T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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625.1 | One way to handle the problem... | MANFAC::GREENLAW | | Sat Oct 01 1988 20:16 | 71 |
| RE .0
I ask my wife who is involved with personnel issues at another company
to answer this as she has had to deal with this type of problem at
other employers. This is an issue that is not unique to DEC. What
follows are her answers to the questions.
>Is this acceptable behavior for a unit manager?
NO, no employee, manager or otherwise, should treat another employee
that way.
>Would ignoring this attack condone this and future outbursts?
YES
>What recourse, if any, does the employee have?
>Assuming some corrective action - what is the proper way to
>escalate the matter?
The employee should go talk to the manager in a calm manner,
preferably not immediately after the incident. He/she should explain
how the outburst made the employee feel (humiliated,embarrased,
incompetent etc). The employee should also tell the manager how
he/she expects to be treated ("I'm not perfect and can take criticism
and expect to be told in a calm, non-threatening manner in private,
the same as you would want to be treated", etc).
My experience is that this type of conversation gets the program
back on track. If the manager continues to act like a jerk, it
needs to get escalated to the manager's manager. If that doesn't work
go to Human Resources (or elsewhere if it's appropriate.) However,
the employee does owe the manager one chance to discuss and correct
the situation befor escalating.
>It seems that the number one "sin" a manager can commit is the
>public ridicule and humiliation of a subordinate. If such a manager
>holds his charges with this amount of esteem - should he be given
>career power over others?
Every person is human and will make mistakes. If this is the
first incident and it doesn't happen again, he/she does deserve
to be forgiven. Most managers that I consider to be good have made
some colassal mistakes of this type in their career. What made
them better was that they learned from them and never did it again.
If the manager makes a habit of this, upper management needs to
be informed in order to take appropriate action.
>Both the employee and the manager have been damaged. Private apologies
>at this point, can not ease the tension and uncertainty created
>by this unfortunate situation.
If this was the first incident and the manger apoligizes, they
should both be able to put it behind them. They're both human and
I can't believe the employee never did something stupid. Private
apologies should ease the tension. Again, this is assuming a one
time incident.
>If this is an example of the "new digital" style of management -
>then it is a sad day for us all.
Employees can help in general by responding to the situation
based on the facts. A one time deal, properly apologized for-forgive
and forget and learn from it (don't do it when you become a manager).
An ongoing problem-escalate to the proper level and let it be taken
care of.
I could not have said it better. - Lee G.
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625.2 | From One Manager to Another.... | MTADMS::JOHNSON | Rob -- Help, this tunnel's dark!! | Sat Oct 01 1988 20:16 | 51 |
| Re: 625.0
> Is this acceptable behavior for a unit manager?
Certainly not!! Not for a unit manager and not for ANY responsible,
intelligent, effective manager (I'm sure KO would agree with me). Any
half-wit manager can tell you that degrading a subordinate in "public"
is the worst thing that one could possibly do. The manager ends up
looking like a complete a** and the subordinate becomes defensive and,
as you stated, there is not much that can be salvaged from the attack.
> Would ignoring this attack condone this and future outbursts?
I don't believe so. If the manager does not act responsibly and admit
fault in "public", the employee, by ignoring the outbursts, sets the
example by not allowing the manager to control the situation. Each time
the manager displays such an immature and negative attitude he/she only
precipitates his/her demise and that of the unit as a whole. Negativity
begets negativity.
> What recourse, if any, does the employee have?
I (my opinion) believe a responsible and intelligent employee would pull
the !@#$ manager aside and express his/her reaction to the outburst.
Not in terms that can only be described with expletives (this will only
put the manager on the defensive), but on a more personal level. Use
constructive criticism. Admit to the mistake if one was made, but explain
in assertive, not demanding, language that you do not appreciate being
publicly humiliated. This should NOT be done immediately. Give the
manager some time to fully realize the mistake that was made. Pull the
manager aside, preferably in a closed-door conference room and have at
it in a very constructive manner. COMMUNICATION is the answer. To have
successful two-way communication, neither party can be in a defensive
posture or feel threatened in any way. Maybe if someone else in the
unit felt strongly enough about the matter, they could intervene. This
may/may not be viewed as being less threatening. I would attempt direct
communication with the manager before seeking any other alternatives.
This has always worked for me.
> Private apologies at this point, can not ease the tension and uncer-
> tainty created by this unfortunate situation.
That is the manager's fault and responsibility. A private apology to the
employee concerned would be helpful, but would not heal the wounds within
the unit. The manager's only recourse would be to apologize publicly for
his/her actions. There could be a number of reasons why the manager acted
in that manner, but only a responsible manager would see the mistake and
take the necessary corrective measures (i.e., "EAT CROW").
/s/ Robert R. Johnson, one responsible manager
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625.3 | I modified title of 625.0 | EXIT26::STRATTON | Just Say No(tes) | Sat Oct 01 1988 23:40 | 12 |
| I modified the title of the base note (625.0) because I
was offended to see the word I replaced with "[removed]"
appear in this conference.
If I were not a moderator, I would have sent MAIL to the
moderators, asking that the title be changed.
I think the discussion can continue without specific knowledge
of the particular word used.
Jim Stratton (co-moderator, DIGITAL conference)
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625.4 | | COOKIE::WITHERS | Trad. Anon. c. 1988 | Mon Oct 03 1988 00:35 | 9 |
| In my experience, the best reply an emplyoyee can give in this
situation is, "Let's continue this discussion in your [the manager's]
manager's office...now."
Having been in a similar (though not abusive) situation, that kooled
the fires really quickly.
BobW
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625.5 | neutral territory | DPDMAI::BEAN | i wanna go HOME! to California! | Mon Oct 03 1988 02:11 | 5 |
| e agree with .4 suggestion....with one modification. if possible
have the meeting in a neutral place...like an unoccupied conference
room. the mgrs. office is HIS/HER territory.
tony
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625.6 | Can We Talk?? | MTADMS::JOHNSON | Rob -- Help, this tunnel's dark!! | Mon Oct 03 1988 08:09 | 22 |
| Re: .4 and .5
Tony, I think Bob (correct me if I'm wrong) is referring to the
manager's boss' office.
I would agree if it had not been for the fact that a majority of
the office also heard the discussion. This may work, but it could
also backfire. The victim (employee) may emerge the victor in the
eyes of fellow employees, but the manager will be severely scarred.
This may appear to be OK, but I think the welfare of the entire
office would suffer as a result. An office can only be as effective
as its manager and a manager only as effective as his/her office.
The lines of communication must remain open if the office and the
manager are to work together and grow together. To 'haul' the manager
into his/her boss' office would only perpetuate the problem (in this
instance, I believe).
I hope all this has helped. Let us know the outcome.
-- Holding my breath....
Rob :^)
|
625.7 | To be continued... | PSYCHE::WAGONER | | Tue Oct 04 1988 10:47 | 36 |
|
Thanks for all the advice (even the editted expletive).
I pointed the accussed to this Note and replies.
Having been an ear-witness to the first outburst and the visited
employee in the second, my interest and concern must be limited
to the impressions the incident left on the unwilling nonparticipants.
This topic was never intended to be a blow-by-blow description
of personal antagonisms. Rather, I was interested in a discussion
of the ethics of the manager as applied to the managed.
Would it have been any different had the manager said " you're a
jerk" or "you clown" or any nonvulgar insult? Possibly. But it was
the second occassion - the manager had an audience and seemed to
feel that he was right in driving home his point - that did the
most damage.
Tension levels in the office have become noticable - folks have
been treating both individuals with some trepidation. Can this ever
be resolved with life getting back to normal?
It was gratifying and enlightening to read the comments from an
uninvolved but interested manager - thanks Rob. You seem to represent
those qualities we have all been told are part of the "digital way
of working".
As to the final resolution of this matter - the incident has been
elevated to personnel (by which route, I'm not sure). I did receive
a call from the PR manager to give an account of what I heard/
witnessed. I'll post a wrap-up on this when it happens.
Gary
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625.8 | | BOSTON::SOHN | Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging | Thu Oct 06 1988 14:27 | 13 |
|
Rule #1:
Praise in public, criticize in private.
All criticism should be done in private, as should all conversations
that get heated.
In my first month on the job, my manager had a knock-down drag-out
on some technical issue with one of my coworkers in the middle of
the office. I slinked out of the office as quick as I could.
eric
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625.9 | One consequence of 'working' managers | REGENT::EPSTEIN | lpr for LPS? Just ask | Fri Oct 07 1988 09:35 | 12 |
| >> In my first month on the job, my manager had a knock-down drag-out
>> on some technical issue with one of my coworkers in the middle of
>> the office.
This is where things can sometimes get sticky, because in Engineering,
many times the manager/supervisor is also the 'lead' engineer because
of experience, etc. It's very tough, especially at design reviews,
to separate the two functions from the one person. Think about
it - would you have been as upset/embarassed if the 'discussion'
had involved a group/project leader instead of a manager?
Bruce (who frequently has to remember which hat to wear)
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625.10 | another such incident- HELP!! | POOR::MAYANK | I am working on - am I ? | Thu Jul 06 1989 19:53 | 57 |
| This note is old, but it is *very* relevant to what I know has happened
in the past 4 months in a group at DEC, that I wanted to continue on
the same topic rather than start a new one.
RE .7
Since you haven't posted a reply stating how the matter was finally
resolved (especially since it was escalated to the personnel mgr), I
presume that it has still not been resolved. I would be very sad to
hear that.
=======================================
Here's what happened to someone I know:
She got yelled at by her manager in *her* office, in full hearing of
many colleagues. What's worse is that he was yelling at her for
totally invalid reasons - telling her she was not performing well and
doing a good job when in fact her supervisor had always told her that
the performance was very good (and she had got a '2' rating in the
previous performance review).
There were other incidents that complete the story better and give a
total picture, but I'll leave those out for the sake of brevity and to
concentrate on the point started by the base note.
Being a mild mannered person, she was aghast and shocked. Manager did
not care even when she had tried speaking. A day later (enough time for
the manager to realize his mistake and apologize), she went to the
site personnel mgr. Personnel did not do much to find out the true
depth of the situation (RE .7 there was no calling of other employees
to get ear-witness accounts or determine the extent of the problem!!)
P mgr tried downplaying her manager's fault. Dragged the matter
instead of addressing it in with all parties present in a room (said it
was a touchy issue!!).
====================================================
What would you do in such a situation ? this is terribly hurting to
the morale and self-respect of an employee. A person who can behave
this way should never be a manager with power of employees' future.
I want to know what people feel about *how* Digital's policies and
philosophy should be enforced in this case ?
On a separate note:
A lot of the earlier replies suggested that the employee should get a
manager *later* into a conf room and tell him/her that this kind of
behavior is not appreciated - and give the mgr a chance. Why should
the employee have to do that ??? any mgr should himself realize that
he ought to apologize publicly (since such behavior cannot be
appreciated in a work place). Why should the victim have to go and
bring it to his attention ?
- mayank
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625.11 | | TRCO01::FINNEY | Keep cool, but do not freeze ... | Thu Jul 06 1989 20:33 | 18 |
| >> A lot of the earlier replies suggested that the employee should get a
>> manager *later* into a conf room and tell him/her that this kindof
>>behavior is not appreciated - and give the mgr a chance. Why should
>>the employee have to do that ??? any mgr should himself realize that
>>he ought to apologize publicly (since such behavior cannot be
>>appreciated in a work place). Why should the victim have to go and
>>bring it to his attention ?
Because managers are human too, and make mistakes. If one is determined
fix a problem, then one should attempt the "face-to-face" approach
first. If one is more interested in raising a stink, exacting revenge,
or saving face, then one tends to skip the face-to-face in private
approach in. The victim shouldn't HAVE to go and bring the problem
to the manager to bring it to his attention, but if after the a
short grace period, nothing is forthcoming, to NOT initiate a low-key
patch up is to exacerbate the situation, and perpetuate hard feelings.
Scooter
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625.12 | Stick to your guns! | LAIDBK::PFLUEGER | and then the merry-go-round stopped... | Thu Jul 06 1989 20:39 | 14 |
| IMHO, the manager who was at fault should apologize in person to
the offended employee. Then issue a public apology for appearing
callous and insensitive to the employee and to the others who were
within hearing distance of the incident (I'm sure they didn't
appreciate the incident).
If that doesn't happen within a "proper" [your mileage may vary]
timeframe, then use the open door policy to achieve restitution.
If none of these work then request a transfer to another unit, under
a new manager.
Jp
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625.13 | opps, notes collision ;^) | LAIDBK::PFLUEGER | and then the merry-go-round stopped... | Thu Jul 06 1989 20:42 | 1 |
|
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625.14 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Happy new year! | Fri Jul 07 1989 11:07 | 4 |
| I got savaged by my manager in an open meeting once... I don't think it
will happen again, cost him a very expensive dinner.
Grins
|
625.15 | Managing the Hot Head... | FDCV06::ARVIDSON | What does God need with a Starship? | Fri Jul 07 1989 17:28 | 88 |
|
I've had two situations happen to me, here's how I handled it:
First:
I was working with a contractor investigating a bug. The supervisor
came over and asked a couple of questions to which we hadn't found
the answers to. The contractor and I focused on answering the questions
he had asked. We found the answer to one and I went over to his
office to give him an update, the manager was there also. Before I
got the answer to his intial question, he had asked me another. I
said I didn't know the answer to that one, but... (At this point he
yelled, angrily "If you can't give me the answer, then get the hell
out of here!! I'll find it myself!!") I stood there for a second,
looked at my manager...and walked off.
This was the first time I had ever been yelled at in an business
environment. When I walked off I considered the situation as
objectively as possible:
- The current environment was a little hot, supporting
an Area's problem
- Heat had been building up for a couple of days
- Manager has difficulty communicating expectations
(If he had ten hands, he'd do it all himself)
So, with the understanding that it wasn't me, I talked to the manager
about the supervisors yelling, to which he was a witness. He said
that he understood and would discuss it with the supervisor. Situation
handled...kinda...the supervisor has yelled at two others, since, in two
other situations over a four month period. On the last one, I was
*very* close to standing up and telling him, calmly, "This is a
work environment; yelling is unprofessional." Should I do this next
time? Or just discuss it with the new manager, who has replaced the
manager during my incident?
Second:
A few weeks before my old manager was to take a new position, I
had approached him to let him know that I was looking. He said
thanks for letting him know and good luck in my search. Within
a week I had interviewed with another group in the building and
they called my manager for a recommendation. Apparently, this
caught him by surprise and he was BULLS**T!! He said that I didn't
give him the courtesy of telling him that a call was coming and
next time, if I want a good recommendation, I had better tell him!
'End of discussion.', he said. I wasn't able to get a word in
edgewise!! I tried again and he said, "That's it! End of discussion!"
and he walked out of his office. So, I went back to my cubie and
pondered the situation:
- I had informed my manager of my intent to leave
- He had a week to consider what recommendation he might give
- In the interview I wasn't told they would call him;
not that that would have mattered as I had already
informed him I was looking
Anyway, about 4 hours later I went back to his office and tried
to describe my side. Again I got, 'If this is about the phone
call, I don't want to discuss it!'. I said, 'Yes it is.' He said,
'I said no more discussion, and I mean it!' So I left...straight
for personnel. The personnel rep listened and said he wanted to
get the manager's story. After the personnel rep talked to my
manager, he talked with me. He said that my manager's was open
to discussing it. That I should go see him. I thought to myself,
'Why should I go to him? I tried twice and was pushed off! He
should come to me, apology in hand, and listen.' The personnel
person didn't agree or disagree, just told me to cross the bridge
again. I said, he should come halfway.
Well, I crossed the bridge and the manager listened and we came to
an understanding, that I would tell him whenever I went on an
interview.
I'm still confused and wonder about this. To me, the manager has
some control issues. Also, I feel that the personnel person
wimped out, maybe because the manager was leaving. I looked at
the policies manual and it states that I should inform my manager
that I will be interviewing, not to tell him about each interview.
Is it a courtesy to tell the manager about each interview? Shouldn't
the manager expect calls after being told that someone is looking?
I don't look towards new positions often, so I'm a little niave
about this.
Dan
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625.16 | opinion | TIXEL::ARNOLD | Flogging continues til morale improves | Sat Jul 08 1989 18:23 | 19 |
| re .15, while it would probably be good to verbally tell your manager
that you are looking, I see it as mandatory to send him/her a mail
message, maybe with 'return receipt' depending on your relationship
with your manager. Otherwise it could become a "I told you about
that"/"no you didn't" discussion which neither of you will ever win.
Regarding informing your manager of every interview, while not
mandatory (at least according to my interpretation of the P&P), it
would probably be a good idea, particularly if your relationship with
your manager is decent to good. Part of your manager's role is to help
you with your career development, and if you inform your manager about
an interview with group 'x', perhaps that manager would take time to
discuss with you his/her opinion of what group 'x' does and how that
may or may not fit into your career goals as he/she sees them.
But again, this is idealistic, and we've all had managers who did not
fit into an idealistic mold...
Jon
|