Good manners are good business.
Respect for others means showing good manners. They make the
office a more congenial, more productive environment.
Bad manners make for drama. Office drama distracts and
confuses. If your mind is preoccupied with the drama you will have less focus
for your job.
For reasons that are best not aired, many people who
practice bad manners do not know that they are offending and irritating their
co-workers.
At times, bringing the matter to their attention will solve
the problem. At other times, a higher power is needed.
Lisa Quast offers some useful guidelines at Forbes:
- Stay at home when you’re
sick.
- Always show up on time for
meetings. If you’re usually running late, try scheduling meetings in 45
minute increments to allow enough time to get to your next one.
- Keep meetings to the
scheduled amount of time. Don’t force the next group to stand in the
hallway outside the conference room waiting for you and your group to
finish.
- Put your cell phone on
vibrate mode to prevent disturbing others.
- Pay attention during meetings
and avoid multi-tasking, such as scrolling through emails on your smart
phone or computer.
- Don’t hold meetings in
your cubicle and distract those sitting close nearby. For meetings with
three or more people, go to a conference room or a break area.
- Eat lunch in the cafeteria
or break room. Avoid eating smelly food at your desk.
- Be aware of how loud you
speak on the telephone if you work in a cubicle environment.
- Avoid wearing perfume or
cologne at work.
- Ladies – don’t wear
revealing clothing. Let others see your skills, not private body parts.
- Respect your co-worker’s
property (and company property).
- Don’t take things from
others without asking. Refrigerator lunch food stealers – that also means
you!
- Don’t yell and scream at
others. Compassion and empathy will serve you much better to earn respect.
But then, what do you do when someone in your office
manifests bad manners. You know and I know that calling someone out on rudeness
is risky.
Quast offers some guidelines:
- Don’t reciprocate bad
office behavior.
- Stay calm and don’t get
emotional or angry. We all have bad days every now and then; sometimes a
sympathetic comment is the best way to direct a coworker toward better
behavior.
- Meet with the person in a
private location and explain how his or her bad manners are affecting you.
- Make sure you understand
your company’s business ethics and procedures for reporting infractions.
- If the bad behavior
continues or worsens after you’ve spoken with the offender, seek help from
your manager or a representative from HR.
Many of these rules apply well to non-work situations. Don’t
fall into the trap of getting into someone else’s drama. Don’t get emotional;
don’t get angry; don’t reciprocate bad manners with more bad manners.
Don’t call the person out in public. Be polite, not
confrontational, in communicating the nature of the offense. You are not
attacking or denouncing; you are trying
to help the other person to see how his behavior looks to others.
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