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Coping with Difficult People

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Title: Coping with Difficult People


1
Coping with Difficult People
Rob Houser August 18, 1999
rob_at_userfirst.net
2
Why cope with difficulty?
  • We rely on other people to do our jobs
  • We cannot avoid conflict
  • We must control stress in our lives
  • We cannot change other people

3
Why are people difficult?
  • Feeling thwarted or threatened
  • Exceptional levels of stress
  • Your reactions to their difficult behavior
  • Learned behavior (getting their way)
  • Inflexibility (on both sides)

4
What can you do about it?
  • The goal of conflict resolution is not to
    eliminate conflict (or the other person) but to
    handle it constructively

5
  • Have you learned lessons only of those who
    admired you, and were tender with you, and stood
    aside for you?
  • Have you not learned great lessons from those
    who braced themselves against you, and disputed
    the passage with you?
  • ---Walt
    Whitman

6
10 Common Difficult Behaviors
  • Super-Agreeables
  • Indecisives
  • Unresponsives
  • Negativists
  • Complainers
  • Sherman Tanks
  • Snipers
  • Exploders
  • Know-it-all Experts
  • Think-they-know-it-alls

7
Sherman Tanks
  • Attacking, accusing, abusive, abrupt,
    intimidating, overwhelming, confrontational
  • Feel strong need to prove that their view of the
    world is always right
  • Get irritated or angry if sense resistance
  • See tasks as clear and concrete
  • Value assertiveness and confidence

8
Snipers
  • Teasing, innuendoes, not-too-subtle digs used to
    make you look foolish in groups
  • Hides behind crowds and social constraints
  • Often very witty
  • Share Tanks strong sense of how others should
    act but is often unrealistic
  • Can turn into a Tank if exposed

9
Exploders
  • Adult tantrum, rage barely under control
  • When person feels thwarted and threatened
  • May cry, be silently enraged, or yell/scream
  • Anger often moves to suspicion and blaming
  • Creates highest amount of resentment among others
    of all behaviors

10
Know-it-all Experts
  • Highly productive, thorough and accurate
    thinkers, careful planners
  • Believe facts and knowledge provide stability
    answers lie within themselves
  • Low tolerance for correction/contradiction
  • Condescending, dont wait for others to catch up
    to their thought process or seek input from
    others

11
Think-they-know-it-alls
  • Seek the admiration and respect of others by
    trying to act like experts when they are not
  • Dont always know they are not experts
  • Curious people like to learn a little about a
    lot of things

12
Super-Agreeables
  • Want to be liked and loved by everyone
  • Make others feel liked and approved of
  • Tell you things that are satisfying to hear
  • Often use humor to ease conversation
  • Say Yes to everything but often dont deliver
    because they are over-committed
  • Can secretly be resentful of doing so much

13
Indecisives
  • Put off making important decisions because they
    dont want to hurt anyone
  • Have high standards
  • Strive to help people
  • Usually stall until the decision is made

14
Unresponsives
  • Close down, even when asked direct question
    (answer yes, no, I dont know)
  • Clam up when you need a response or expect
    conversation
  • Difficult to determine why they are silent

15
Complainers
  • Find fault with everything, complain constantly,
    accusatory, prescriptive
  • Feel someone should be doing something but feel
    helpless to take action
  • Have distinct idea of what should be done
  • Usually is some truth to their complaints

16
Negativists
  • Feel defeated and dispirited as though they have
    little power over their lives
  • Pessimistic, more bitter than complainers
  • Bring others down quickly
  • Say Weve tried this before or That wont
    work without looking for solutions

17
  • If civilization is to survive, we must
    cultivate the science of human relationships--the
    ability of all people, of all kinds, to live
    together, in the same world at peace.
  • --- Franklin D.
    Roosevelt

18
Acknowledge Positive Intent
  • FOCUS ON TASKS
  • Control (to get the job done)
  • Sherman Tanks, Snipers, Know-it-alls
  • Perfection (to get it right)
  • Complainers, Negativists, Unresponsives

19
Acknowledge Positive Intent
  • FOCUS ON PEOPLE
  • Approval Seeking (to get along)
  • Super-agreeables, Indecisives
  • Attention Getting (to get appreciation)
  • Exploders, Think-they-know-it-alls, Snipers

20
10 Coping Methods
  • Super-Agreeables
  • Indecisives
  • Unresponsives
  • Negativists
  • Complainers
  • Sherman Tanks
  • Snipers
  • Exploders
  • Know-it-all Experts
  • Think-they-know-it-alls

21
Sherman Tanks
Get it done
  • Stand up for yourself without fighting
  • Get their attention, carefully
  • Get them to sit down
  • Restate the problem briefly
  • Speak from your own point of view
  • Be ready to be friendly

22
Snipers
Get it done
Get appreciated
  • Surface the attack immediately
  • Ask about intent and relevancy
  • Seek group confirmation or denial of the snipers
    criticism
  • Move on to solve any problems uncovered
  • Resolve on-going problems with friendly snipers
    in private

23
Exploders
Get appreciated
  • Give them time to run down
  • Get their attention
  • Show that you take them seriously
  • Reduce the intensity (take a break)
  • Identify and solve underlying problems

24
Know-it-all Experts
Get it done
  • Do your homework
  • Listen and acknowledge respectfully
  • Present your views indirectly
  • Ask extensional questions to get details
  • Acknowledge their competence
  • Make time for reflection
  • As last resort, let them be the expert

25
Think-they-know-it-alls
Get appreciated
  • Give them a little attention
  • Clarify for specifics
  • State the facts as an alternative version
  • Give them a way out
  • Break the cycle

26
Super-agreeables
Get along
  • Make honesty non-threatening
  • Be personal - when you can
  • Listen to their humor
  • Be prepared to compromise if in conflict
  • Help them learn to plan realistically
  • Ensure commitment
  • Strengthen the relationship

27
Indecisives
Get along
  • Establish a comfort zone
  • Surface the issues
  • Help them problem solve (make decision)
  • Reassure after decision is made
  • Ensure follow through
  • Strengthen the relationship

28
Unresponsives
Get it right
  • Ask open-ended questions
  • Use the friendly, silent stare
  • Dont fill the space with words
  • Comment on whats happening (guess)
  • If person stays silent, terminate meeting and
    reschedule
  • Show the future

29
Negativists
Get it right
  • Avoid getting drawn in by stating your own
    realistic optimism
  • Dont argue
  • Explore the problem before solutions
  • Set a horror floor
  • Use comments to make decisions
  • Be ready to take action on your own

30
Complainers
Get it right
  • Listen attentively to their complaints
  • Acknowledge what they say
  • Be prepared to interrupt to get specifics
  • Re-state the facts without agreeing or
    apologizing
  • Move quickly into problem solving
  • Draw the line (what do you expect to happen)

31
  • The person who grabs the cat by the tail
    learns about 44 percent faster than the one just
    watching.
  • ---
    Mark Twain

32
Practice, Practice, Practice
  • Practice coping techniques in safe situations
    (like in STC)
  • Role play how you will handle difficult
    situations before you confront a known difficult
    person

33
Basic Strategy
  • Determine positive intent/valued criteria
  • Listen (but stop destructive behavior)
  • Summarize (length depends on behavior)
  • Clarify questions to collect details

34
Basic Strategy
  • Speak to be heard
  • State your positive intent
  • Tell your story from your point of view
  • Dont damage the relationship, if possible

35
Conclusion
  • Avoid attributing internal motives to behavior
  • Always look for positive intent
  • Remember that everybody is somebodys difficult
    person sometime

36
Recommended Books
  • Bramson, Robert M. Coping With Difficult People.
    Dell Publishing. New York 1981.
  • Bolton, Robert and Dorothy Grover Bolton. People
    Styles at Work. American Management Association.
    New York 1996
  • Brinkman, Rick and Rick Kirschner. Dealing With
    People You Cant Stand. R.R. Donnelley Sons.
    New York 1994.
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