Unrest on the Job:
Has ‘Desk Rage’ Hit Your Co-workers?
By Denise Mann;
Reviewed By Dr. Tonja Wynn Hampton
Published on January 18, 2001
See
this article in webmd.com ››
Companies may soon begin to hold training seminars on manners
just as they do for sexual harassment and discrimination. In
fact, a handful of U.S. companies are already hiring outside
consultants to cope with the rudeness that seems to be about
as commonplace as water coolers and copy machines in today's
offices and workplaces.
Whether it's brushing by someone in the hall,
calling your assistant incompetent, or cutting someone in line
for the fax machine, corporate rudeness takes its toll.
A study of 775 employees conducted at the University
of North Carolina's Kenan-Flagler Business School showed that
12% of workers had quit their jobs to avoid nasty people at work,
and 45% are thinking about doing so. In addition, more than half
of workers lost time worrying about rude people in the office.
By all accounts, workplace stress is at an all-time
high, and the number of violent workplace incidents has tripled
since 1989. While incidents such as December's deadly shooting
spree at an Internet consulting firm near Boston are the exception,
not the rule, all across America workers are yelling, cursing,
slamming down phones, and damaging office supplies as they struggle
with what psychologists call 'desk rage.'
"The same factors that cause rudeness at
large lead to incivility in the workplace," explains Giovinella
Gonthier, a Chicago etiquette consultant who gives lessons to
individuals and consultants.
According to Gonthier, a number of factors are
to blame. They include: corporate downsizing; pressure to produce
more quickly with fewer resources; and the mushrooming population,
which results in less space to work in, drive in, and play in.
An additional survey, released by Integra Realty
Resources in New York, showed that one in 10 workers say employees
have come to blows because of stress at work, and more than 40%
said there is yelling and verbal abuse in their office. More
than 20% of the 1,305 workers surveyed said that they have been
driven to tears due to workplace stress. What's more, the survey
showed that people who work in cubicles are more stressed than
people who don't.
"Another major factor is that an entire
generation of children has been raised without a lot of manners," says
Gonthier. "They have been raised by parents who grew up
in the 1960s who felt too constrained by boundaries, so they
raised their own children with greater permissiveness."
Then, "In mid-'80s and 1990s, everyone
focused on technology, so companies put all of their budgets
into technology training and neglected soft skills such as manners
and civility," she tells WebMD. "Now you have a whole
generation of employees skilled in computers who are lacking
in dealing with people."
Another problem, she says, is that "we
don't have a sense of 'community,' so if we make a vulgar gesture
to a neighbor or someone on the road, they won't know who we
are. There's no humiliation factor."
Business casual dress codes may also be to blame,
she says. "The casualness of dress code has affected the
mentality of what is an appropriate business code of behavior," says
Gonthier. "If I am dressed casually, my behavior is going
to be casual."
Gonthier practices what she preaches. A seasoned
diplomat, she was the ambassador to the United Nations and U.S.
for Seychelles, an island republic off the coast of Kenya. She
served as the charge d'affair in the Seychelles Paris embassy
and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Seychelles. She has also
been an ambassador to some of the Central American countries
and to Cuba.
In today's economy, she says, more job choices
equal less loyalty. "If you view your employment situation
as temporary, you are not going to care about how you behave," she
explains.
But the tide -- not to mention the job market
-- may be turning, she says.
Gonthier's company and others like it are working
toward educating management about the consequences of incivility
in the workplace, including how it affects employee retention
and diminished productivity levels.
Usually, there are one or two people causing
unhappiness in a corporate environment. Gonthier calls this person
(or persons) "the rudester."
But even one rudester can cause a ripple effect,
she says. "If the CEO is yelling and screaming at his executive
assistant, then his executive assistant will start screaming
and yelling at other co-workers," she says.
And who are you going to tell?
There are no procedures in place to report rudeness
in most companies. "If an employee is sexually harassed,
they know where to go, [but] companies are not recognizing civility
as important or necessary until someone gets shot, slapped, or
equipment is damaged," she says.
Unfortunately, "companies don't place a
priority on workplace civility because it is not against the
law the way that discrimination and sexual harassment are," Gonthier
tells WebMD. "When it comes to civility training, [companies]
don't have to do it because there's no law against incivility."
"I don't think [rudeness] needs to be criminalized.
People just need to become more aware of civility, and organizations
should start rewarding people who [are civil] and evaluate workers
on their soft skills as well as their hard skills," she
says. "This would eliminate the problem."
Kerry J. Sulkowicz, MD, a New York City-based
psychiatrist and management consultant, puts it this way: "Underlying
the stress and the blow-ups at work are feelings of helplessness,
and I think you can see that at all levels: from the people at
bottom of the totem pole to people at the top."
The new communication technologies have something
to do with these feelings of helplessness, says Sulkowicz, who
is president of The Boswell Group, a management consulting firm
in New York City, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry
at New York University School of Medicine, and a faculty member
of New York University's Psychoanalytic Institute.
Helplessness triggers rage, he says.
"Fantasies are prevalent that more and
more can be done by human beings, but it's technology that can
do more -- not human beings," he tells WebMD. "There
isn't enough of a gap between expectations of technology and
expectations of human beings."
If there is a problem with rudeness, incivility,
or rage in the office, the first place to start is to involve
the human resources department. Then, if necessary, management
may want to bring in an outside consultant -- like Sulkowicz
or Gonthier, for example.
"I think there already is a greater sensitivity
to the role of psychology in the workplace," says Sulkowicz. "We
are seeing good trends about the receptivity of managers and
leaders to bring in outside counselors. I would hate to think
that we would need more shootings to raise our awareness, but
inevitably those things do it."
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