Responding to Employee Concerns
Marie G.
McIntyre, Ph.D.
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As a manager, an important part of your job involves addressing the
problems and concerns of your staff.
The following suggestions may help to make these discussions more
pleasant and productive.
1.
Give the employee your full attention.
Keep in mind that dealing with employee problems and concerns is not an
interruption to your work. As a manager, it is your work.
Taking phone calls or continuing to work on your computer clearly sends
the message that the employee’s concerns aren’t all that important.
2.
Listen to their explanation without interrupting.
Unless the person is just endlessly rambling on, let them finish their
story. If they are endlessly rambling, just say, “let me stop
you for a minute to be sure that I understand”. Then summarize what
you’ve heard so far.
3.
If it’s not clear what the problem is, ask “how can I help?”.
Sometimes people just don’t explain things well. If you really have no
clue what the issue is, finding out what they expect from you may make
it clearer.
4.
Show understanding, but not necessarily agreement.
You want to be empathic and convey that you understand the problem, but
so far you’ve only heard their version of the situation. Agreeing with
them can therefore be hazardous. So don’t say, “That’s awful!
We have to do something about it!” Better to say something like, “I can
understand why you would be upset about that.”
5.
Remain neutral about issues involving other people.
You don’t want to jump to conclusions about the behavior of others until
you have actually talked to them or learned more about the situation.
6.
Ask questions to get a complete picture.
Sometimes people who are upset or angry fail to provide all the relevant
information. They are usually focused on their own point of view to the
exclusion of all others. Try to understand the whole situation before
deciding what to do next.
7.
Explain what you are going to do. Then do it.
The end of a conversation about an employee concern should be a clear
agreement on what happens next. There may be things that you want the
employee to do, such as provide more information or talk directly with a
colleague. For your part, you should be explicitly clear about (a)
whether you can do anything about the situation and (b) if so, what your
next steps will be.
8.
Get permission to involve other employees.
If the employee’s complaint is about a colleague, most of the time that
other person has to become part of the conversation in order to solve
the problem. But don’t assume that the complaining employee has thought
this through. Unless it’s a legal issue (see below), you may need to
help the employee realize that they have a choice of either (a)
involving the other party or (b) living with the situation.
9.
Take legal issues to the appropriate people. Immediately!
If the employee mentions sexual harassment, discrimination, threats of
personal harm, financial mismanagement, or other legal issues, you must
run, not walk, to your legal or HR department. Delays could create
serious problems. Do not try to investigate these issues
yourself.
10.
Set a time for the employee to get back to you.
The employee is probably more concerned about this issue than you are,
so just to insure that you don’t let it slip your mind or delay taking
action, give the employee a specific time to follow up with you.
11.
Keep information confidential.
Some employee problems are just so odd or funny or interesting that you
may be tempted to turn them into amusing anecdotes to tell your
co-workers. Don’t do this. People really resent having their personal
issues shared with others.
12.
Resolve the issue. Or clearly explain why you cannot.
Don’t leave employees wondering when their problem will be resolved or
what will be done about it. If you can’t do anything about the
situation, explain why. Most people understand that managers have
limited power.
13.
If necessary, arrange a time to follow up.
If it’s a situation that will take awhile to improve (like an
interpersonal problem with a co-worker), determine when you will touch
base with the employee to see how things are progressing.
14.
Don’t reward employees for complaining.
Addressing valid concerns is important, but some people complain
endlessly about everything. After awhile, these employees will just
suck up all your energy, so you don’t want to inadvertently encourage
them! Attention can be a powerful reward, so if you have a chronic
complainer, be sure that you don’t reinforce this behavior by listening
sympathetically to lengthy recitations of complaints.
You may also be interested in these topics .
. .
Ten
Helpful Questions to Ask Employees
Six Secrets of
Motivational Managers
How to Be a Lousy
Leader
Ten Ways to
Motivate Your Employees
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All
material on yourofficecoach.com
is copyrighted to Marie G. McIntyre.
All rights reserved.
May
be reproduced for non-commercial use with copyright and attribution to
www.yourofficecoach.com.
Commercial use requires permission: email
mmcintyre@yourofficecoach.com
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