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This Seminar › Designed to meet the needs of professionals to resolve their own personal and immediate conflicts. › Specific skills one needs to act as a third party in helping others resolve conflicts.
This training will enable students to be able to: › Recognize conflict › Size up the situation › Prevent conflict from becoming destructive › Identify styles of handling conflict › Improve interpersonal relations at work
Purpose: To help students understand how they perceive conflict, and what conflict means to their life experiences Defining Conflict › What is your definition of conflict? › Provide an example of an experience that led to this conclusion.
How can conflict strengthen relationships? In what ways can conflict generate growth and self-development?
Please complete the handout “Attitude Toward Conflict”
Different Work Methods Different Goals Personalities Stress Different Viewpoints or Perspectives
Competition for limited resources Frustration over unmet needs Introduction of change Cultural differences Misinformation Assumptions Expectations
Good or Bad Root Cause Benefits of Resolution › Increased Understanding › Increased Group Cohesion › Improved Self Knowledge
Competing Collaborating Compromising Accommodating Avoiding
Operate from a position of power Useful when there is an emergency or when a decision is unpopular Issues vital to moral and you know you are right Leave people feeling bruised, unsatisfied and resentful.
Highly assertive Acknowledge that everyone is important Useful to merge a variety of viewpoints
Try to partially satisfy everyone Everyone is expected to give up something Useful when the cost of conflict is higher than the cost of losing ground Useful when opponents of equal strength are at a standstill or when there is a deadline looming
Demonstrating a willingness to meet the needs of others, at the expense of their own needs Not assertive but highly cooperative Useful when the issues matter more to the other party or when peace is more valuable than winning Negotiating tool when hoping to collect on future favors. Favors may not be returned and does not give the best out come
View conflict as negative Do no want to hurt anyone’s feelings Will delegate controversial decisions Appropriate when controversy is trivial Weak and ineffective position to take
Scenario #1 Scenario #2
Make sure that good relationships are 1 st priority Keep people and problems separate Listen first; talk second Focus on the facts Explore options together Negotiate a solution
Don’t Gossip or Dwell on It. Don’t Be Defensive Don’t Be a Bully Don’t Assume the Worst Other Destructive Behaviors
The Sniper The Staller The Know-it-all The Steamroller The Complainer View “Conflicts in the Workplace” Video
When You Are Involved Getting Started › What is my goal? › What are my options? › What is my plan?
Dealing with workplace conflict may be the most important function that leadership must learn to handle Three guiding principles to remember: › Be Calm › Be Patient › Be Respectful