Empathy, The Key To Deal With Jerks At Work
We spend a lot of our lives at work. So it makes sense to acknowledge that a difficult workplace can make life miserable. Often, there is a disruptive person at work that throws the whole place off kilter. Coworkers feel miserable, angry, and frustrated. They feel their creativity, productivity, and commitment drain away. They want something to change but don’t know what steps to take and often just hope the difficult worker changes. Which unfortunately never happens.
We spend a lot of our lives at work. So it makes sense to acknowledge that a difficult workplace can make life miserable. Often, there is a disruptive person at work that throws the whole place off kilter. Coworkers feel miserable, angry, and frustrated. They feel their creativity, productivity, and commitment drain away. They want something to change but don’t know what steps to take and often just hope the difficult worker changes. Which unfortunately never happens.
The Counter-intuitive Solution But there is, in fact, a way
forward. It can seem counterintuitive and downright frustrating, but it’s
simple, and it works. They key is committing to it and entrusting the idea that
each individual has a responsibility to help make the workplace better. The
approach can be summed up in just one word. Empathy. Empathy is the key to
managing difficult workplace relationships. And in this context it means really
trying to understand and appreciate the very person that you likely have the
least desire to think or care about. But when we look at what might be driving
disruptive individuals to act the way they do, we can begin to understand them,
empathize with them, and even begin to work better together with these three
steps:
Ways for empathy at work place
Step 1: What is the Pattern of Behavior? Step one is trying
to nail down the individual’s pattern of behavior. What exactly is disruptive
about how they act? Maybe they are always overestimating their abilities and
blaming others for any shortcomings. Perhaps the person explodes whenever their
authority is threatened. Some difficult workers frustrate us by cutting corners
and always falling short on tasks – and then lying about it! Yet others are a
pain with their need for perfection, orderliness, and control. Whatever it may
be, the task is to figure out just what the pattern of behavior is. What is the
action the bothers you and in what settings does it occur? Only by having a
clear sense of the problem can you find a solution.
Step 2: Empathy and Understanding The key here is thinking
about why the person might be acting so disruptively. Much like a child
throwing a tantrum, the goal is not necessarily to be bad but the difficult
person often doesn’t know another way to handle his own stressful situation. In
understanding their behavior, we can have empathy for their situation, and
figure out ways to engage them rather than merely complaining about how
frustrating they are. Begin by asking what you know about this person? What is
her life like? What is the office like for her? What is she worried about that
she covers up be being difficult? Because that’s what is usually going on: the
bad actor has some internal struggle that is causing the inappropriate
behavior. Even acknowledging that general conclusion can be incredibly
comforting. The person that is making your life a living hell is actually
insecure and taking it out on you. The arrogant, condescending person is often covering up their own
feelings of inadequacy. Once you understand this, you can acknowledge that
little compliments might avoid a blowout. The inflexible micro manager is only
controlling you because she out of control and overwhelmed. Recognizing this
can provide for the technique of avoiding challenges over details and
expressing appreciation for their dedication (while emphasizing yours!). While
each difficult person might be different, there tend to be general types. And
once you figure out what they’re struggling with to cover up, you can approach
them with more empathy and specific techniques that minimize their anxiety. At
the end of the day, even if you’re the one doing the legwork, this will make
your job and your workday more pleasant.
Step 3: What am I contributing? The last step is to figure
out just why the person’s pattern of behavior bothers you so much. As much as
the disruptive coworker is labelled as a “jerk” or “schmuck” it is just as
important to figure out why we are bothered by the behavior. Why do you hate
being blamed? Does the individual remind you of someone else in your life? Is
there a reason that certain demands rub you the wrong way? By assessing your
own contribution to the problem, you are more likely to be able to take a step
back and diffuse some negative feelings for the disruptive person that you are
carrying with you throughout the day. While certain people at work can be
extremely frustrating, we can take solace in knowing that there is a way
forward. Instead of just hoping that the difficult person changes, each of us
has the ability – and responsibility – to improve the office. Committing to the
steps of identifying patterns of behavior, harnessing empathy, and looking at
our own contributions can all help to improve our time at work.
Ways for improving empaty
-Travel to new place
-Learn new skills
-Have deep conservation
-Read more
-Identify personal biases
-Ask for feedback
Why important empaty in work place?
-Customer prefer empathetic companies
-Empathy increase employee retention
-Empathic manager foster creativity
Ways for improving empaty
-Travel to new place
-Learn new skills
-Have deep conservation
-Read more
-Identify personal biases
-Ask for feedback
Why important empaty in work place?
-Customer prefer empathetic companies
-Empathy increase employee retention
-Empathic manager foster creativity
References:

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