SPEAK WELL OF YOUR
FIRM
-- AND ALL THOSE IN IT
Good policy for nearly a century. |
No company can afford employees who complain about their
firm or the people in it to anyone they don’t know well.
TGIM EXECUTIVE ACTION: Coach others to never
criticize their company or coworkers in front of customers ... prospects …
suspects …casual acquaintances … “the public” -- anyone they don’t know much
about. It invariably leaves a bad taste. And it can ruin relationships that
others have worked long and hard to build.
What
prompts this “sudden” outburst on my part?
What
pushed my buttons recently was a little interaction that I will share with you
in abbreviated form to get us closer to some universal what-to-do and
how-to-do-it thoughts. Here’s my –
Case in point: While signing in in
the lobby and waiting for my morning appointment to come bring me to his office
suite, I remarked to the building’s receptionist that the name of the man I was
calling on meant “nobleman” in German.
She
gave an ironic laugh and said –
“He’s anything but!” The receptionist had
little to gain by her remark; some momentary gratification at most. And (I
hope) she had little idea of the harm she was doing.
But
that one flip remark tainted my thinking about the man and the whole
organization.
I
confess that I could not give our meeting the 100% attention it deserved
because that unconfirmed insinuation poked at my thinking like a sharp stone in
my shoe. And, even with my heightened awareness, in my time with the executive I
got no other impression that would have suggested her comment had merit.
Fortunately
(sort of) she was also at her station on my departure. So, while signing out,
and out of the hearing of any others, I recapitulated our earlier exchange and
suggested she should probably stop making such remarks or take her case up with
HR.
She
suggested I “Have a nice day.”
I
have not seen her since.
Why do people
criticize their company or coworkers
– especially in the
presence of strangers?
Sometimes
it’s because –
That’s the kind of
people they are.
They take pleasure in tearing others down. They look for things to complain about,
and then start gossiping.
TGIM ALERT: Some people get into
the habit of belittling personnel in their company to anyone who will listen.
They should be stopped the moment such a tendency is detected.
More
often the reason people disparage each other is –
To get a monkey off
their backs. Nobody
likes to take the brunt of a customer’s disaffection. So people say or imply
that others are responsible.
v Suppose a customer
calls about a late shipment. The salesperson doesn’t want to take the blame
personally, so he or she passes the buck suggesting perhaps, “Our shipping
department messed up the paperwork. They’re not too careful over there.”
v When a bank customer
complains about a mistake to a teller, the teller may blame the IT Department.
“Those nerds aren’t bankers. They’re always making mistakes.”
v When a department
store customer asks about a change in return policy, the salesperson or floor
manager may say something like, “I don’t like the new policy myself. Another
whim of those guys in corporate, I guess.”
v When a serviceman
brings the wrong part for an appliance repair, he may cover himself by saying,
“Those phone people always give me the wrong information.”
In
my long career I particularly recall a VP in a small-ish firm who was
constantly downgrading his employees to customers. Whenever anything went
wrong, it was because the salespeople promised too much or manufacturing didn’t
run a tight enough ship. This so-called executive constantly referred to the
firm’s employees as “idiots” or “dummies.”
Sure,
there are plenty of books targeted at that Idiot/Dummy crowd.
But just who was the idiot
or dummy?
It didn’t take people too long to discover that the employees were being blamed
for the problems stemming from the poor skills of the VP himself.
TGIM ACTION IDEA: The way to stop this
kind of criticism is to take the offending individual aside and talk to them.
Odds are they don’t realize just how destructive such remarks are to the
company and to themselves. Let them know.
TGIM IDEA IN ACTION: Also let them know
how to handle problems without blaming others in the organization.
For example:
v Suggest they tell the
customer they will “look into what’s holding things up” instead of blaming a
delay on “those guys in shipping.”
v Or they might say,
“I’ll correct the mistake and get back to those responsible so it doesn’t
happen again.”
v Or they might say, if
the source of a problem is specifically identifiable, “Milt in shipping would
want me to correct it ASAP. I’ll straighten it out now.”
v Or even just not
calling Milt an idiot might be acceptable.
Speak well of your
firm and others in it. And let the insiders know that the idea is to support
their colleagues and present a united front to the customer. Above all, see to
it that people in supervisory positions stand by their people when talking to
customers. It gives a better image of the company.
In
every company, of course, people do make mistakes and need correction. Every
company has its dirty linen. And I should be washed.
Just
not in public.
Geoff
Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8
Depot Square
Englewood,
NJ 07631
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
P. S. “SPEAK WELL OF YOUR FIRM”
That
was the ALL-CAPS injunction of a 42” x 28” “motivational” poster (pictured above) that was given
to me when I assumed my first publishing job that had managerial,
people-handling responsibilities.
It
was a real time capsule, even when I first received it 40+ years ago. The
illustration (five fashionably suited men in discussion in a rather abstract
“office” space), the colors, the graphic design, the type and typographic
layout, the punctuation and capitalization -- all hint at an origination date
perhaps as early as 1920.
But
even now, at what may well be a century later, the message is evergreen. It is:
When
you “knock” your
Firm,
you insult yourself,
because
you are Part
of
the Firm. When you
Praise and Speak-Well of
your
Firm, you speak
well
of yourself: as a
part
of your Firm you
therefore
profit.”
Boosting Pays!
Throughout
my most “corporate” days it hung on the wall behind me in my office. Maybe I
should not have taken it down.