Workplaces, however modern they are, havea certain etiquette. You have to dress a certain way, act a certain way, and talk about certain things with care. Politics, religion, and medical history are just some of the things experts advise you to steer away from when chatting with your coworkers. Perhaps even when you’re not in the office.
Bored Pandasought the expertise of Louise Carnachan, an organization development consultant and author ofWork Jerks: How to Cope with Difficult Bosses and Colleagues, which recently placed second in two categories for the BookFest Awards. She was kind enough to tell us more about how to navigate conversations with work colleagues. Read her expert insights below!
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It can sometimes be tricky to navigate which conversation topics are appropriate with coworkers
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This employee, for example, had to go to sensitivity training after bringing up climate change during a team get-together
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Navigating conversations with colleagues is like navigating a field of mines
Upon reading this story, it might seem that conversation topics that seemed ‘safe’ before might no longer be so. Workplace relationship coach Louise Carnachan agrees that it’s becoming more and more difficult to avoid landmines when simply conversing with your colleagues.
“We have a plethora of alternate facts these days, not just about science,” she says. “The weatherused to be our go-to for uncontroversial conversation, so it’s sad that it’s become conflated with political and religious overtones.” The situation described here could’ve happened to anyone, Carnachan points out.
Doubting and asking questions is a normal part of conversations. “In an ideal world, if you pick up cues that communication has gone awry, you can switch to listener mode and see what you can learn,” Carnachan tells Bored Panda.
“Phrases like, ‘Tell me more about that,’ ‘I’m interested to learn what led you to those conclusions,’ or ‘I’d like to understand better’ [open] up the possibility for the speaker to feel heard (and you get an inside track to that thinking).”
However, does that really apply when the topic is something like climate change? “It can’t be done to debate facts or change minds. It’s just [to] hear someone out,” Carnachan says. “Would being heard [have] kept whomever it was from going to HR? Maybe, maybe not.”
We should be more patient and more willing to listen to each other
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Stubbornness and an unwillingness to hear another person out are hardly the ways to move forward. “It gets increasingly difficult to find non-controversial topics, so we might as well tune up our listening skills,” Carnachan emphasizes. “Will there be mutuality, and [will] the other party care about what you think and why?”
“Maybe not at the beginning, but over time, being a good role model might have an impact. With so much said about ‘the great divide,’ if we don’t start hearing each other out, we don’t have a chance of bridging it.”
In some industries, companies might have norms about specific religions or political affiliations. Unfortunately, that remains unclear in this case. Carnachan speculates that “the report may not have been an objective statement of what happened, rather an accusation that someone’s religious and political views were attacked.”
“[An] attack is very different from a difference of perspective,” she points out. “It doesn’t sound like HR had any conversation with [OP], which means there was only one side. Before prescribing sensitivitytraining, the story should have been investigated and common sense applied.”
Conversational etiquette for casual get-togethers between coworkers is the same as for in the office
One important element in this story is that all this happened outside of work. The employee describes how he came to Texas for a team get-together. But does the place and time matter when it comes to conversations with colleagues?
“The conversational etiquette is pretty much the same at the office or outside of it,” Louise Carnachan tells us. “The thing to remember is there are no ‘safe’socials with colleagues. People pay attention to what is said and done, they make judgments, and they gossip about what happened. Sometimes, they ‘tattle’ to others, like the boss or HR.”
“When alcohol is involved, the opportunity for poor decision-making and outsized reactions are exponentially increased. Watch what you say, do, and how much you drink. Your norms with a select few good friends from work may be different, but be attentive if it’s a larger group or with people you don’t know well,” Carnachan gives some advice.
Naturally, some topics should also be off-the-table. Questions that put the other person on the spot, for example, ‘How come yougot the promotion?’ or ‘Why don’t you have kids?’, are not appropriate.
“Basically anything you wouldn’t talk about at a family gathering where your grandparents are in attendance should probably be eliminated,” Carnachan gives a basic point of reference.
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