How do you explain to an alcoholic employee that his drinking is affecting his job? How do you deal with an employee who glares at you when you walk into his office because he hates decisions you've made? What do you do when your biggest client asks if she can pay an overdue bill next year? How do you tell your business partner you're having an affair with his wife? In business and in life, stuff happens. Unless you talk about it, say the right things, and come up with solutions, really bad stuff happens. So Crucial Confrontations, the newest book by Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, and Al Switzler (McGraw-Hill, 2005) is important. It and the authors' earlier work, Crucial Conversations, can teach readers how to deal with broken promises, violated expectations, and other bad behavior. Patterson talked with me about the techniques his group has discussed.
Our readers are entrepreneurs with 5 or 10 or 15 employees. What are the typical crucial confrontations in their office? The No. 1 way people find employment at small businesses is through networking, friends, and family. That is not a great way of hiring. Rather than going to Monster.com and getting 200 resumes, of which 20 are eminently qualified and 5 are very good, small business owners often hire people they know or are connected to though friends or family. There is less likelihood at a small company that they have gone through a rigorous search process to find the right people. There is always a chance when you are working with people that they are not going to live up to your expectations. But it is even more so at the smaller companies because of the way they hire people. Every time someone on the staff lets you down, it's exacerbated by the fact that you may have hired friends and family members whom you are less likely to feel comfortable confronting about not living up to a promise or not being qualified in ways that you thought they would be. Personal habits, hygiene, or how they talk with customers–any one of those problems. We find in smaller companies people are less willing to step up to a confrontation about them.
Are crucial confrontations more important because of the era we live in? My grandfather was trained in social interaction at a card table, playing cards with his parents and sitting out on the porch and talking in the evenings. If they had differences of opinion, they argued. He lived in a much more social world than we live in. Electronics have replaced conversation with participation–watching from a distance. We watch TV more than ever, rather than having a conversation. Children who play video games used to play baseball and argue with each other about the rules. Now they sit quietly next to each other in parallel. We used to go to dances and listen to soft music and talk to each other. Now, the music is so loud, you can't even hear conversation. While technologically we are becoming more confident than our predecessors, I have little reason to believe that conversationally and interpersonally we are. With the advent of the microwave, fast food, and mom and dad working, people don't have dinner at the table where they use to have confrontations and conversations and talk. Now you put people in a cubicle or an office and give them e-mail, and they just dash off nasty things to each other. So people are less qualified to meet face to face. Our society is less interpersonally confident. TV creates bosses as bad guys. They are abusive and insulting and attacking. I had my students watch every TV show that had a boss interacting with an employee.
So Donald Trump is not a role model? Everything about that show is horrific. His leadership style is repressive. His two key people shake in his presence. He makes capricious calls based on the worst kind of analysis. It's the worst of leadership. Trump's personal style is abrasive and insulting, and he is an egomaniac.
You say that knowing what to cover in a crucial conversation is so important. Let me give you an example. I'm at a meeting with a bunch of grade school principals when one tells me about a little girl who said something racist to another little girl, and she in return calls her "fatty." Now you have a racist comment and an insulting comment. They call the parents and tell them they are going to discipline the children. One parent says, "You can't discipline my child," and comes down and yells at the teacher. The teacher says the girl is going to have her eat lunch with a teacher's aide and be deprived of playing with her friends as punishment. The mother says, "I'm going to take her out for lunch on a special mother-daughter date," essentially confounding the authority. She's pitting the child against the authorities, she's refusing to allow them to discipline, and she is treating them in an insulting way. There are four different problems right there. When you've got a big bundle, you have to slowly unbundle it. You have to look at the one issue you care about most, the one that you feel will have the biggest impact, and deal with that. Most people move too quickly. They go for the easiest thing or the most emotional thing, and it may not be the right target at all in a crucial confrontation.
What do you do? Ask yourself: "What is the problem?" Then, "Am I angry? How am I going to come across? What is the first sentence going to sound like?" If you are perfect at this, you don't need to do this. Maybe you don't even have to think about it, and the words just flow out of your mouth. But most of us are not perfect at this. We have avoided confrontations. When we step up to it, we stumble through. Preparing yourself is slowing down. Slowing down may mean thinking about the situation. Sometimes people will find it helpful to write it all down. Most people have a confidant, a friend, a spouse whom they talk to in advance, and even practice the conversation. We have had people get great results by reading about it, thinking about it, practicing, and then going in.