by Jeff Boss
Republished from Forbes, May 12, 2017
When you shake a carbonated beverage and then open it, pressure gets released. It’ll be ugly and messy but eventually that messiness will be cleaned up and you can enjoy what you have — a nice tasty beverage.
Teams work the same way. Tensions build over time because that’s the nature of relationships. Conversations in teams often create emotional tolls — a “deposit” that positively resonates with people and a “withdrawal” that conflicts with others’ values and beliefs, therefore creating conflict. Neither one is bad. In fact, you need both deposits and withdrawals to keep that team’s bank account (i.e. performance) healthy and flowing. Conflict is healthy. It’s just not comfortable.
However, not everybody sees conflict as an opportunity, yet that’s exactly what it is. When there’s misunderstanding, there’s conflict. When competing interests collide, there’s conflict. When there’s a lack of information, there’s conflict. And most important, when there’s low trust, there’s conflict because people don’t trust each others’ intentions as noble. The beauty of conflict is that it serves as a compass to point you in the right direction. When something feels uncomfortable, it’s probably “right.”
To better manage conflict in your team, try these three strategies:
Name it.
When somebody brings up a touchy subject or pinpoints a problem area, one of two things typically happen:
1. The room fills with an uncomfortable silence.
2. The floodgates of conversation open.
Funny how it’s either on one side of the spectrum or the other. If it’s silence that fills the room, keep in mind that it’s only silence for the moment because once you get into the hallway, that’s when the floodgates of private conversation open up. Either way, communicating a concern leads to more communication, and last I checked, more communication isn’t a bad thing. You can over-communicate or under-deliver.
One strategy that I’ve used with clients to help them eliminate the fear of team conflict is to name the fear, its associated emotion and their bodily reaction. Here’s an example: “I’m afraid of talking to my boss (naming the fear) and I feel uneasy (naming the emotion) — my palms sweat and my breathing increases (naming the bodily reaction).” The reason I ask them to listen to their bodies is because it serves as another trigger to heighten self-awareness. The more self-aware you are about the events that activate your fear state, the better you can A) manage those situations and B) manage yourself.
Another reason why I ask them to verbalize their fear is because hearing themselves say it aloud makes a once “rational” fear sound irrational. They realize that, “Hmmm, this wasn’t really worth fearing after all.” They learn to quell their own fear.
Identify the priority.
Many people dislike addressing conflict because they fear social judgment. They fear what the others will think of them or if they’ll still be “liked.” When you place yourself ahead of the company or the team’s mission, you actually invite more conflict. Let’s say, for example, there are two creatively-name fictitious characters in a team, Joe and Bob. Joe is a problem child. He constantly shows up late and doesn’t pull his weight. Bob is the project team’s leader, except he’s new to the team and new to leading a team and worries too much what others think of him as a new leader, so he avoids confronting Joe. By placing himself before A) the needs of the company and B) the needs of the team, Bob allows that conflict to build. He (unintentionally) contributes to more conflict because he put his own needs (to avoid conflict) first and lets the conflict fester. Conflict avoidance only creates more conflict.
Have a process.
Another way to tackle the fear of conflict is to have a process. With a process, you root out the human element by adhering to agreed-upon steps to explore rather than opining on individual objections. For example, let’s say your team has a delicate issue to address but nobody brings it up because it’s a big fat pink elephant in the room and nobody wants to be “that guy” or “that girl” (again, fear of social judgment). Instead of hoping the issue will resolve itself, you can use a process to:
1. Review what the team is doing right
2. Identify where the team could improve
3. Explore the team’s blindspots
An after action review (AAR) is a great example. AARs follow a process that identifies strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats that would otherwise remain unnoticed by asking three questions: What did we intend to happen? What actually happened? What caused the difference? The very process of cycling through these questions removes the “individual factor,” which is the sense that somebody only raises their hand or addresses an issue when they have an agenda. With an AAR, you remove that fear because addressing concerns is just part of the process.
Let fear be a compass. Whatever you’re fearful of, that’s the path you want to take because addressing it is the only way to quell that fear.