
- Unresolved conflict
- Inability to accept change
- Resentment
Secondary contributors
- Stress/burnout
- Physical conditions
- Past experiences
- Lack of recognition
- Lack of feedback

2
- Lack of understanding of incremental goals, mission, vision
IV MANAGER SELF-ASSESSMENT
- Limitations, you can only influence what you have influence over

- Management style

• Command and control major contributor to bad attitudes
• You cannot threaten take away what you cannot promise or
guarantee
• Bad attitudes believe they are not being listened to
• Involve in the process
• Training targeted to develop the critical skills
• Technical skills make us good, the people skills with technical skills
make us great
• Objective measurement brings accountability and responsibility

- Corporate Culture
V THE ROLE OF CONFLICT IN INFLUENCING BAD ATTITUDES
- Bad attitude employees
• Lack conflict resolution skills
• Are mistrustful
• Personalize conflict
• Not solution oriented
• Bring historical perspective to conflict

- Bad attitude employee emotional conflict cascade

• Event
• Blaming
• Generalized and pervasive feelings
• Perceived threat escalation
• Selective victimization
• Behavioral responses

- Negative responses

• Avoidance
• Winning at all costs
• Capitulation

- Impediments to resolution
• Inflexibility
• Emotional barriers

- Foundations of successful conflict resolution
• Create conditions of flexibility

3
• Defuse emotional barriers
• Clearly identify the problem/cause
• Communicate effectively

VI POSITIVE CONFLICT RESOLUTION
- Third degree conflict
• Descriptions
  Misunderstandings
  Irrational behaviors
  Unintended slights
  Differences of opinion
  Irritations
  Minor miscommunications
  Inconveniences
  Disagreements on the interpretation of facts and data
• Third degree conflict strategies for addressing
  Coping skills (avoidance is not coping)
  Interactive communications
- Second degree conflict
• Description
  Unresolved third degree conflict
  Disagreements over methodology
  Disagreements over mission
• Symptoms
  Emotion/anger is visible
  Negative projection becomes the norm
  Personalization of conflict is high
  Personal opinion is embraced as fact
  Trust erodes
  Fear of punishment or retribution increases
  Passive aggressive behaviors may begin or intensify
  Winning and saving face gain importance and may become
the dominant factor
  Distorted communications begin to occur
• Strategies for addressing
  Interactive communication
  Mediation
- First degree conflict
• Symptoms
  Low potential for successful resolution
  Lack of intention or skills to resolve the conflict
  The need for retribution or punishment overriding
everything
  Individuals or groups having an interest in prolonging the
conflict
  Required third party intervention
• Strategies for addressing
  Mediation
  Arbitration
VII TURNING AROUND BAD ATTITUDE BASED BEHAVIOR

4
- People out of control

• Turnaround strategies
  Acknowledge their perceptions and avoid emotional
involvement
  Neutralize their emotion
  Identify and diagnose the real problem
  Identify multiple options
  Agree on future actions
- People who exhibit negative nonverbal communications

• Symptoms
  Rolling the eyes
  Looks of contempt
  Gestures of disgust
  Slamming doors
  Kicking wastebaskets
  Punching walls

• Turnaround strategies
  Positive confronting statement
  Describe the behavior
  Summarize the perceived conclusion

- People who are defensive

• Symptoms
  Blaming other things and other people
  Denying responsibility
  Pleading innocent to crimes they haven’t been charged with
  Justifying or rationalizing their action
  Personal attacks

• Turnaround strategies
  Acknowledge and refocus

- Persons who pursue negative confrontations

• Symptoms
  I’m just an honest person
  I just tell it like it is
  I’m only telling you this for your own good

• Causes

  Want others to see things their way
  Cruel
  Demanding attention

• Turnaround strategies (really applies to all)
  Don’ts
  Stifle or silence the employee
  Subject them to ridicule

5
  Tell them they are wrong
  Fall into the trap of arguing
  Dos
  Deal with it in private
  Maintain dignity and respect
  Use I and we based communication
  Validate their input
  Broaden the communications options
  Identify consequences of future actions
VIII TURNING AROUND OTHER BAD ATTITUDE EMPLOYEES’ BEHAVIORS
- People who spread poison

• Symptoms
  Covertness
  Linkage to other past actions
  Get others to carry the water
• Turnaround strategies
  Meet the issue head on in public
  Venting is problem identification, not problem solving
  Confront poison spreader directly

- People who communicate in negative, exaggerated terms

• Symptoms
  This always happens to me
  You never say this to anyone else
  This company never gets things right
  This gets screwed up every time

• Turnaround strategy
  Challenge the distorted communication

- People who vocalize narrow, personalized, self-serving beliefs

• Symptoms
  You don’t like me
  I am treated unfairly
  You’re just doing that to aggravate me
  You don’t say anything to anyone else but me
• Turnaround strategy
  Depersonalize the issue

- People who fear the inevitable impending doom

• Symptoms
  I’m afraid this decision will put us out of business
  I’m afraid I’ll do something to make you fire me
  I’m afraid the new competitor will eliminate my position
  I’m afraid my pension won’t be there when I need it

6
  I’m afraid I’m going to lose my job
  Not seek promotion because increased responsibility
increases risk of failure
  Refuse relocation or transfer because change may lead to
doom
  Tendency to identify failures and discount success

• Turnaround strategies
  Identify the worst case scenario
  Summarize their fear
  Affirm their thought process
  Project the positive upside
  Minimize the fear
  Action plan for avoiding the catastrophe

- People who become the troll on the highway to change

• Symptoms
  Been there, done that
  The perception the person possesses unique knowledge
concerning the topic
  The self-designated devil’s advocate
• Turnaround strategies
  Acknowledge their statements
  Affirm their perceptions
  Assign them a part of the positive plan of action

- People who demonstrate inappropriate emotions

• Symptoms
  Inappropriate verbal or physical displays
• Turnaround strategies
  Let temper tantrum run its course
  Identify it as inappropriate behavior

- People who distort reality and facts

• Unintentional distortions
  Symptoms
  Faulty judgment/observation
  Exaggeration
  Lack of awareness of what to communicate
  Turnaround strategies
  Training and communication

• Intentional distortions
  Symptoms
  Withholding of information or intentional
alteration of information
  Turnaround strategies

7
  Withholding/establish clear duty to
communicate complete information
  Altering/hold them accountable for their actions

8
- People who pave the “one-way street”
• Symptoms
  Arrogance
  Selfishness
  Intolerance of the ideas of others

• Turnaround strategies
  Depersonalize the acceptance or rejection of input and ideas
  While stressing the high value of their input, also stress the
equally high value of others’ input
  Play the hypotheticals

- People who complain

• Symptoms
  Trying to elicit sympathy for their burdens

• Turnaround strategies
  Get a life
  What’s different this time
  Positive recognition to change behavior
  Collaborate on resolution options
IX UNDERSTANDING WHY PERFORMANCE IS POOR
- Lack of ability to do the job
- Lack of proper knowledge, training or information to do the job
- Lack of confidence to do the job
- Performance impediments, real or imagined
- Attitudes of resistance or refusal to do the job
X TURNING AROUND POOR PERFORMANCE
- Types of poor performance
• Insubordination
• Personal problems
• Absenteeism and tardiness
• Employee who is skating
• Disruptive passive-aggressive behavior
• Procrastination

- Insubordination
• Turnaround strategies include counseling and verbal warning

- Personal problems
• Short term problems
  Clearly identify the problem and its duration
  Negotiate an agreement
  Request documentation
  Identify how employee will make up lost time
  Enforce the agreement
• Long-term problems
  Listen and maintain confidentiality

9
  Demonstrate empathetic but not enabling sympathy
  Reinforce standards, objectives, and expectations
  Monitor employee to insure performance and maintain
accountability

- Absenteeism and tardiness
• Revisit policy
• Circumstances investigated
• Legitimate personal reasons dealt with as above
• Restate policy and emphasize unacceptability of conduct
• Identify discussion as verbal warning
• Monitor ongoing results

- Skating employee
• Symptoms
  Employees who are not performing to ability for various
reasons unrelated to bad attitude
• Turnaround strategies
  Appeal to their pride, primacy, or legacy
  Increase their leadership role

- Disruptive passive-aggressive behavior
• Types
  Sabotage
  Talking behind people’s backs
  Spreading negative rumors or gossip
  Agreeing with management to his face, disagreeing behind
back
  Making and intentionally breaking agreements and pleading
a misunderstanding
  Undermine manager’s position by spreading rumors above
manager
• Turnaround strategies
  Deal with employee in private
  Let employee know you know what’s going on and that it
has to stop

- Procrastination
• Causes
  Fear of failure
  Resistance
  Boredom
• Turnaround strategies
  Fear/remove fear from task
  Resistance/explain importance and downside to not
performing
  Boredom/rotate tasks, structure tasks not to be boring,
assess the value of the tasks
XI THE DISCIPLINARY PROCESS
- Counseling
- Confrontation

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- Documentation
XII MOTIVATING BAD ATTITUDE EMPLOYEES
- Hierarchy of needs
• Physiological and safety needs
• Affiliation and belonging needs
• Self-esteem and self-actualization needs

- The role of manager to motivation
• Setting goals
• Create a motivational culture
• Maintain dignity and respect
• Share recognition and rewards

- Strategies for success
• Increase skills inventory
• Communicate information
• Give employees influence and input
• Acknowledge individuality
• Acknowledge transferable skills
• Have fun

- Dos
• Give personal positive attention
• Listen
• Identify options or unfixables
• Feedback
• Praise positive change or performance
• Give away “how” decisions when possible
• Develop their skills
• Have fun
• Reward and recognized all contributions to success
• Negotiate their goals

- Don’ts
• Fail to listen
• Fail to have goals
• Give responsibility without authority
• Fail to give feedback
• Have poor information flow
• Fail to correct poor performance in others
• Furnish inadequate resources, including time
• Require repetitive work
• Be disorganized
• Fail to end things
XIII BAD ATTITUDE EMPLOYEES AND CHANGE
- Nature of change
o Inflicted or elected
o Inevitability of change

- Organizational change

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- Bad attitude employees and change
• Defense against criticism
• Defense against loss
• Defense against potential unfairness

- Turnaround strategies
• Explain and interpret
• Listen to their perception of loss, fear, or resentment
• Make bridging agreements
• Establish accountability and consequence
• Announce the change early and often
• Celebrate past achievements
• Articulate your confidence in their ability
• Open up the how to do it
• Train the change
• Balance ongoing discussion with effective action
• Monitor incremental activity and results
• Monitor and celebrate the new achievements
• Confront resistance
• Implement consequences
• Display the courage to live the change

doc_884908061.pdf
 

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