10 Difficult Employees
(and How to Handle Them)
Whether your company
is an a early-stage start-up or a huge corporation, you've surely run into an
employee who drives you batty. Here's an look at of the 10 most irritating
workplace characters--along with some advice on how to get them back on track.
The
Undecider
He takes
days to make a decision and then, after it's made, revisits it. Then revisits
it again. Then, when things fall apart and he is held responsible for his
indecision, he becomes indignant or evasive. "It's not MY fault!"
How to cope: Establish a deadline where
the decision must be final, and a default decision that will hold true if no
decision is made. When the deadline comes, that's it. Refuse to consider any
other alternatives.
The
Ultra-Competitor
No matter
how a situation plays out, no matter who gets hurt in the process, the
ultra-competitor can't let it go until he's convinced that he's won--and, more
importantly, that someone else has lost.
How to cope: Get him focused on having the
entire team win, rather than just him. Hint: Pay him a bonus based on team
achievement--never on individual accomplishment.
The Drama
Queen
He
automatically turns absolutely everything into a hissy fit, replete with pique,
umbrage, and a host of other French emotions. He seems to draw energy from the
drama, while draining energy from everyone else.
How to cope: Set up boundaries for the
behavior that you won't tolerate. Eject him from any meeting where his behavior
becomes obstructive.
The
Iconoclast
He
thrives on the negative attention that comes from dissing authority figures and
social protocols. He misses deadlines just to prove he doesn't have to follow
the rules, and takes up causes without really understanding the implications of
his actions.
How to cope: It's all about aiming him at
the right enemy. Oddly, these types often do well as "customer
advocates" who can take on the bureaucracy in order to see that customers
get what they need
The
Droner
He's
always ready to give you a presentation--and it's usually one you've heard
before. He's got a list of bullet points and is going to read each and every
one to you, or know the reason why!
How to cope: Have an written agenda for
every meeting, with a limited amount of time for presentations. Better yet,
make a "no PowerPoint" rule for your meetings. Then stick to it.
The
Social (Network) Butterfly
He is
convinced that it's productive for him to remain online all day "building
relationships" with all your customers. In fact, he's just adding to the
day-to-day blather that's such an integral part of the social network.
How to cope: Assign him measurable
goals--like a certain number of qualified sales leads that he has to create
every week.
The
Volcano
He
explodes whenever things don't go the way he thinks they should. He screams at
meetings, yells into the telephone, and gets in your face. While he might
apologize later, the whole team ends up perpetually walking on eggshells.
How to cope: Raise your own intensity (or
you won't be heard), and then refuse to put up with unprofessional behavior. If
necessary, leave the room until he's cooled down.
The
Procrastinator
He says
yes to projects but fails to follow through. As deadlines approach, he can't be
found, even via email. When the work is finally turned in (often by others who
have covered for him), he'll go on a mini vacation to "recuperate from the
stress."
How to cope: Unfortunately, the only
solution here is a little good old-fashioned micromanagement. Lay out frequent
(even daily) milestones, and create consequences for missing one -- or for
failing to report that he missed it.
The
Creative Genius
He's a
legend in his own mind ... and makes certain that you know about it. He's
always talking about the amazing stuff he did in the past and his equally
amazing plans for the future. Still, he seldom seems to actually do anythingtoday.
How to cope: Give some lip service to his
greatness, then bring him down to earth by breaking a project into chunks and
getting him to "consult" on each chunk.
The Panic
Button
Some
people really shine in a crisis. Others ... not so much. This guy remains calm
for day and weeks, but then when a problem has reached its inevitable
conclusion, he runs around like a decapitated chicken.
How to cope: Create an early warning
system so that there are fewer surprises. And replace the regular coffee with
the decaf on the day the bad news hits.
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