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No Batteries Required: 8 Conflict Resolution Tips
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| Guest post by: Bruna Martinuzzi |
Article Overview: Learning to deal with emotions in negotiations or conflict situations helps us to be more effective whether in our professional or personal life. This article provides 8 tips for effective conflict resolution.
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No Batteries Required: 8 Conflict Resolution Tips
There is an African proverb that says: “Don’t look where you fell, but where
you slipped.” When we find ourselves on the conflict carousel, we often tend to
lose sight of the root cause of the conflict. It may very well have originated
with us, but, once the conflict with a colleague or superior is set in motion,
we seem to suffer from temporary, corporate amnesia—the emotional nature of the
conflict clouds our objectivity.
Learning to deal with emotions in negotiations or conflict situations helps
us to be more effective, whether in our professional or personal life. In the
book Beyond Reason: Using Emotions
as You Negotiate, Roger Fisher and Daniel Shapiro
provide a powerful framework for dealing with emotions without being
overwhelmed by them. The authors identify five concerns in our relationships
with others which elicit, for better or for worse, many of the emotions that
surface in negotiations and conflicts:
1. Appreciation
Do you feel heard, understood and valued for your point of view?
2. Affiliation
Are you treated as an adversary and kept at a distance, or are you treated
as a colleague?
3. Autonomy
Do you have the freedom to make a decision without feeling that someone else
is telling you what to do?
4. Status
Do you feel treated with respect, or do you feel diminished?
5. Role
Do you have a fulfilling or meaningful role in your conflict situations or
negotiations?
When you find yourself in a conflict scenario, run these five core concerns
in your mind and ask yourself, for example, how you might be failing in letting
the other person feel appreciated throughout the interaction; or how you might,
unwittingly or not, be diminishing their status, or placing them in a corner in
terms of autonomy. Could you have broadened their role by asking for their
advice or recommendations? Keeping the five concerns in the forefront when you
find yourself in a conflict situation can help you manage the emotions in the
room.
Here are some additional tips for enhancing your ability to manage conflict,
whether on the job or at home:
1. Become aware of your role in escalating or de-escalating the
conflict
Escalators cause a conflict to quickly intensify. These are words or phrases
we use that have the unintended effect of fueling rather than tempering a
situation. They often start with a “you” statement. Examples include: “You are
making a mountain out of a molehill;” “You are too sensitive;” “You are taking
this personally.” Escalators are also non-verbal behaviors such as tone of
voice, lowering of the eyebrows to indicate disapproval, exchanging a knowing
look and smile with someone else in the room or condescendingly patting someone
on the shoulder.
Make a list of de-escalators that you can use in difficult situations.
Examples include pausing, genuinely making an effort to listen, letting the
other person speak uninterrupted, not telling the other person that they are
“wrong.” You can also take time out by calling for a coffee break or adjourning
the meeting.
2. Know your conflict resolution style
Consider taking an assessment such as the Myers-Briggs Conflict Style Report
which will provide you with invaluable information on the way you might
approach conflict. For example, are you prone to adopt a martyr stance like,
“After all I have done for this team, this is the response I get?” Do you get
on the offensive in order to push others to adopt your own solution, or do you
habitually stall the process by focusing too much on defining the problem
rather than solving it?
Another assessment that is helpful for determining your conflict resolution
style is the Thomas-Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument. This instrument outlines
five typical ways of handling conflict; it will show you which is your default
mode and how you can develop the flexibility to use the other modes when more
appropriate. For example, your natural preference might be an “Avoiding” style
(“Leave well enough alone”) when a Compromising approach would yield more
benefits (“Split the Difference.”)
3. Help people see the logic behind your argument
Don’t just state what you want without taking the time to give people an
explanation of the reasons behind your request. As Anthony Weston said in A
Rulebook for Arguments: “It is not a mistake to have strong views. The mistake
is to have nothing else.” Spending a little time upfront to paint the picture
that helps others see your vision or your idea can be a smart, conflict
prevention move.
4. Don’t withhold a necessary apology
In our litigious society, we have been inculcated against ever apologizing
for anything. Many may consider apologizing as a sign of weakness when in fact,
it is the mark of a statesman (or stateswoman.) It takes a big person to have
the strength of character and confidence to apologize when the circumstances
warrant it. It may often be one of the quickest ways to end a conflict.
5. Let go of your need to always be right
Think about your values. They may include achievement, status, recognition,
power, wealth, family, health, adventure, risk taking, innovation and many
others. Is peace of mind on your list? If not, make it a point to remind
yourself periodically of its importance in enhancing the long-term quality of
your life. There are many ways to achieve peace of mind; one of them is to let
go of the need to be right at all cost. Joseph Chilton Pearce said it
beautifully: “To live a creative life, we must lose our fear of being wrong.”
6. Don’t lose sight of the higher purpose
As Ron Ashkenas states in “Why Leaders Play Chicken,” we sometimes get locked into a
staring down contest, waiting for the other party to blink first. When we do
this, we may win in the short-term but it is a vacuous victory. If you find
yourself in this contest of wills, stop and remind yourself not to lose sight
of the higher purpose, the greater good.
7. Don’t lecture
In our zeal to convince others during a conflict discussion, we forget the
value of brevity. Watch that you don’t unintentionally slip into lecture mode.
Most people, including you, experience a lecture as patronizing which hinders
resolution of the conflict. State your position succinctly and move on.
8. Leave some things unsaid
For many of us, this requires an enormous amount of self-control. In the
midst of a conflict discussion, our words can be like an unguided missile,
uncontrolled or unrestrained, doing collateral damage to the relationship, long
after the conflict is settled. Have some strategies ahead of time that you can
use. Consider, for example the power of a 90 second pause to allow you time for
self-censoring.
Another strategy in this regard, which comes from the teachings of Shirdi
Sai Baba, is to ask yourself, before you respond, “Is it kind, is it necessary,
is it true, does it improve on the silence?” Try this sometimes. You will be
surprised how effective in can be.
While we cannot control the amount of unbidden conflict that enters our
lives, we can control how we manage it. Whether you are in the boardroom or the
shop floor, a small business owner, teacher or parent, acquiring good conflict
resolution skills is an investment that will pay recurring dividends for your
entire life.
This column first appeared on OPEN
Forum Idea Hub.
Copyright © 2011 by Bruna Martinuzzi. All Rights Reserved.
Article Tags: Bruna Martinuzz, conflict resolution, conflict situations, emotions, MBTI, MyersBriggs Conflict Style Report, negotiations, personal life, ThomasKilman
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About the Author: Bruna Martinuzzi RSS for Bruna's articles - Visit Bruna's website Author, facilitator, speaker and founder of Clarion Enterprises Ltd., a company specializing in Emotional Intelligence, Leadership and Presentation skills training and coaching. Speaks six languages and is experienced in delivering training in China, Europe, The Middle East, in addition to the U.S. and Canada. Author of The Leader as a Mensch: Become the Kind of Person Others Want to Follow http://www.leaderasamensch.com Winner of The Izaak Killam Pre-doctoral Fellowship three years in a row and the Award for Unusual Innovation in the Workplace. Click here to visit Bruna's website Likeability Its an Inside Job Are You Talking to Me Rx for Extraverts and Introverts The Importance of Character Monkey Business Fairness in the Workplace Being Accountable to Yourself in Leadership Part II |
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