Tuesday, May 8, 2018

The Management Tip of the Day from Harvard Business Review


THE MANAGEMENT TIP OF THE DAY: Harvard Business Review

May 8, 2018

Only Express Emotions During a Conflict If They'll Help You Resolve It


When a disagreement with a colleague gets heated, it's normal to feel all sorts of emotions: disappointment, anger, or frustration, for example. But should you express what you're feeling? It depends. If you're experiencing what psychologists call a hot emotion — one that comes with an urgent sense of entitlement or even revenge ("I have to tell him exactly how I feel!"), it's better to find a way to calm down first. If the emotion is cold, meaning you can control it and use it to help the situation ("I want to tell him how I feel so that he'll understand my perspective"), then it's probably OK to express it. But don't just name the emotion; explain what's causing it. Telling someone you're angry is less helpful than sharing that you're disappointed they didn't follow through on their commitment to you.

Adapted from "Should You Share Your Feelings During a Work Conflict?," by Susan David




ADVERTISEMENT

FEATURED PRODUCT

Build an A-Team

By Whitney Johnson

What's the secret to having an engaged and productive team? It's having a plan for developing all employees—no matter where they are on their personal learning curves.

Better morale and higher performance happen through learning, argues Whitney Johnson. In Build an A-Team, she argues that employees need continuous learning and fresh challenges to stay motivated. Johnson presents how to identify what your employees already know and what they need to learn; how to design their jobs to maximize engagement; and how to apply a seven-step process for leading each person up their learning curve Build an A-Team, she argues that employees need continuous learning and fresh challenges to stay motivated. Johnson presents how to identify what your employees already know and what they need to learn; how to design their jobs to maximize engagement; and how to apply a seven-step process for leading each person up their learning curve.

$28.00

Buy Now

FEATURED PRODUCT

HBR Emotional Intelligence Boxed Set (6 Books)

By Harvard Business Review, Daniel Goleman, Annie McKee, and Bill George

Newly updated from HBR's Emotional Intelligence Series, this specially priced, six-volume boxed set includes Mindfulness, Resilience, Happiness, Empathy, and the new titles Influence and Persuasion and Authentic Leadership. Each book in the series offers proven research showing how our emotions impact our work lives, practical advice for managing difficult people and situations, and inspiring essays on what it means to tend to our emotional well-being at work.

$99.99

Buy Now



ADVERTISEMENT

No comments:

Post a Comment