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Bad behavior went unmanaged for a good reason
Managing Ted was a nightmare for Bryan. Every day seemed to bring another complaint about Ted’s inappropriate behavior. Even people two and three levels above Bryan were complaining. His inability to rein Ted in was making Bryan look ineffectual as a leader.
The problem was that Ted was exceptionally gifted. And everyone knew it.
Bryan led a team of twenty-six artists at a consumer products company. The team’s ability to create stunning designs was crucial to the company’s success. And none of the other artists could turn out designs like Ted. So when he behaved badly—which was a great deal of the time—no one wanted to challenge him too harshly. There was always the fear that Ted might make good on his constant threat to “quit this crap factory.”
Bryan, himself an accomplished artist, had become a vice-president by being super-agreeable. Now this friendly, conflict-averse guy had to contend with Ted. Whenever Bryan tried to give him feedback, Ted quickly sabotaged the conversation with any number of tactics.
A tool for all seasons: “Repeated Headlines”
I wanted Bryan to have a tool that would stand up in the face of whatever Ted would throw at him, so I taught him a technique I call “Repeated Headlines.” You can use this technique in any situation when the following two factors are present: A) the situation is hard to measure (meaning it’s not easily quantifiable like missing deadlines or sarcastic emails) and B) it is ongoing. And when I say it can be used in any situation that has those two factors, I mean it: “Repeated Headlines” can be used with a boss or a spouse or a child. It’s terrific to have in your toolkit. Here’s how I taught it to Bryan.
First, I asked Bryan to brainstorm all the ways Ted was creating difficulties. In no time he’d built a long list that ranged from suspicious behavior with a co-worker to dressing inappropriately for a client meeting to his outbursts during feedback sessions.
When the brainstorm list was complete, I asked Bryan, “If you could scoop every item on this list into one giant bucket, how would you label it?”
He thought a while then said, “It would have to be something like ‘Unprofessional Behavior’.”
“OK,” I said. “Before we go on, can you rename the bucket so it becomes a positive, not a negative? It’s important that the label point towards what you
do want, not towards what you don’t want. So ‘Unprofessional Behavior’ would become, what?”
The initial “Repeated Headlines” conversation
“OK. So now you have a list of all the difficult behaviors, and the list has a label. That’s step one. Here’s what’s next. You’re going to have a conversation with Ted. And you’re going to say something like this:
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Ted,
I know I’ve been
giving you feedback
about a lot of
different things. It
hasn’t been very
effective for either
of us. From now on
I’m only going to
give you feedback
about one thing. I’m
going to call it
‘Professional
Behavior.’ " |
“Ooh, boy,” said Bryan, rolling his eyes. “I can imagine his reaction to that.”
“What do you think he’ll say?”
“He’ll probably have a tantrum and threaten me.”
“Perfect!” I said. “Then that’s your first opportunity to use the repeated headline. Let him say whatever he’s going to say. Then, instead of responding to him, you simply say, ‘What you did just now is a good example of what I think is NOT professional behavior.’ Don’t get engaged with what he does. Just give him the repeated headline. That’s the beauty of this, Bryan. You don’t have to get sucked into his debates or discussions ever again.”
Bryan considered that. “So if he gets defensive on me, I don’t have to try to calm him down? I can just say, ‘That’s not professional behavior’?”
“Exactly. At any moment of the day he either is or isn’t behaving professionally—and your job now is to let him know how he’s doing. It’s particularly important to tell him when he’s doing it right. He needs to know you aren’t only dinging him when he’s out of line. This is a time when positive reinforcement is going to help enormously.”
Bryan got to practice on me while I got to play Ted. Bryan learned how hard it is not to get sucked into the bad behavior. But he began to enjoy the strength he gained by sticking to the repeated headline. He was eager to try it out.
“Repeated Headlines” in summary:
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1 |
Brainstorm all the
behaviors that are
problematic. |
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2 |
Think
strategically about
the brainstorm list
and give it a
positive label.
(Name the behavior
you want in the
future, not the
problem behavior of
the past.) |
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3 |
Tell
the person about
this new label and
that you will watch
their actions
through that
specific lens from
now on. (Note:
During this
conversation, don’t
re-hash specific
items on the list:
keep this
conversation at a
high level.) |
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4 |
Give
the person the
feedback as often as
possible—perhaps
beginning with the
conversation in #3!
Don’t debate. Don’t
discuss. Just name
what you see and
move on. Feedback
can be one or two
sentences. |
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5 |
Give
lots of feedback
when there isn’t
a problem. |
In fairly short order, Ted dropped many of his unruly ways. Of course he was never a perfect model of compliance: that wasn’t in his nature. But he stopped being the source of so much turmoil. And Bryan received the credit for reining him in. In his turn, Bryan gave the credit to the tool called “Repeated Headlines,” one of the powerful techniques of
The Look & Sound of Leadership™.
Read related Tips:
Dealing with Emotional Responses
Performance Reviews
Your Team's Best Interests - Part One
Your Team's Best Interests - Part Two
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