One of the things most self-employed businessowners, entrepreneurs and solo professionals dislike is confrontation. What I have seen time and again in my
personal business coaching practice is that avoiding confrontation very often
causes problems to fester, grow bigger and explode.
Confrontation
The Wrong Way
I had a client with seven employees. One employee was the manager over the
others. She was confrontational with
everyone, including the owners who were in a partnership. But, no one confronted her. When confrontation is one way it really is a
form of bullying.
This business, which had been thriving before
her arrival, started to slowly head in the wrong direction. Employee morale was bad. The owners saw what was happening but refused
to stand up to her. Her bullying and
confrontational tactics were about her power, not an effort to improve the
business.
Confrontation
The Right Way
Confrontation, when used to advance ideas or
improvements is good. In fact, you
cannot have improvement without questions that confront the status quo. But, when confrontation is purely about
personal control it is bad for all concerned, including the person who
initiates it.
Small business success, let alone personal
success cannot be achieved without others.
Confrontation the right way is about “What’s right” not “Who’s
Right.” When it is about “Who’s right”
it is impossible to build a team and to accomplish goals over the long-term.
No matter how much online training, corporate
training, business training, business courses or business skills training you
have had confrontation of the wrong type is a difficult challenge.
Confrontation-The
Solution
Too often, people let other people run over
them because they do not want confrontation.
All this does is encourage the person who is doing the confronting or
bullying to do it more. Starting your
own business or running a small business has enough challenges but I can assure
you as a personal business coach you must have the right mindset about
confrontation.
It is hard to accept but confrontation can be
a good thing. Confrontation is about
clarity. If you think about it, clarity
is hard to come by without opposing points of view on complicated and sometimes
even simple matters.
Once the business owners I was collaborating
with understood that they needed clarity and that confrontation was the means
to achieve it they took action. The
bullying employee was given a performance review with specific times and
incidents where her behavior was not appropriate.
Interestingly, her behavior got worse after
the review. Then we knew it was not
about her doing a good job but about her having power. But there was a dividend from the
confrontation between the owners and the employee.
The other employees saw that the owners were
willing to stand up to her. As a result,
they started coming forward one by one and telling the owners what was really
going on with the business and how she was not doing her job. What they related happened to be true.
The employees confronted the owners and this
started the process of bringing clarity.
Things became very clear to the point where the owners fired the
employee. With this one employee gone
turnover decreased over the next year by 70%.
Customer satisfaction surveys were increasingly positive. And the best part, the business was a happy
place and more profitable.
The next time you are thinking of avoiding
confrontation remember this.
Confrontation, more often than not is your pathway to clarity and a
better future.
Author bio: More detailed information can be found at www.thehoustonbusinesscoach.com Created by Scott Steve. The definitive guide to a better business and a better you for entrepreneurs, solo professionals and self-employed individuals striving to reach the top and who are serious about their success.
One of the most important things small business coaches do is to create a plan for your organization that helps it stay on track and stay accountable by checking back in with you regularly to see that the plan is implemented correctly and running smoothly.
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