The Scotsman

‘Jaw, jaw’ is always better than ‘war, war’ when it comes to office disputes

Mediation needs to be much more widely used, writes Graham Boyack

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Most mediators would be very wealthy if they were given money when people had said tot hem:“i wish I’d spoken to you earlier.” It’s a feature of much conflict resolution that people and organisati­ons have processes and procedures that push people into disputes rather than seeking to resolve issues at an early stage.

One of the key reasons that people end up in disputes is that people involved in organisati­ons are not supported to develop the skills that might allow for earlier resolution. Sometimest­hat’ s because of a culture in the organisati­on and sometimes it can be down to a view that such skills don’t have an obvious return on investment or are somehow soft skills that don’t merit priority.

the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Developmen­t (CIPD) published “Getting under the skin of workplace conflict: Tracing the experience­s of employees” and the Chartered Management Institute published their research “Difficult Conversati­ons”. The reports provide great insight into both conflict in the workplace and how people do and don’t tackle difficult conversati­ons. Some of the points they make are telling.

The CIPD Research, based on a representa­tive survey of 2195 UK employees, found that four in ten employees faced conflict of some sort in the workplace with the most common being conflict with line managers and supervisor­s. The main impact is stress, a drop in motiva- tion and commitment with a smaller number either being unproducti­ve and in one in ten situations either the employee or the line manager leaving their job. Another potential impact is sickness absence.

In terms of how conflict is dealt with, the CIPD research points out that resolution is achieved through a mixture of formal and informal channels. They commented:

“In particular this should include approaches such as mediation, which are currently rarer options than formal channels, but importantl­y provide a way to facilitate informal discussion­s. It does little good to rely on grievance and discipline procedures alone, as this will often mean conflict festers until it escalates to a serious level.” Such action may not make the more establishe­d grievance and discipline procedures redundant, but will help nip potentiall­y very damaging conflict in the bud.”

Given the above comments what is perhaps most concerning is that “1.5 per cent of employees who report conflict used mediation, most of which was provided by the employer”. There is a gap that needs to be bridged and work needs to be done to make mediation more widely used.

The CMI report looked at difficult conversati­ons in the workplace and found that there is a great reluctance to engage in such conversati­ons and that “Brits find it harder to ask their boss for a pay rise than to dump a partner”. Their research has found that the top three difficult conversati­ons in the workplace are pay, colrecentl­y

league’s inappropri­ate behaviour and feedback on poor performanc­e. Sixty-six per cent of employees indicated that they had felt stressed or anxious when they knew that they had a difficult conversati­on coming up. Related to this it was also found that 80 per cent of those surveyed had never received any training in how tackle difficult conversati­ons at work.

When cross-referenced with the CIPD study on workplace conflict my conclusion would be that most people are not generally equipped to have the early conversati­on that might reduce conflict and that when conflict occurs they don’t have access to one of the main tools (mediation) to resolve it.

Our response at Scottish Mediation is that a key role we can play is to provide informatio­n and to promote mediation, the skills of mediation and how to access mediation. We do that in a number of ways; through a free public helpline, hosting a register of mediators and by engaging with a wide range of organisati­ons and stakeholde­rs to promote mediation.

Part of our work is also about making mediation work for organisati­ons. In 2015 we launched a Third Sector Mediation scheme designed to provide a focussed service for charities and voluntary organisati­ons. It combines a free service for organisati­ons with a turnover below £50,000 and a fixed price option for organisati­ons with a turnover between £50,000 and £250,000. We have done so in partnershi­p with the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisati­ons and run a dedicated helpline to help those organisati­ons find the right solution.

That service has now dealt with over 80 enquiries resulting in over 25 mediations helping charities and people in organisati­ons to resolve their conflicts and move on, whilst at the same time improving the resilience of the third sector.

Graham Boyack, director, Scottish Mediation

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