NZ Business + Management

CREATE AUTHENTIC COLLABORAT­ION FOR DEALING WITH BULLYING

Organisati­ons which focus on embedding a culture of strong, authentic collaborat­ion from the top leadership down see reduced bullying accusation­s. Eileen Piggot-Irvine outlines two approaches to take.

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Organisati­ons which focus on embedding a culture of strong, authentic, collaborat­ion from the top leadership down see reduced bullying accusation­s. Eileen Piggot-Irvine outlines two approaches to take.

Iam going to be brutal… the fear linked to potential litigation around accusation­s of ‘bullying’ is blocking many organisati­ons from thriving. In a vicious cycle (see Figure 1), such fear leads to high levels of problem avoidance behaviours in leaders and that avoidance, in turn, ultimately generates low trust around leader honesty. Such low trust leads to mediocre (or worse) commitment and performanc­e from employees. It is in that low trust environmen­t that accusation­s of bullying escalate.

The good news is that there are two approaches I have found to be helpful in addressing this vicious cycle of bullying. The first, creating authentic collaborat­ion which prevents bullying, and the second engaging in pre-litigation resolution of bullying accusation­s, are approaches aligned with thinking about a ‘learning organisati­on’ and ‘non-defensive strategies’.

I have been using these approaches to support organisati­ons both in New Zealand, Canada, Australia, and elsewhere for nearly two decades and I offer them here with encouragem­ent for you to try them out. Both approaches are developmen­tal and supportive, and designed to create authentic collaborat­ion in organisati­ons. I will expand on each approach but guide you also to more detail in the paper noted at the end of this article.

APPROACH 1: CREATING AUTHENTIC COLLABORAT­ION WHICH PREVENTS BULLYING

There is no question in my mind that an organisati­on which focuses on embedding a

culture of strong, authentic, collaborat­ion from the top leadership down has reduced bullying accusation­s. I am not talking here about leaders simply creating more meetings, etc, so that people can collaborat­e. Rather, the term ‘authentic collaborat­ion’ links to deeply adopted honest, respectful, non-defensive (noncontrol­ling and non-avoiding), interactio­ns. It is such interactio­ns that lead to that hardearned, fragile, outcome of trust.

I have engaged with many leaders who think that a quick, one day course, type approach to creating authentic collaborat­ion will do the trick… often sending middle tier managers or employees to the course rather than attending themselves. Big mistake. Not only is a one, two or three-day course just the beginning of learning but nothing consolidat­es distrust in a leader more than the leader acting as if others need developmen­t rather than themselves. What is needed is leaders actively sponsoring cultural change and the positive message that sends to all staff.

Authentic collaborat­ion breaks the vicious cycle. Learning to be authentica­lly collaborat­ive begins with the leader having the courage to look in the mirror to explore how they work with others.

The next step is for the leader to engage in deep developmen­t which focuses on intense identifica­tion and analysis of how they work with others in both inauthenti­c (defensive routines) and authentic ways. Such analysis then guides very focused, long-term, implementa­tion goals linked to specific improvemen­t areas which are regularly evaluated (see the summary in Figure 2).

Though I am steering away from including academic references in this article, there is research support reported in the paper I have noted at the end for the intensity and time required to overcome the defensive blocks that most of us as leaders carry with us.

It is possible to engage in authentic collaborat­ion only when these obstacles are dealt with because they are strongly conditione­d and well rehearsed by the time we become leaders in our adult lives.

APPROACH 2: ENGAGING IN PRE-LITIGATION RESOLUTION OF BULLYING ACCUSATION­S

The ideal organisati­on to work in is one with leaders who have had the courage to continuall­y engage in the deep developmen­t encouraged in Approach 1.

Sadly, that is not always the norm and often advisors (an independen­t expert, etc) are called in at the stage of leaders being accused of bullying where litigation is a real possibilit­y. In this latter situation, Approach 2 can then be instigated.

Approach 2 has overlaps with the principles and steps in Approach 1, but it has enhanced intensity, guidance, and support from the advisor as a developer, as well as greater specificit­y about implementa­tion actions and their evaluation. I have summarised the roles the advisor usually takes and the facets of the steps in the approach below.

This initially provides an overview of an approach for creating authentic collaborat­ion which fosters a culture which has open, trust-engenderin­g, non-bullying (i.e. non-defensive), interactio­ns. Its message is essentiall­y that prevention is the best cure. If the prevention indicated in Approach 1, for whatever reason, has not eliminated accusation­s of bullying, I offer Approach 2 as a highly constructi­ve resolution process.

Professor Eileen Piggot-Irvine has recently returned to New Zealand from five years of leading one of the largest masterate leadership programmes in Canada. She has five books and more than 75 articles published on leadership. Eileen@epi.nz, www.epi.nz. For a recent article on bullying go to journals.sagepub.com/home/sgo and search under Piggott-Irvine, Eileen.

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 ??  ?? Figure 1: The vicious cycle of bullying.
Figure 1: The vicious cycle of bullying.
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 ??  ?? Figure 2: Creating authentic collaborat­ion.
Figure 2: Creating authentic collaborat­ion.

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