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When Rudeness Dominates Your Work Culture, Everyone Pays the Price

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 You’re rude because your boss is rude.

WOW! That was an article in my feed from the Harvard Business Review this week. I could not wait to click over and absorb that one.

What happens when you have bad behavior and you do nothing about it from an organizational perspective?

When you do not address it in the flick of a switch, this could become your culture. Yes, I’m talking about a culture of screamers. How long do you think you can keep that a secret?

When rudeness dominates, everyone pays a price

I always thought that The Devil Wears Prada is a great movie. I would suggest that movie to all entry level job seekers because it tells such a great story about organizational behavior and having the boss from hell. It also tells a story of how to deal with these challenges. Then again, no matter where you are on your career journey, it is still a good movie.

The character in the movie that I could never quite figure out was Emily. Here is someone who is an administrative assistant, and you would have thought she was one of the major players in the company. She was rude because she saw her boss use that behavior and she was able to exemplify it. Like a cascading water fall, you are rude because your boss is rude.

However, the downside to having the boss from hell on the premises is that it not only affects that direct report, it affects everyone who walks past and happens to hear it. It affects the person who sits in the vicinity of that sound chamber. It affects the friends of the people who hear that story.

But the most detrimental effect that it has on your organization is that it affects the bottom line. When you have an organization of screamers, you are churning money because you probably also have a high turnover number, and your so-called innovation initiatives are likely stalled because people are just not into it when the culture is challenged. Your workforce is probably spending a great chunk of their time just trying to get out.

The HBR article mentioned companies creating a 10/5 rule. I wondered, what is that?

Civility should be at the top of the list

The “10/5 way” says that if you’re within 10 feet of someone, you must make eye contact. Within five feet, you say hello. As my daughter would say, “really?”

That was a new one for me, mandating niceties. However, I should report that the company has already reported greater patient satisfaction and an increase in patient referrals

Another solution was that the executive was going to take some behavioral training classes because he had gone through six (6) administrative assistants.

To be successful, an organization has to make it a priority to manage its interpersonal relationships so there are positive and respectful interactions among employees and managers. This is not brain surgery, folks.

If the boss is abrasive, then everyone else has an excuse for being abrasive. If the boss is polite and encouraging, everyone else will likely follow in the boss’ footsteps.

Leadership should take the lead in this. Everyone should respect each other in the workplace. Title, status and hierarchy should not matter.

From the boardroom to the mail room, everyone should get equal amounts of respect. Having the leaders of the company make a commitment to civility goes a long way toward sending the message that it will not be tolerated..

Zero-tolerance is the Golden Rule

You must have zero-tolerance expectations for abrasive behaviors in the workplace. Make sure you take action, otherwise, you are condoning it.

Teach employees how to self-monitor their own behavior. Employees need to know what their triggers are and how to control their impulses and responses.

As part of the development curriculum, stress management should be offered (I prefer not to use the term anger management because of the strong emotions it has attached to it).

Encourage employees to consider the impact of their words and actions on others before they act. Think before you respond to that email; do not react the same way that you are being reacted to. It never works and it could head downhill from there and escalate the situation.

You may think the issue of civility in the workplace is too big to tackle, however like anything else, change comes one person at a time. If today each of us shows respect and good manners to our colleagues, that can make a difference.

So if you are that rude boss, take some time to think about the message you are sending about yourself and the enormous amount of stress you are responsible for in the workplace.

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Editor's Note - May 10

Had a busy week with two days at the Responsible Business Summit in London. What struck me was the appetite for sustainability in the corporate world. I spoke to senior figures from multinationals who knew wholeheartedly that businesses in the future would not succeed if the society around them failed.

Much of this appetite was understandably focused on collaboration - the future of sustainability. Words that were previously indicative of success - power, might, scale, size - are no longer enough in the open source, peer-reviewed future where opponents will not simply grumble and moan and then leave you in peace. Companies must work with governments, NGOs, charities and social enterprises as a matter of course. And even competitors, where necessary.

Facilitating this collaboration is the big challenge of the next five years. Highly-strung and ego-centric companies, feverish with the need to protect their brand, will struggle the most, but it's either adapt or die.

The business/charity relationship is one of the most interesting focal points. Business power can drive positive social change in so many ways but charities are the key holders to communities. As businesses are expected more and more to play a stake in the future, charity partnerships should be top of the corporate priority list. Businesses that don't work closely with a charity will find themselves with reputational problems.

There's a lot more to CSR, of course, but collaboration is the bedding on which CSR will rest. Businesses can no longer find the answers to all their problems in their own resources and assets.

And for many that's a scary thought.

Any thoughts, thoughts or questions, drop me a line on editor@hrzone.co.uk.

Best wishes

Jamie