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Jewish World Review July 5, 2006 / 9 Tamuz, 5766
Coping with cruddy coworkers
By Marty Nemko
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http://www.JewishWorldReview.com |
Countless books, articles, and workshops have been written about how to deal with lousy co-workers.
Each guru has The Magic Formula. Consider, for example, Laura Benjamin, who writes about and conducts workshops on how to cope with difficult people. She urges five strategies: get to know them, identify what motivates them, build trust with them, ask yourself how you've contributed to their bad behavior, and later, spend less time with them.
Those may sound sensible, but nowhere does she provide even a shred of evidence of how well those strategies work.
In fact, I've found that no matter which expert's elixir you drink, most problem employees remain a problem.
What works best is to get rid of them.
What works next best is accept them as-is, and, even if you're not their supervisor, do what you can to get them moved to where they do the least harm.
Examples:
With all employees, earned praise is helpful try to catch them doing something right. Even if praise doesn't make them better employees, they'll feel better. That's a worthy outcome itself. Besides, studies find that praise, even more than money, keeps employees from leaving. So, you'll less often have the hassle of recruiting and training replacement workers.
Even more important to a good workplace, if you're in the position to hire, take the time to hire wisely: cast a wide net, screen thoroughly, and hire for ability and attitude more than experience and credentials.
That's my not-very-magical elixir for creating a workplace that's productive and enjoyable for everyone.