Minimising conflict with effective communication


Did you know there are 5 types of communication that lead to
conflict?

Let's look at them...

Definition of 'Conflict'
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It helps if we first define what we mean by 'conflict'

Conflict is an expressed struggle between at least two

parties, both of whom perceive interference from the other

towards achieving their goals

A conflict can only exist when both parties are aware of a

disagreement

The 5 types of negative communication that lead to conflict
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Negative communication

We all know a 'Negative Nigel/Nancy' in every team —

they exist and we find it near impossible to remove

them. But constant negativity drains the other team

members of enthusiasm, energy and self esteem. So Nigel

and Nancy need to be confronted with their behaviour.

This can best be achieved if all of the other team

members individually feedback the effect of this

behaviour on them. An 'I message' is the best approach

for this—such as, "Every time I put forth a suggestion

your negativity frustrates me and I find it hard to

work with you."

Blaming communication

Blamers spray blame around, effectively stopping

reflection and scrutiny of their performance and

behaviour. However, their impact can be reduced by

fostering a learning environment, as well as the use of

'I messages', peer pressure and individual feedback.

Find out what the blamer's issues are and try to

address them one by one.

Superior communication

'Superiors' frequently order people about, direct,

advise and moralise. They are also very skilled at

withholding information. Such behaviour sets up team

members for frustration, resentment and sabotage. But

'superiors' and their behaviour can be addressed with

individual assertiveness and 'I messages'

Dishonest communication

Dishonest communicators frequently fail to practice

listening to understand and fail to display empathy.

They also display circumlocutory communication — also

known as 'talking around the issue, not addressing it'.

It's kind of like casually wandering around the outside

edge of a garden when what's really required is to walk

confidently through the middle of it. Dishonest

communicators also often use royal or imperial 'WE'

statements — as in, "We are not amused" - when in

reality it is just they who are not amused.

They also deliberately choose to not address

unprofessional behaviour or behaviour that is damaging

to the team and its mission. All of which leads to a

dysfunctional team. But it can be addressed: everyone

in the team must insist on open, honest communication,

foster mutual respect, stop blaming, bullying and

harassment.

Selective communication

Selective communicators only tell what they think

others need to know, hence keeping themselves in a

position of power over the other team members. Such

behaviour can be effectively addressed through

assertive requests for having access to all the

information.

The importance of a team's values to communication
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are negative team values that can actually sabotage good
communication within a team. For example:

"As long as I do a good job that's all that matters to me"
undermines team cohesiveness and co-operation.

"Problems are the result of other people's mistakes" is also
unhealthy.

"If someone 'stuffs up' it's their problem" is really not
helpful to anyone.

Such values induce competition, not co-operation and
collaboration. These team values destroy teamwork!

Positive team values
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are 5 key values that aid co-operation and cohesiveness
within a team:

We are all in this together

The performance of the team is seen as more important

than individual performance. Note that blaming styles

of communication lead to individual performance

becoming the paramount object, resulting in little or

no team work.

No member is more important than another

When individuals consider themselves more important

than another ('superior communication') then

communication breaks down and competition takes over.

But when everyone is seen as an equal, communication is

open and there are high levels of co-operation and

collaboration.

Open, honest communication is essential

When you are thinking of a reply, instead of really

listening to the other, you are engaging in 'dishonest

communication'. Similarly, when you see something done

that is not acceptable but you 'are polite' and ignore

it you are equally being dishonest with your

communication.

There is no room for dishonest communication in teams.

Open and honest communication requires the use of

listening and empathy. Listening to understand gives us

the other person's perspective—it allows us to hear

their experience. Empathy reduces the need to judge the

behaviours and beliefs of others. By listening and

empathising we model open and honest communication.

Everyone needs open access to information

Information facilitates collaboration and co-operation,

and effective decision-making requires all the

information. Decision-making always has an element of

uncertainty attached to it, but having all the

information available makes the decision-making easier.

We all need to focus on the team's goals, aims and mission

Without a clear and sustained focus minor distractions

become major blockages.

Managing personal criticism
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It is always discomforting to be on the receiving end of
criticism. It hurts! Ouch!

But there are ways of managing your feelings when someone 'has a
go at you'.

1. Listen to understand:

Listen with your ears, your eyes and your senses

Engage your mind and disengage your emotions — pack

them up (remember, YOU are in control of what you think

and feel)

Be flexible and accommodate another view of the problem

or issue

Evaluate, discriminate and judge the decision you make

2. Don't go into 'defensive' mode

3. Use an 'I message' — such as, "When I am just simply
criticised I feel angry and hurt and disregard the information.
However, I would welcome constructive feedback."

About the Author

When you match consumer psychology with effective communication
styles you get a powerful combination. At Hopkins-Business-
Communication-Training.com you can find the secrets to
communication success. At Hopkins we show you how to communicate
better for better business results.

www.hopkins-business-communication-training.com