Friday, May 22, 2020
Why Cant We Be Friends
Why Canât We Be Friends Friendship⦠has no survival value; rather it is one of those things that give value to survival. C. S. Lewis You may be one of the people who claim not to need friends at work. âWe donât need to be best friends; we just need to be able to work together,â you mutter after leaving an unproductive or uncomfortable meeting. That may be true, but having people around you that you like and trust can make your career much more successful. Keep in mind that coworkers are rarely completely neutral in their opinions of people. If you have a strong personality, you may have more people in your negative opinion column than your positive. There are many reasons to build relationships and trust in the workplace. No one can perform in an office environment in complete isolation; we need other people. Even if youâre a soloist in your actual job duties, youâll eventually need IT support, payroll questions answered, or your meeting room scheduled. Friendship may be optional, but good working relationships are essential. Hereâs are the factors that influence how likely you are to have a good relationship with someone at work (based on Enlightened Office Politics by Michael and Deborah Dobson.) Trust: Past behavior is the best indicator of how someone will act. You canât demand trust; it must be earned, especially after a hiccup in the relationship. Trust is a very emotionally loaded word, and should be used judiciously when dealing with other people. Saying âI trust you to handle thisâ implies more than simply âI think youâre competent.â It means that I think you are a good person and that you have my interests at heart. On the other end of the spectrum, starting any sentence with âI donât trust you toâ¦â is a HUGE deal, no matter how trivial the rest of the sentence is. There are people who claim to like people they donât trust, but I almost never believe them. For me, the word âlikeâ implies a relaxed relationship, and I canât relax around people I donât trust. I suspect that you really believe youâre far enough down their enemies list to escape any negative behavior splash. (Good luck with that.) Common Interests: Whether itâs personal interests or career goals, knowing that you care about the same things helps a relationship grow and prosper. Thatâs why small talk was invented. The more often you have a âme, tooâ moment with someone, the likelier you are to feel like friends. âYou love âThe Walking Dead?â Me, too!â That small connection causes both parties to light up, and the feeling carries over to your next connection. Finding things that you have in common give you a basis for pleasant interactions, and may even lead to real friendship. Common Goals: If you share an interest in a project or a company objective, you can also form bonds with team members. In other words, your common interests can be professional rather than personal. You may share a specialty skill set, be assigned to a team or project together, or share a passion for the companyâs customers or products. Factions: Almost everyone in a company is part of a team, but they may also be perceived as part of a faction (which can be defined as âa small, organized, dissenting group within a larger one, especially in politics.â) Just as tribes have always formed alliances or made war, tribes within a company may have long histories of cooperation or enmity. Your perceived alliances may override any of your personal behavior or attempts at friendship. You can see examples of factions in the most cohesive of teams. Recently, I was speaking to a group of veterans from the U.S. Navy, and I referred to one of them as a âBrown Shoe.â It got a big laugh at the time, but the division between the âBlack Shoeâ and âBrown Shoeâ Navy is a real issue that has been contentious throughout history. For those of you who have never served, here is the origin of these terms. U.S. Navy sailors traditionally wore black boots aboard naval ships, which burned coal (and made black a great choice for hiding soot.) When the first naval aviator volunteers came to San Diego in 1911 to be trained on the newly invented âflying machines,â they had a real problem with dust on their standard issue black shoes. They solved the problem by making brown shoes a part of an aviatorâs official uniform, and naval aviators have been wearing them ever since. Even something as simple as shoe color became a visible tribal badge distinguishing the aviators (the glamorous âfly boysâ) from the blue collar shipboard sailors. The tradition is over 100 years old, but can still be a sore point for some personnel. (Full disclosure: I married a brown shoe and traveled with him throughout his career. I know Brown Shoes.) Do you have factions in your company culture? How do they impact relationships/ Next: Mapping Relationships at work
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