Occasionally in management, you run into an employee who is toxic to a team. If those employees are dealing with customers, it reflects badly on the entire company. In this scenario, a department manager oversees a team of ten. The team is expected to uphold to a high level of technical expertise and deliver excellent customer service. One particular employee is not performing to expectations and has received complaints from both co-workers and customers. The employee has been known to be confrontational and creating a hostile work environment.
As his supervisor, I would open up dialogue by reviewing expectations with the employees and why that is important to the company and to the employee. For instance, in this case, I would explain how the technology industry is such a competitive market. It is important that we offer a positive customer service experience to each one of our customers or we run the risk of losing them to one of our many competitors. I would explain to the employee that he or she was put into their current position not only because of the expertise, but also because we felt that they could offer a consistently strong customer experience.
Assuming I have done my due diligence as a manager, I should have been prepared for such an occurrence based on the employee’s track record. Following the previous meeting, would d have scheduled a follow-up meeting. That way, the employee has the expectation that we would be sitting down again and following up on the items discussed on the previous meeting. As a manager, this would help provide guidance for an employee looking to sincerely correct their behavior or act as documentation for an employee who failed to meet expectations.
For someone like myself who prefers to avoid confrontations, it is important to remember that as uncomfortable the situation may be, it is necessary. As a supervisor, I have an obligation to company, the rest of the team and to my family to address any toxic employees. If not, the behaviors of that one employee can impact several people (Ethics Scoreboard, 2005). Plus, I would never allow someone else’s poor performance cost me my job.
I would hope the employee would be open to feedback; however based on history, I would expect and be prepared for the employee to become defensive. The employee may choose to point fingers and blame others for his actions or as the “The Ethic of Confrontation” blog points out, I can also expect the “everybody does it” rationale (Ethics Scoreboard, 2005). If so, I would need to remain firm that we are currently addressing these particular complaints.
I would finalize our meeting by clearly outlining the expectations and again, aligning them with the vision of the company. I would directly ask the employee if he or she felt they could commit to what was expected of them. If I gained agreement, I would schedule another follow-up meeting. I would thank them for their commitment and build confidence by reinforcing that they are in their current role because we know they are capable of doing a good job. If the employee felt they could not act as expected, I would notify them immediately that would be terminating their services. Going into the meeting, I should have been prepared for the possibility and reached out to my own supervisor and Human Recourse partner to fill them in and make sure I adhered to company procedure.
It is never easy to let someone go, but an employee can only get so many chances to do their job in the way that expected. In the long run, letting an uncooperative employee go is in the best interest of the others in the team.
Reference
The Ethics Scoreboard. (2005, August). The Ethics of Confrontation Retrieved from: http://www.ethicsscoreboard.com/list/confrontation.html
As his supervisor, I would open up dialogue by reviewing expectations with the employees and why that is important to the company and to the employee. For instance, in this case, I would explain how the technology industry is such a competitive market. It is important that we offer a positive customer service experience to each one of our customers or we run the risk of losing them to one of our many competitors. I would explain to the employee that he or she was put into their current position not only because of the expertise, but also because we felt that they could offer a consistently strong customer experience.
Assuming I have done my due diligence as a manager, I should have been prepared for such an occurrence based on the employee’s track record. Following the previous meeting, would d have scheduled a follow-up meeting. That way, the employee has the expectation that we would be sitting down again and following up on the items discussed on the previous meeting. As a manager, this would help provide guidance for an employee looking to sincerely correct their behavior or act as documentation for an employee who failed to meet expectations.
For someone like myself who prefers to avoid confrontations, it is important to remember that as uncomfortable the situation may be, it is necessary. As a supervisor, I have an obligation to company, the rest of the team and to my family to address any toxic employees. If not, the behaviors of that one employee can impact several people (Ethics Scoreboard, 2005). Plus, I would never allow someone else’s poor performance cost me my job.
I would hope the employee would be open to feedback; however based on history, I would expect and be prepared for the employee to become defensive. The employee may choose to point fingers and blame others for his actions or as the “The Ethic of Confrontation” blog points out, I can also expect the “everybody does it” rationale (Ethics Scoreboard, 2005). If so, I would need to remain firm that we are currently addressing these particular complaints.
I would finalize our meeting by clearly outlining the expectations and again, aligning them with the vision of the company. I would directly ask the employee if he or she felt they could commit to what was expected of them. If I gained agreement, I would schedule another follow-up meeting. I would thank them for their commitment and build confidence by reinforcing that they are in their current role because we know they are capable of doing a good job. If the employee felt they could not act as expected, I would notify them immediately that would be terminating their services. Going into the meeting, I should have been prepared for the possibility and reached out to my own supervisor and Human Recourse partner to fill them in and make sure I adhered to company procedure.
It is never easy to let someone go, but an employee can only get so many chances to do their job in the way that expected. In the long run, letting an uncooperative employee go is in the best interest of the others in the team.
Reference
The Ethics Scoreboard. (2005, August). The Ethics of Confrontation Retrieved from: http://www.ethicsscoreboard.com/list/confrontation.html
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