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  #61 (permalink)  
Old 18-08-2008, 05:30 PM
rajsawster's Avatar
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Saudi Arabia
Posts: 210
Default How To Deal With A Difficult Boss




Hi Sweeta,

My previous advise may not have understood correctly so here is systematic approach to deal with such difficult boss as follows:


Most people at some point in their lives have to deal with a difficult boss. Difficult supervisors vary in personality from being a little pushy or rude, all the way to being downright abusive. Many people feel that an abusive boss has control of their personal life outside of work by lowering their self-esteem and making them live in constant fear. The role of a supervisor sometimes attracts certain controlling-type personalities because they crave the power it gives them and because they lack such control in their own personal lives. A supervisor has complete control over your most basic human needs—your ability to put food on the table and a roof over your head. These are powerful motivating factors that allow a difficult supervisor to control people out of fear of losing these basic needs. We may not be able to always correct their behavior, but we should never have to live in fear and let our difficult boss control our lives.

Here are some strategies on handling a difficult boss situation.

Always have a plan B. Most people are scared about having a discussion with their boss concerning their abusive behavior because they fear reprimand or losing their job. Their fear is usually justified if the supervisor is a control-freak and feels that their subordinate is threatening their control. Before you deal with any type of conflict, you always need to have a plan B in case things don’t work out. A plan B is the best alternative that you can come up without having to negotiate anything with your boss. In this type of scenario, your best plan B would probably take the form of having an actual job offer in hand with another employer before you have your talk. By not having a back-up plan, you have given your abusive boss even more leverage over you because they know you have no where else to go. Having a plan B, however, empowers you with the ability to walk-away at any time should the negotiation not go right. Increase your power and have a plan B before you deal with the conflict.

Never react to verbal abuse or harsh criticism with emotion. This will always get you into more trouble than you started with because it will become a war between egos and chances are good that your boss has a bigger ego than you have—hence why he is difficult in the first place. When a personal attack is made on you, they are trying to bait you into reacting emotionally because once you react, you become an easy target for additional attacks. The key then is not to react, but to acknowledge and move on. By doing this, you effectively strip all of the power behind their verbal attacks away from your abusive boss, without creating conflict. If your boss happens to be an intimidator or a control freak, then the best way of dealing with their behavior is to remain calm and acknowledge their power by saying, "You're right, I'm sorry." By saying this, you take away any chance of them lashing back at you because you have sidestepped their verbal attack rather than meeting it head on.

Discuss rather than confront. When your boss criticizes you, don’t react out of emotion and become confrontational with them about it because that just breeds more conflict. Instead, use their criticism as a topic for discussion on interests, goals, and problem-solving and ask them for their advice. If they criticize your work, then that means that they have their own idea on how that work should be done, so ask them for their advice on how your work can be improved.

Manage the manager. A source of conflict usually occurs when a group of employees gets a new manager who demands that things run differently. These changes are usually reactionary in nature because the employees go about their regular duties until the manager comes by and criticizes the way it is being done. Instead of waiting for their criticism, take a proactive approach and be absolutely clear from the very beginning on how your boss wants things to be done so that there is no miscommunication later on. There are many ways of completing a task and having a discussion about them at the very beginning will allow you to see things from their perspective as well as sharing your own with them. Get to know their likes and dislikes inside and out so that you can avoid future criticisms.

Know that you can do little to change them. Being a difficult person is part of their personality and therefore it is a very difficult, if not impossible thing to change in a supervisor, so don’t think that you can change how they act. Instead, change the way that you view their behavior. Don’t label them as being a jerk--just merely label them as your boss. By avoiding derogatory labeling, you avoid making it easy on yourself to be angry with your boss.

Keep your professional face on. Know the difference between not liking your boss and not being professional. You don’t have to make your boss your friend or even like your boss as a person, but you do have to remain professional and get the job done and carry out their instructions dutifully as a subordinate, just as you would expect them to be professional as do their duties as a supervisor.

Evaluate your own performance. Before you go attacking your boss, examine your own performance and ask yourself if you are doing everything right. Get opinions from other coworkers about your performance and see if there is any warrant to the criticisms of your supervisor before you criticize their opinions.

Gather additional support. If others share in your concern, then you have the power of numbers behind you to give you additional persuasion power over your boss. It is often easy for a supervisor to ignore or attack one employee, but it becomes more difficult to attack all of his employees. He might be able to fire one of you, but he will look like an idiot (and probably get fired himself) if he tries to fire all of you. An interdepartment union is a good way of mustering power against an abusive employer.

Don’t go to up the chain of command unless it’s a last resort. Going straight up the chain of command is not an effective way of dealing with a difficult supervisor because it only increases conflict in the workplace. Your immediate supervisor will consider this a very serious backstabbing maneuver and might seek some sort of retribution in the future against you and your career. Also, other people in your workplace might brand you as a whistleblower because of your actions. Try to discuss issues with your supervisor first and only go up the chain of command as a last resort.

Encourage good behavior with praise. It is easy to criticize your superiors, but criticisms often lead towards resentment and hostile feelings. Everyone likes a pat on the back for good behavior, so you should strive to watch for good behaviors from your supervisor and compliment them on that. Proactive praising is much more effective than reactive criticisms.

Document everything. If you choose to stay with a toxic employer, then document everything. This will become your main ammunition should a complaint ever be filed down the road. Document interactions with them as well as your own activities so that you can remind them of your own achievements at performance review time.


Leave work at work. Get into the habit of leaving work at home and not bringing it into your personal life because that will only add to your level of stress. Keep your professional life separate from your personal life as best as you can. This also includes having friends who you don’t work with so that you can detach yourself from your work life rather than bringing it home with you.

Is it OK now?

Regards

Sawant
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  #62 (permalink)  
Old 18-08-2008, 05:44 PM
usha HR's Avatar
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 28
Default

Hi Swetha

I suggest to stay there for sone time atleast for 1 year because job hopping is not good and you may find the difficult people at other places too. Its only how we manage. As its new place ,new people and new environment you may feel frustated , it takes some time to get adjudted to the new environment and new people , after some you will get accustomed to those p[eople and will how to deal such kind of people. Even after one year if you feel liking leaving yoiu can search for other job but not in the initial stage of the job start. If the next interivewer asks you why you left what would be you r answer, you cannot just say because your boss is not good , if you, he will also that iam also the same kind of person , he will have a negative impart on you.


Think properly and take a decision but still i suggest to stay for some time if not 1 year atleast for 6 months so that you can say that you have been appointed on contract basis.

bye usha



Quote:
Originally Posted by shwe11 View Post
Hi Frnds!!!!!!

I am in a serious problem....Really need your suggestion....I have joined a MNC as a Asst Manager-HR....My problem is my Boss...He is very rude and I have never come across a personality like this before...In last company I was into multiple things and was a very efficient employee ...Infact they was not relieving me and also I got my resignation approved after one month........

Here in this new company it's been 2 months now but my boss is really a tough personality....He is rude with the entire staff..everybody is pissed off ...but what to do ...even if we all work fine he never acknowledge but yes he criticize us.....and too in front of everybody.......I doesn't feel like talking to him...and generally avoid him ..I do all the communication through E mails only with him....Entire office here do the back biting for him...Actually he is a NRI and as per the company rule 15 days he spend in Singapore & 15 days in India....It seems that as if he like Singapore culture but can't say same for India.....He keeps on scolding everybody on silly issues as well...He is very impatient also.....

I really don't know how tackle the situation....Other then him entire staff is very good...Should I Look for some other option or just stick to this company & should gain experience of handling difficult people.....I have option of job hopping with me as of now....but will this be a practical decision......

Plz advice & help me....


Thanks
Shweta Jaitly
  #63 (permalink)  
Old 18-08-2008, 06:26 PM
admin_pcmw's Avatar
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Mumbai
Posts: 3
Default Hello Shweta

As per the specifications submitted by you, it is understood that your Boss has "BOSSY Ruthless Professional character" . People with such characterstics like to dominate others & treat others beneath.

The best policy to deal with such people of "confrontation" . Since he is your Boss & you are new to the Organization, its sugested that you people (you & your TEAM members) confront him indirectly over his various professional downsides, to the extreme. This will either put him aback or straigten him.
  #64 (permalink)  
Old 18-08-2008, 06:38 PM
josh_joshi@rediffmail.com's Avatar
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Mumbai
Posts: 3
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by shwe11 View Post
Hi Frnds!!!!!!

I am in a serious problem....Really need your suggestion....I have joined a MNC as a Asst Manager-HR....My problem is my Boss...He is very rude and I have never come across a personality like this before...In last company I was into multiple things and was a very efficient employee ...Infact they was not relieving me and also I got my resignation approved after one month........

Here in this new company it's been 2 months now but my boss is really a tough personality....He is rude with the entire staff..everybody is pissed off ...but what to do ...even if we all work fine he never acknowledge but yes he criticize us.....and too in front of everybody.......I doesn't feel like talking to him...and generally avoid him ..I do all the communication through E mails only with him....Entire office here do the back biting for him...Actually he is a NRI and as per the company rule 15 days he spend in Singapore & 15 days in India....It seems that as if he like Singapore culture but can't say same for India.....He keeps on scolding everybody on silly issues as well...He is very impatient also.....

I really don't know how tackle the situation....Other then him entire staff is very good...Should I Look for some other option or just stick to this company & should gain experience of handling difficult people.....I have option of job hopping with me as of now....but will this be a practical decision......

Plz advice & help me....


Thanks
Shweta Jaitly
I dont see any big problem in that situation of yours. you need to put this point in front of your Management about his behaviour and thats where HR has to play a role.
In case you won't see any positive sign from the Management about the guy than i would suggest you not to spend much of your career in an organisation who can't see the invaluable contribution of the HR team. last but not the least" People leave the company coz of bosses". so take a call rather than sitting on the issue till it boils down your carrer.
  #65 (permalink)  
Old 18-08-2008, 06:40 PM
shailesh.mohite's Avatar
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Mumbai
Posts: 12
Default

Dear Shweta,

I also faced the same situation in my career almost for 4 years. My bosses were not cooperative. I left one job within 2 months under frustration & that affects my cv a lot.

But now I am realizing the difference, becoz of such situations I learn how to tackle with such bosses.

Stick to the organization & try to find out the ways to work with him.

Definitely you will get successes

Regards,


Shailesh
  #66 (permalink)  
Old 18-08-2008, 08:12 PM
Nayana Chander's Avatar
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Pune
Posts: 97
Default

I am in complete agreement with Mr. Sawant. Nice pointers.

Cheers.
__________________
Regards

Nayana. Chander
Asst. Manager - HR

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