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Emotions in the Workplace?

Jan05
2012
Leave a Comment Written by Steve

One of the most difficult tasks for a manager is dealing with emotions in the workplace. Partly because the organization as a whole, would like to keep emotions, especially negative ones, out of the workplace. I have worked for managers, VP level folks, that would have us all check our emotions (negative ones) at the door, before we walk in. Just not feasible. We all are feeling people. Whatever you see, hear or touch usually gets a reaction or emotion from you. Good or bad emotions – they all happen. A little story telling now. I happened to be in a senior level meeting, when we were discussing morale within the departments. Many of the works that came out were fear, frustration, anger, and dissatisfaction were used. The VP stopped the discussion and told us, “enough about these emotions, I don’t want to hear about them. You need to get morale up. That is your job, make it happen.” I am not one to sit and not say anything. I lightheartedly said, “Beatings will continue to morale goes up.” Some laughed, others sat quietly. I quickly pointed out that we (the leadership team) needed to validate their emotions. We needed to understand what was at the root of the emotion, rather than ignore them. VP looked at me with anger. I quickly added, that I probably sparked an emotion with those statements. Before you punish, let’s think… Defused situation (I just knew, I was going to get killed).  Emotions are there…

How do you as a manager deal with them? As a manager, at least a good manager, you have to be able to see, hear and help. How do you set this up for your people?

  • You need to develop an open, trusting environment. People have to have the ability to speak freely. With no fear of reprimand. Start with the individuals on the team first, then make sure you take it to the complete team. Start small, then go big.
  • Know you people. Think of the fear emotions… Some folks can deal with it themselves, they “fear” they may fail and they buckle down and do whatever is necessary. Others may shutdown. Recognize what works for each person and get to moving forward quickly.
  • Push through the uncomfortable. Sometimes dealing with emotions can be uncomfortable. It happens. You as the manager need to make sure that you deal with the situation as early as possible to lessen the effect long term. Role play that discuss with a mentor, be honest and push through – you will be surprised at the end of it.
  • Be real and yourself. Slow down.. The first thing that most people do is react. Slow down and think it through first. I know this is a broken record when it comes to be a manager. You have to set the example for your team. All eyes are watching you all the time. Make sure that you are being real. If you are having one of those days (like your folks), acknowledge it with them. Maybe they will have some insight for you! Last time I checked, you managers are people too.
  • Ask others if they are feeling the same way. When in the team setting, go ahead and ask for additional information. Some folks are more vocal than others and sometimes we think it is just them. If you ask, you maybe surprised to see that more folks are in the same boat. Just afraid to speak up first. Once on the table, it can be worked.

Don’t think that emotions are not going to play in your teams. Be ready, be prepared and don’t be afraid. The sooner you confront, acknowledge and validate, the quicker moving forward can happen. All negative emotions can true to a positive, if handled properly. Same is true for positive emotions (passion). If you play that one up too much on your “rising star” – the rest of the team will be deflated or be negative toward that person. This is a very tricky subject, probably why that VP wanted nothing to do with it. You have to deal with it…

Posted in Leadership, New To Management - Tagged action, coaching, communication, fear, fun, Leading Teams, managing, people, relationship, trust

Tossing and Turning to Success

Oct11
2011
Leave a Comment Written by Steve

Ever have a sleepless night because something important was hanging on your head? Work and life can definitely give you something to think about when you are trying to sleep. Got a big presentation to a large group the next day? Having to have a real deep discussion with an employee, that you are afraid will not go well? Going in for surgery? One of your adult children are getting married the next day? Some of my best work has come when I was worried about a situation and spent most of the night, tossing and turning worrying about that situation. For that big presentation, I would be reviewing it all night long, trying to insure that I presented all of the key points. Trying to understand all potential questions and have answers for them. That difficult discussion is one that I really play over and over again in my head. Have to be prepared for the worst and hope for the best. I’m writing this today, because in a couple of days, I will be going through my second hip replacement surgery. Since, I have already been through it about 3.5 years ago, I am playing the whole situation through my head. What to expect, what to do, and how I will handle everything. Being prepared is key…

I used to try and block out those sleepless nights, but figured why? It is part of my DNA. I want to do my best in every situation and losing some sleep over doing my best is a fair price to pay. I used to have a notebook on my nightstand to help me capture the thoughts and worries from my sleep. Not anymore. I just chose to get up and document my thoughts in my digital notebook. Then come back to review, rewrite and act upon my notes. It has worked over the years… When I was delivering messages to employees that were being redeployed, I was able to play the discussion over and over in my head. I was definitely prepared for the worse, but never had the worse happen. For those big presentations, I have to say, they have gone very well. At least that is the feedback that I have received from the audience.

I know I am not alone, am I? What do you do to move on from the tossing and turning? Do the notebook or hope to remember everything the next day?

Posted in Observations - Tagged action, fear, feedback, managing, relationship, thoughts

Sorry, Well Sort of

Aug31
2011
6 Comments Written by Steve

As some of you will remember, I posted my thoughts after I was interviewed a few weeks back. Well, I got a response.  That particular position was not for me… Not something that anyone ever wants to hear. We all like to think that we are the perfect candidate for any position that we apply for. I know that is not true, I completely understand. What was disturbing to me is how this particular communication was done. There was no phone call! Email was used. Not a personal email from the hiring manager or anyone. An automated system generated form email response. The ones that politely say we regret to inform you that you have not been selected. Pretty personal stuff, right?

I have interviewed well over a thousand or so folks in my 28+ years as a manager. If I talked to anyone, I owed them a personal phone call to communicate my decision. I fully understand that this is a time consuming process of reaching out and communicating your decision. If you were good enough to make it through the screening process and interviewed twice – you should at least get a call. Why not? Afraid of the potential conflict or an awkward situation? Any adult would feel disappointed in not being selected. We all want to feel that we really were the right person for the job. Fact is, we were not. Someone was selected over you. It happens… I for one, am not one to take it personal. I would like to get some feedback. Only fair?

When making that call, which I have always done.. I would do the following:

  • Communicate my decision. “I am calling to inform you that you were not selected for my current open position. I am sorry to say. I would like to share some of my thoughts on the interview and your qualifications for the opening.” I would then go onto communicate the impressions that were shared in the interviews.
  • Be honest. Sharing your impressions and the impressions of the interview team can be tricky. If they are not experienced enough to get the job, tell them what they potentially needed to work on. I know, some folks are going to come out and probably be defensive on this, but the interview plainly did not demonstrate that the experience was there. Maybe doing a better job in sharing that experience will help in the future.
  • Ask for questions. Ask the candidate if they have any questions. Be honest with your answers to the questions.

Maybe it is the sign of the times – Automated Messages. It is bad enough that we get them when we submit for a job, wait around and never hear back. Once you have interviewed, we now have people involved. Especially if you have made it to the short list. Two separate interviews by two levels of the organization. Getting personal, I think.

Me being me, I found an email from someone within the company and sent them an email, to see if maybe the two folks that I interviewed with could provide some feedback. It has been a long time since I was on the other end of interviewing. Maybe my passion was really a bit much. Maybe this or maybe that. I am not really sure.

UPDATE: Over a week has gone by and nothing back in email from my request. I will probably never know really “why”. 

Related articles
  • Interviewing (stevebellnow.com)
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Posted in Observations - Tagged communication, people, rant, reflections, thoughts

Temperature Hot, Driving Not

Aug26
2011
2 Comments Written by Steve

Phoenix is usually pretty hot in the summer time. The jokes are it is a dry heat. Well, this time of year there is nothing “dry” about it. With this weeks over 110 temperatures and the humidity in the air – it is just plain hot. My wife left a bottle of water in her car, when she went into work. When she came out it felt pretty close to boiling. I chose to live here and love it, but with the temps as they are and how people drive – there are some really wonderful observations… These actually have been witnessed by me – this week..

  •  Folks in a car without or broken A/C – with the windows down. No matter how fast you drive the air outside is not going to be refreshing. Those folks, actually were wearing long sleeves. I was sweating just looking at them.
  • Turning left with two lanes of traffic and crossing over into the other person’s lane. Normally not good anytime, but add the high temps and watch the next few feet of interaction.
    • Watched one person – flip off the driver that was actually driving right. I guess they thought they were the only one’s turning left.
    • Next up, one PO’d driver – roll down his window to scream at the person that turned into his lane. Well, it is really hot outside – skip the window going down. Plus other person could not hear you anyways.
    • Horn blows for about 1 mile. Not sure if the heat caused the horn to stay engaged, but 1 mile.
  • Steering wheels are really hot… Watching some folks drive with:
    • Gloves – great idea to lessen the extreme temp of the wheel. Just that the A/C usually doesn’t cool the car and your hands get pretty sweaty.
    • Lots of leg driving. Look mom, no hands.. Well, if you are wearing shorts – I bet those thighs get the heat.
    • My favorite: Driving with the tips of your fingers… Add the texting or talking on the phone and you have a really distracted driver.
  • Refreshments are always a great way to cool down! Of course, the adult variety is not welcome. I actually saw two people sitting at the light drinking away – with the cop next to me. The cop saw them too! Open Container at a minimum.
  • Short fuses everywhere. The fast lane becomes the extremely fast lane – and if there is one slow person in that fast lane… Looked almost like cutting someone off or turning in their lane. Not pretty..
I know it is hot out there. Most drivers are not really doing a great job of driving – either because of the heat, distractions or just plain bad or extremely young or old driver. The best thing to do is for you to be more defensive driver with a cooler head than the outside temperature.
Anything that you have seen that really was out of the ordinary?
Posted in Observations - Tagged people, reflections

Interviewing

Aug10
2011
2 Comments Written by Steve

About three weeks ago, I found a particular open position that really sparked my interest. In fact, I got pretty excited. It suited my skill set very nicely. I tweeted out about it! Weeks went by with no response. When you least expect things they happen. I was presenting at the Chandler PMI monthly meeting on leadership when you are not the boss, when I got a call. That call was from the admin of the hiring manager requesting an interview… Wow, excitement level picks up again! We plan for the interview the following week…

Interviewing can be a wonderful but scary thing for me. This particular opening was in my sweet spot. My passion for leading teams and making a difference drives me. I saw this as a definite opportunity for me. I was ready! I reviewed the  job description, researched the hiring company and asked my network about the company. I wanted to be prepared. For years, I was on the other side of interviewing, asking the questions. For 29 years, I rarely was on the interviewee side. I was set – look at the questions that I would have asked and answered them.

Day of the interview, I was busy ironed and insuring that my suit was ready. Have to make a good first impression. I most have tied that tie about 7 times (either too short, too long or just not a good knot). With me ready, off we go into the heat of Arizona, it was 108 that day. Planned the drive to arrive about 20 minutes early, just in case of parking issues. All of that was done superb! Checked in, waited for the hiring manager…

Now the interview…

My impressions of the interview after the fact were very good. In fact, I felt pretty confident that I did a solid job in answering the question. How was that interview received by the hiring manager – don’t know yet. After you step away from the interview for awhile… I got to thinking – how did I really do? Looking back, I was fired up about the opening, very passionate in my answers, transparent and a maybe a bit over excited. Well, that is me! I carry all of that on my sleeves. I am very confident in myself and the work that I do. I believe that you should sign your name on the bottom line of everything you do. When I look in the mirror, I have to be happy with what I see (and I am).

Did I get a follow-up interview or the job? Don’t know yet! Did my true self scare off the hiring manager? Only time will tell.

Posted in Observations - Tagged communication, fear, Leadership, Leading Teams, people, reflections, thoughts

New Year, New Beginning

Jan03
2011
1 Comment Written by Steve

Well, the day is here! That first Monday of the new year. This first Monday is even more special, it is my last day of my 28+ year career at Intel. I have been communicating in my blog from time to time on this day coming. My thoughts on should I retire or not, a list of some of the folks that made my time special at Intel and my last internal blog post. I have had a retirement party or two… Got time to talk old war stories with many of the folks that were with me on my journey the past 28 years. We looked back and laughed! We reviewed the good times and some of the “not so” good times. The fact over the past months of making my decision, I was still going into the office the next day. That is not true today. This is the last day!I will be riding an emotional roller coaster today!

This was not an easy decision to make, but I know I made the right decision. My wife asked me this morning, “how you feeling?” My simple answer was, “pretty strange.”

  • I am excited about what the next journey will bring. A little scared at the same time!
  • I am happy for all of the people I have met over those 28 years. A little sadden by the fact, that I know I will not get to see some of them in the future.
  • I am happy that I will not be sitting in a gray 6×8 “veal pen” or better known as a cubicle. A little sadden by the fact, that I have to empty out that cubicle – looking at those memories one last time.
  • I am not looking forward to saying “good-bye” to folks.

Well, I guess I better get to it! One last drive, one last time parking the car, one last time walking in with an employee badge on, getting that last “free” soda – I think you get the point!

Posted in Observations - Tagged fear, fun, goals, people, rant, reflections, thoughts

House Projects – Always Scope Creep

Dec03
2010
Leave a Comment Written by Steve

What is it about anything that you do around your house that makes it seem like the simplest of projects just grow and grow? Scope creep is just a way of life with every single project that I do around the house. Why? At work, I really have that problem. Why? Is it because I have much more experience at scoping out my projects at work? Not sure..

  • At work – I have stakeholders that I am accountable too.. At home – only one clear stakeholder.
  • At work – Set up a project plan.. At home – do the same thing.
  • At work – Really look at every possible alternative or risk that will come up.. At home – maybe not so much.
  • At work – have a budget to work within.. At home – have a budget for sure, its our dollars.
  • At work – review of the project is set.. At home – well, maybe not so much.
  • At work – closure on the project when completed.. At home – closure sure, usually means done and onto the next project (like work).

So, looking at that list – there definitely are a few things that I could do better with the home projects that I do well, within the work projects. Clear definition of all alternative, risks and necessary contingent elements. Take order new desk for home office. We focused on the colors, the size and what to do with the other older furniture. What was missed some was the amount of work cleaning out 10+ years of stuff. The carpet needed to be replaced. Now the color on the walls maybe a bit of a problem. Under-scoped that project a bit.. Reviewing the project really happens when you are doing most of the work yourself. You just do… I think I have added more things to that to do list, because of every step I found something else that needed to be done (or should be done).

I need to really do a better job of practicing everything that I do at work, at home too!

Posted in Observations - Tagged challenges, change, goals, reflections, thoughts

Breaking Through The Same Old Stuff

Oct21
2010
Leave a Comment Written by Steve

I was having a 1:1 with a new manager… The discussion was a good one – so much so, that I want to share it! The overall topic was on why is it so hard to change behaviors… They always want to do exactly what was done before… I liken this to the Not Invented Here. It reminded me of a story that I heard many years ago from a manager friend of mine (did a quick Google search and found something like it at this link); Monkeys, A Cage, A Banana and A Fire Hose.

You build a nice big room-sized cage, and in one end of it you put five monkeys. In the other end you put a  banana. Then you stand by with the fire hose.  Sooner or later one of the monkeys is going after the banana, and when it does you turn on the fire hose and spray the other monkeys with it. Replace the banana if needed, then repeat the process. Monkeys are pretty smart, so they’ll figure this out pretty quickly: “If anybody goes for the banana, the rest of us get the hose.” Soon they’ll attack any member of their group who tries to go to the banana.

Once this happens, take one monkey out of the cage and bring in a new one. The new monkey will come in, try to make friends, then probably go for the banana. And the other monkeys, knowing what this means, will attack him to stop you from using the hose on them. Eventually the new monkey will get the message, and will even start joining in on the attack if another monkey goes for the banana. Continue to swap new monkeys for the original monkey.

After repeating this a few times, the time will come when none of the monkeys in the cage have ever been sprayed by the fire hose; in fact, they’ll never even have seen the hose. But they’ll attack any monkey who goes to get the banana. If the monkeys could speak, and if you could ask them why they attack anyone who goes for the banana, their answer would almost certainly be: “Well, I don’t really know, but that’s how we’ve always done things around here.”

Not that I am saying that we all are monkey’s – that is not the point. We get conditioned/trained over time and we pass this onto new members. We have to break the cycle. What are some of the ways that you think could help? Let me start the brainstorming -

  • Reposition the problem to give clearer expectations.
  • Keep asking why for better clarity to yourself and the complete group.
  • Set Boundaries that if we have done this before – we have to do something different.. We would not be reworking it again…
  • Reward Behaviors that are breaking the cycle.

Please add your comments below.. To keep the brainstorming going.. Community sharing and all…

Posted in Leadership - Tagged change, communication, Leading Teams, people, team dynamics, thoughts

No Shortage of Ideas; Just Movement

Sep08
2010
Leave a Comment Written by Steve

Ever have a brainstorming session and get a lot of ideas? How about ask a co-worker their ideas on a topic? Go to a staff meeting and a question is tossed out – plenty of ideas or comments come in? To me, we all have plenty of ideas, thoughts, comments or opinions on a topic or problem. What seems to get into the way of moving forward? Ourselves? Company? The “boss”? How many times have you talked about a topic, felt like there was one or more ideas that could have worked, but did not go anywhere? To me, I think we have plenty of ideas but lack in the way of getting them to move forward.

Getting stuck on an idea is natural. It happens plenty of times both individually and organizationally. Why is that? I read someone both on this topic (and many more) that it really is a thinking problem; self inflicted. We think either too much or not enough.. You pick.. How do we move forward? How about we rethink how we think? Sounds funny, but really it is as simple as rethinking the usual suspects. Below I will list the ones that I have encountered…

  • Scope…Insure that you have defined the problem well. Nothing worse than starting off with a problem statement that is over-defined or under-defined. You may have some ideas that just don’t fix the real problem or issue. Tighten that part up, every time.
  • Complexity… I can not tell you how many times I believe that we have over-analzyed the situation or created issues where there were none or forgot our purpose. Time to keep the issues uncluttered and simple as possible. From time to time, have someone not close tho the issue look at it for you. Those different set of eyes could be very helpful. If there is no one, then ask yourself, “Am I making this bigger than it really is?” or ”What am I afraid of?”
  • Ego… As the old saying goes, “Check your ego at the door.” We really love what we have done and it gets in the way of doing stuff differently. NIH (Not Invented Here). Too many times we are reworking the old and trying to convince ourselves it is the right thing to do. Still stuck and nothing is flowing.
  • Failure… Fear of failure is a dangerous way to step out. That fear will cause you to do nothing. A long time ago, I had a senior manager that used a phrase, “There is Success in Failure.” At first, I thought he was nuts. After thinking about it, he made it clear that in every failure – there is some success. The success may come later – when you apply doing something differently. He said to keep failure in perspective. Is there a perfect person among us? I think not, failure happens – we are not perfect.
  • Success… Definitely what true success looks like needs to happen at the beginning. What is it exactly want to end with. Helps to know when you have finally arrived. More importantly, it helps when you have clear expectations. It is that first step in moving forward. Set clear expectations.. Saves lots of time and effort in the beginning.

I believe that everyone can sit back and think of anything that they have worked on that went slowly or no where.. Think of why it was that way… Is there anything that fits in the buckets above? Is there something missing?

Posted in Leadership, Observations - Tagged action, challenges, goals, managing, thoughts

My “Days” Without My Smartphone

Aug31
2010
Leave a Comment Written by Steve

This past Saturday, my smartphone needed a software update that for some reason failed with a critical error. Simple solution for the service people was to say it needed a warranty replacement. Since it was late Saturday night, I would get one shipped out Monday for overnight delivery to me on Tuesday. My first thought was no big deal… Well, it is a frickin big deal. It plain sucked not having my smartphone.

Here is the laundry list of stuff I missed…

  • I have more phone numbers stored on my smartphone from my personal directory. That when I needed to make a couple of calls (unlisted numbers) during the day at work, I did not have the numbers. Getting them after hours only meant I will have to wait 24 hours.
  • Using unplanned time (or stealing time) for many things.. You know those times you are stuck in traffic, the supermarket, shopping or sitting at home and don’t want to fire up the PC.
    • Emails – this is a great way to get the inbox under some control. Filling empty time with answering email. Or giving someone the answer to their question.
    • Facebook – nothing like keeping family and friends up on your doings. Or finding out what is happening with them.
    • Twitter – those random thoughts that pop into your head. Or those weird things that are happening out in the world that need to be shared. There is much that happens that is not planned.
    • LinkedIn- since I am busy looking for employment after my retirement, I had 3 days without any instant contact. I don’t plan time to sit down and review LinkedIn and the groups I follow.
  • Foursquare- No checkin’s over the past 3 days. I was already ousted from one mayor-ship. Oh no, I may lose a few more… Maybe some of my “friends” may think I am stuck at the last checked in place for 3 days. Well, maybe not, no one came to rescue me…
  • No way to take down or record notes on potential blog posts. Missed opportunities!
  • Ran into an old friend while eating lunch on Monday. I did not have a way to just point and click – he has my contact information (and I get his). I felt pretty alone asking for a pen and paper…
  • Trying to locate a restaurant that you know the name, but just not the location. Search the web – get the directions or phone number to get directions.

 It has been a rough couple of days… I missed my smartphone…

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Posted in Observations - Tagged E2.0, managing, productivity, reflections, social media, thoughts
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