Women at Work - When a Relationship with a Colleague Goes Sour
Episode Date: May 16, 2022How do you address a falling-out with a teammate when they either won’t acknowledge you or just lash out? Amy Gallo brings her conflict management expertise to a coaching session for a woman whose p...roject manager and former work friend went from helpful to hostile. The approaches that come out of the conversation are ones that anyone facing tension in a work relationship can use to find a way forward.
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You're listening to Women at Work from Harvard Business Review. I'm Amy Gallo.
Have you ever had a relationship with a colleague go sour? Like someone on your team who'd been
friendly turns on you and is now making your life miserable and collaboration impossible?
Maybe they won't respond to your emails or even look you in the eye.
That's the distressing situation a listener of another podcast, Women Amplified, was in.
The show's host, Celeste Headley, invited me on to give the listener, Cindy, advice.
Cindy wanted to figure out what the conflict was about,
which was especially challenging to do since her colleague had stonewalled her.
And she wanted to know how to continue working with someone who was being so difficult. I felt particularly ready to talk through Cindy's
situation since this is the kind of interpersonal issue that's the focus of my upcoming book,
Getting Along. As you'll hear, not all of my advice was spot on. Cindy understandably did
not like the idea that she might want to flatter her co-worker to win her back over, but she took away some communication and conflict management tools.
I hope this conversation will be a resource for you whenever a work relationship turns tense.
Here's Celeste getting us going.
Cindy, maybe you can tell us a quick overview of why you reached out to us. What is your question? Sure. I have this conflict with
my teammate. So when I joined the company, even though the company is huge, our group is very
small. So it was just the manager, myself, and my colleague here. And we have two colleagues
remotely. So we were all friendly. Everything was going good. And then we started, my manager
assigned me to this project, which my colleague was managing. So she was a solo person in charge
of that project. She had complete control over it. And I had to learn that system as a backup
and some kind of redundancy and resource in case someone is off, the support
is still there. So once that started, this was like four months into my job, the whole relationship
shifted. So during the KTs, I realized she was getting annoyed at my questions or not directly answering my question. And then she would stare at the wall
while I ask a question, when I ask a question and she doesn't want to make any eye contact or engage
with me or acknowledge my contribution. So I'm learning a completely new system. So if there
was something I was doing right, there was no acknowledgement of that.
It was always picking on the deficiencies or the gaps.
And it's just that I have, you know, I'm learning.
So I haven't gotten there yet.
Maybe the answer is out there, but I haven't found it yet.
So it would be like, if you don't know the answer, Google.
So that kind of response came up a lot.
So then I thought, okay, maybe I'm asking silly questions.
So I'm like itemizing all the questions I have and making sure I'm checking every place I can to see if there's an answer.
But still this kind of behavior continued.
So I was taken aback because this was like a drastic change in the dynamic.
And I wasn't sure if it's me, am I just being overly sensitive? So I think I wasted some time
just thinking it might be me or she's going through something personal. So I gave her the
benefit of that doubt because she was being friendly and welcoming up until that point.
But I have to say from that point forward, it never improved.
What was the space of time between when you were assigned to do this project that the woman had been doing solo for some time?
When you began that, how long did it take before it started to become
toxic? Oh, I would say the first couple of meetings. So I was assigned some tasks.
So almost immediately. It's almost immediately. Yeah, exactly. So whatever deliverables I give,
she wasn't happy. So then I'm like, I haven't screwed up yet. So I understand if you get frustrated,
I have screwed up and you have to clean up my work because I get that too. If I'm mentoring
someone new and they screw up and I have to clean up as a senior resource. But in my mind,
I'm like, I haven't screwed up yet. And I haven't added to your workload. I'm trying to
take on the task. so the workload is balanced.
And it didn't seem like that was appreciated.
So, yeah, it was almost immediate in order to answer your question, yes.
So what do you think is at the heart of this?
I mean, I can make guesses, but you must have some suspicion about why this woman is treating you this way.
I mean, I have thought about it a lot.
So some of the things is she likes to work a lot, definitely.
And secondly, I don't know if it's the right term,
but it feels like she is kind of an alpha female kind of person.
She wants to be the person.
So she will answer to seniors or like, you know, who's above her or who has some kind of influence on deciding her future.
But to me, I don't report to her.
She doesn't report to me.
So I don't have to answer to you.
So any question I ask, I get a redirect.
I never got a straightforward answer. I might have on a couple
of occasions, but it's very frustrating asking a question. So I spent like a lot of time trying to
frame the question to make sure that I'm not offending her in any way. And I have checked
all the different resources available to make sure that I don't see an answer anywhere.
Because every time I ask a question, it's anxiety for me.
Like, what is she going to say?
Like, is she going to answer like a normal person or is she going to talk down to me?
What does the future hold for business?
Can someone please invent a crystal ball?
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That's netsuite.com slash women at work. Thank you. School professor, Madhupe Akanola. The show features TED Talks about everything from setting
smart goals to the latest on DEI in business, followed up with a mini lesson from Madhupe
on how to apply these lessons in your own life. Listen to TED Business wherever you get your
podcasts. So before we bring in an expert, let me ask you one more question.
Have you spoken with anyone, one of your managers or supervisors about the situation?
So I have, and I believe maybe I wasn't assertive enough.
So my manager changed.
So the first manager, we were all in person and I talked to him about it. I feel like
they don't get the gravity of the situation or they don't see it the same way I do. But then also
her body language, everything changes if someone like a manager is present.
So it was tricky for me to explain what I was feeling because it's not in writing. She's not being
rude to me in writing. She's not being rude to me in words. It's just ignoring my side of things,
like ignoring if I'm in a room. If we are walking to the conference room together, I'll just say,
hey, how are you? And then it's like dead silence. And she ignores your emails as well,
your chat messages, all of it. So that all started much later,
but even the emails, yeah.
So I'll have like a list of five questions
and she would just answer to either one
or she would redirect me to some link,
check it out here or something.
Well, we have exactly the right expert for you.
Let me bring in Amy Gallo.
She is the author of The HBR Guide to Dealing with Conflict.
She has another book coming out called Getting Along, How to Work with Anyone, Even Difficult People, which could not be more relevant.
And she co-hosts the Women at Work podcast.
She's just a super, super smart person.
Amy?
Here I am.
Oh, boy, this is right in my wheelhouse.
Yeah.
I am so sorry you're going through this, Cindy,
but you are not alone.
There are lots and lots of people
who are facing coworkers like this.
What are the initial actions that Cindy can take
or questions that she needs to ask for herself?
Yeah, so I would start with a few questions, right?
Just a few questions to ask yourself to reflect on the situation.
Number one is, what might you be doing to contribute to the situation? Now, I don't want
you to feel like this is your responsibility or that you have caused the situation, but recognizing
what your part in it is, is helpful. Because as you start to navigate this relationship
with your coworker, what you can control is your behavior. What you can't control is how she reacts
or what she does. So I think you want to really think about what have I actually done? What have
I possibly done to make this situation turn out the way it has? And the answer may be nothing.
You may have just done your job and interacted in a professional and respectful way, but it's
helpful to think about what could have contributed on your end to the situation. I think the other
thing to think about is, it sounds like this has been going on for quite some time, is to reflect
on what has made things worse
and what has made things better.
I think anytime you're dealing with a difficult colleague,
you want to use your interactions as experiments.
You're never going to get it perfectly right.
It's never going to be the,
there's no silver bullet that just,
you do it and this gets all better.
It's a series of small experiments,
what trying out different
tactics and seeing what works and what doesn't. So I would take some time to think about,
has there been anything that has made things even a little bit easier? And have there been
things that have made things completely worse? Cindy, what do you think?
So the first question, like what might have cost it? The only thing I can think is coming into her space and taking some of the tasks from her.
So I got the feeling was she was territorial and didn't want me, even though it was helping over the workload.
That's not something she was looking for.
So I went to my manager at the time and asked, was she okay with me coming into the space? And he said, yeah, I had talked with her and got her
permission and she's fine with it. But I don't think that's the case. I think that was the root
of everything where she was like the number one person. Everyone reaches out to her. She was a
point person from there, me coming into the space and me being another person
and sharing that credit or responsibility she was not happy with. I feel like that's actually
the root of it all. Yeah. And I'm not surprised because we know from research that people act out
when their ego is threatened. And it sounds like she has a lot of ego resting on the responsibility for this particular system, or as you say, being the one who knows the answers. So whether or not she gave permission to your manager for you to be involved, it sounds like she's feeling, as you said, you're stepping into her territory. Yeah. And I couldn't help with that, right? Because that was my goals with the year too,
like learn the system, be a backup, and then eventually have two primaries for the platform.
So there was nothing I could do on that one. And then regarding my actions. So I have to say,
I haven't found an answer to that. So I have reached out to my old manager
and now current manager.
So every time I go to them with this issue
or something like,
it's a common platform we work in.
If any changes are done,
I would appreciate if I'm kept in the loop
because when something comes up,
I know all this was changed
instead of me again,
reinventing the wheel, spending time figuring it out.
But I'm never kept in the loop.
So then when I bring it up, they would be like, okay, why don't we set up weekly meetings or bi-weekly meetings?
Why don't we communicate via SharePoint? Why don't we?
So I always felt like I had to take the initiative to find a solution and then do these
things. And then it became even more anxiety-inducing events for me, this weekly meeting.
Whenever it comes up, I'm so stressed out before the meeting and after the meeting, I'm so upset
by the things that were said. It's not outright rude comments.
It's things like, that was an unnecessary change.
That shouldn't have been done.
Yeah.
So it's discrediting my contribution any way she can.
And considering she was the primary before me,
not even the manager knows what actually happens there,
right? So her words have a lot of value to it. So I have two thoughts. One is,
if we acknowledge that she is feeling defensive or threatened, that her ego is getting injured
here or bruised by your involvement in the project. One of the things that we know can
often soothe those defensive or aggressive behaviors is something, I'm sure it's the last
thing you're going to want to do, but which is to compliment or reassure that person. You're
basically compensating for some insecurity that she might have around losing control or losing authority around the
system. So saying to her, you have the knowledge here. I'm simply trying to learn from you.
Constantly reassuring. I love what you've done with this system. I'm indebted to you and the
organization is indebted to you for the work you've done. I know you'll continue to be the
point person here. I simply want to learn from you. Now, it's never fun to want to have to stroke someone's ego,
especially someone who's being rude to you. But we do know that flattery oftentimes soothes that
response. Have you done any of that, Cindy? No, I would say I have never done that.
Yeah. Only because when we got into this mode, right, this dynamic,
she started attacking my work. And I'm like, why are you criticizing this when I'm modeling
my work after something you pointed me to? So she would say, okay, this is a task and this is being
done before over here. You can refer to that and learn and do it.
So I would be doing the exact thing.
So my thinking was if I follow the instructions,
learn the stuff and do it, she would be happy.
But every time I tried to please her,
it was some slip and comment that would kick me off.
And I'm like, why am I even spending so much energy trying to please her?
And then as I got to learn the system more, then I had my own voice, right?
So when she was trying to say something demotivating me, I would fight back or say something.
Yeah. I wonder, and Amy, this is something that not only Harvard Business Review has written a lot about, but you have written about, which is the use of the question to diffuse some of these things.
In other words, Cindy, when she's criticizing your work and your response is to say, what are you talking about?
I'm modeling it on exactly what you told me to read.
You can use questions instead to force her to explain what's behind her
objection. And I'm going to let Amy explain further because, like I said, she's written a
lot about this and researched this, but your questions can prevent the conversation from
becoming a conflict, and they can also force her to think through her criticisms rather than simply
automatically need your criticizing. What do you think, Amy? I absolutely agree. And I think the
other piece about questions is it signals collaboration, right? It signals I'm interested
in what you have to say. And I think from your description, what it sounds like is she came out
very aggressive. You understandably got defensive, and it sounds like is she came out very aggressive. You understandably got
defensive and it sounds like you have been locked in a tug of war ever since. And I think what you
have to do is sort of change the pattern of the interaction. And I think questions is a wonderful
way to do that because as Celeste was saying, it encourages her to have to articulate what she
believes, what she wants you to do,
while also signaling to her, I want this to be a collaboration. This is not I say something,
you say something, I say something, you say something. This is a conversation in which we
are on the same side of the table trying to resolve the problem, which is me learning the system
rather than us being at each other's throats.
Understood. So that asking that questions thing, it doesn't come naturally to me because
I get worked up by some of the comments and then I have to gather my thoughts. Like I shut down
when that happens because I don't want to speak out of turn or out of anger. So one specific scenario is there was a meeting,
and this is after she was on, I don't know,
some kind of leave for a long period of time.
And I have been managing the system solo for her extended absence.
And when the first meeting, I'm expecting some kind of light discussion, right?
Or how is it?
How are you?
Or something like that.
She immediately jumps in and says,
I see a lot of unnecessary changes in the system.
And that just throws me down a rabbit hole.
Like, I cannot even imagine,
like, how can someone talk like that?
Yeah.
And one thing to add to that is
before she was going on this extended absence,
I wouldn't call the backup at that point.
We are both equally primaries,
but I wasn't even notified.
And I think people were not getting responses
to their request
and it started getting
routed to me. So it was an extremely busy period of time for me. I thought I was managing well.
I think I supported the users well. And then for her to come back and just say that as a first line,
yeah, I was really upset. I'm like, why am I even doing this? Yeah. And I think that's a normal reaction.
The challenge with getting defensive in the face of her aggression is it continues to lock you
into that dynamic. And she has a lot of power over you if she is setting you off with her questions.
And I think one of the things you can do also is think about, okay, you know, all of this is causing so much stress.
How can I care less about the sort of nature of the interaction and focus more on what
I actually need to get done?
So one of the other things I might recommend is thinking about what are your goals for
this interaction, right?
Is it to learn the system?
Is it to have a positive relationship with her? I would list all of those goals out and then focus on which are the most
primary. What are the ones, and even for these individual interactions, what is your goal in
that moment? Because the difficulty is you might be pursuing goals, for example, to make her less
toxic that you're never going to be able to achieve.
So I would instead focus on what is the information you need in that meeting?
What is it you have to learn that week?
What is the goal for the next month?
And how do you achieve that?
And try to put aside the fact that she's behaving in a way that feels unprofessional or aggressive, because you're
not going to be able to control that and really focus on the underlying need of what is it you
actually need from her. And I do think to change the dynamic, you're going to have to sort of
loosen and experiment with how you react. I might try throwing in some compliments,
of course, genuine compliments, even though that
feels not what you want to do, right? Because she's, you know, why should I compliment someone
who's been aggressive and has made my work life miserable, right? But instead of seeing that as
something generous to her, see it as something generous to yourself because it may actually
loosen up the dynamic in a way that could benefit you. with NetSuite by Oracle, the number one cloud ERP, bringing accounting, financial management,
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If you think about it, Cindy, many of these tactics that Amy is suggesting are the tactics
negotiators use when they are trying to negotiate like a ceasefire, right? Like between warring nations,
they try to find something positive
to say about the other person.
They use questions to have the other person
explain their point of view.
And they will also say things like,
if I hear you correctly,
you told me blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
They'll like repeat back to the other person
what they heard.
Yes.
So that they make sure that miscommunications don't happen as well. Like you can take the
exact same advice that negotiators use and use it to create a kind of mini ceasefire between you
and this colleague.
Yeah. I mean, and I think the other thing to follow on that, Celeste, is that you want to
think about taking pattern breaking actions, right? Because you are
in a pattern with her. And what has happened so far, the pattern you're in is not working.
So what can you do that's different, that's essentially led to this, you becoming warring
factions? And what could you do that's drastically different? Even if it's just an experiment you try in one conversation to
see, does that change things at all? Does that lead to the necessary ceasefire that you're looking for?
So I had hope that this can be resolved if I approach it professionally. But like you mentioned,
I shut down when things like this happen and I don't want, like, I don't know what to do next. So that's a good advice where I can ask questions.
I need to remember that and practice that
so that at least I have some space to have a discussion.
Right now, what happens is something,
she says something, I shut down
and I'm like not dealing with this, I'm done.
Right.
So I need to ask the question. So I was hoping there was something I'm like not dealing with this. I'm done. Right. So I need to ask the question.
So I was hoping there was something I'm doing, right?
So I tried to have a discussion with her
and I didn't want to do it alone
because I know if I do it alone and it goes sideways,
there's no use in having that discussion.
So I asked my manager to kind of, all three of us,
have a chat and discuss what can I do to improve. Because in my mind, maybe she has some reason,
and that's what I was hoping to get. Like, what is your reason? What can I do differently? Am I not
contributing enough? Am I adding work?
Or I just want to give me something.
So we had that discussion and she got very defensive and upset.
And basically, like you said, she has a lot of ego. So she was like, my work is appreciated all over the company.
You're the one, only one with the problem.
So here's the thing that I'm hearing, Cindy, which is that every time she says something
awful or does something awful, you're reacting as though this is the first time. In other words,
I would suggest perhaps you need to prepare yourself that the kind of things she may say
to you, this is the way she may react to you and prepare yourself for that. You can go into a meeting and say,
she's likely going to say something that will upset me. So how do I prepare myself mentally
and emotionally in advance so that I can take a breath and respond in a measured way without
escalating this conflict? Like, I think you need to expect that your interactions right now will not be fully healthy.
Yeah, sure. Yeah, I've never thought about it like that. And it does feel like the first time
every time. Well, and it's understandable you would shut down because if it feels like the
first time, you're blindsided every time, right? And that's when we're blindsided, we do not make
good choices about how to react or about how to navigate what can be a tricky interaction.
And I would say the confusing part for me throughout all this is I know she's a good person, right?
Because we were friends before.
Yeah.
So I couldn't figure out how a person can just turn like that.
So in my mind, and I see her interaction with others, I see her polite emails to others,
you know, helpful emails, and then the tone suddenly switching when it's addressing me.
So I kept expecting to go back to that stage.
But like you said, yeah, it doesn't look like it will go back.
And I need to be ready for that, like at each interaction.
Yeah.
You know, the image that keeps coming to mind is a cat that's sort of cornered and has their back up and their hackles up.
And I think that description of the conversation you had with you and your manager and her, I just see her as
completely on the attack. She is just feeling so threatened. Everyone here loves working with me.
Why? It must be you, right? And I think one of the things you might do is think about how can I just
get her to calm down? Now, it's not your job to make her calm down,
but if you can lessen that feeling of threatenedness, right?
If you can help her see that she is still in charge of this system,
she is still well-respected,
you still respect her for her knowledge about this system,
that might calm some of that,
help her bring some of those hackles down a bit.
And the mention that you had a good relationship, one of the things that often works when a
relationship has gone sour is to help, is to remind people that you were once collaborative
colleagues. Now that doesn't mean like, hey, listen, we used to get along, what's going on?
That doesn't sound like a conversation she would be willing to participate in.
Yeah.
But you could bring up things about time you went out to lunch and had a great time,
or you could reference those positive moments you did have together to remind her that a
collaborative relationship here is possible and that you're not interested in continuing
in this back and forth, this sort of aggression, defensiveness dynamic that you've gotten in.
So I was hoping, you know, my manager would be able to help me with that. But I have to say
not. It looks like it's on me to change that dynamic.
Yeah. Here's the tricky part about escalating, which is that you have to be able to escalate
to someone who's capable of mediating a resolution. And most managers and even many
HR representatives are not capable of that. Amen.
Yeah. And so even though they have the power, they may not have the skills.
And I think actually the escalation in this situation, I'm guessing, has made her feel more defensive rather than actually applying the pressure that you would hope would sort of make her behave differently.
True.
I didn't want to go to HR at all because I thought that was escalating it too much.
But I was at a loss.
Like, I don't know how to turn this around. I don't know how to coexist, basically. So that's
why I thought, OK, maybe this is the closest person to the situation and he has a stake in it
because it affects productivity. So maybe that's the right way to go. And I saw it as an open discussion where we could,
maybe she has something that I'm doing wrong.
So maybe she could say it out in this meeting.
That's what I was hoping for,
where she would give me one, two, and three.
These are the things that are wrong.
And I fix it and it's all good.
But yeah, she had nothing.
And then, like you said, it even went back further.
So I want to make sure, Cindy, before we let you go, that we have given you,
Amy especially, has given you practical tips that you can now carry out.
So let me try and summarize the advice you've been given, and then Amy can correct me if I
miss some. So the first is to expect that your interactions
with this colleague will be not productive
or even condescending and hostile
instead of getting blindsided by them.
The second one is to compliment her when you can,
authentically, real compliments,
but find a way to diffuse her defensiveness
by making her feel proud, allowing
her to feel good about herself. The third thing is to use your questions to keep the conversation
going and not only force her to interrogate the criticisms that she's offering, but also to
continue the conversation without escalation. I have to say the one and three, I'm on board. Number two,
the complimenting. I don't know how it comes naturally, but I have to try. Yeah. And I think
with the compliments, I agree this is the hardest thing. When someone has made your work life
miserable, the idea that you would have to find something to flatter them about is just,
it's so unpleasant. That said, I think if you
think about it less as something you're giving her and more as something you're giving yourself,
which is this could be the pattern breaking action that helps loosen this dynamic and maybe improves
your work life, right? Maybe reduces all that stress and anxiety you're
feeling about every time you have to meet with her. And the other thing, when people have someone,
a difficult colleague, one of the things I often say is go find the person that enjoys working
with this person. It sounds like she has a good reputation in your organization. And there's probably someone you've mentioned that she has positive interactions with others.
So is there someone who you can talk to who can tell you what they so enjoy about working with
her that could help you see her in a little bit of a different light and that would make those
compliments come a little bit more easily? And the last thing I'd tell you before
we have to wrap up is you might try to use the same thing that we tell women to do when they're
working in an environment with a lot of sexism, which is find an ally. Find someone who's in that
meeting who also will notice when this person says something rude or dismissive to you or ignores you
and can be your ally in that
moment so that you're not the only person noticing these things and speaking up for yourself.
Yeah, that's a good point. That's something I have struggled with because I have noticed some
kind of, you know, rude comments against my co-workers as well. And sometimes I'm like surprised like how she can make those comments
and nobody says anything.
And even though the manager is there,
so I feel like she has gotten away with it for so long.
However, the way she behaves,
that it's nobody has kept her in check.
So she is right in that I'm the,
probably the first person
that doesn't like being treated. Maybe
the others just brush it off and move along because they get things done by her, right?
So they tolerate it. So when these things happen in meetings, it's natural to her and nobody says
anything. So that's a good point. I never thought of it like that, like have someone to
support you. Yeah. Yeah. And there is safety in numbers, right? There's power in numbers. So
if she realizes that many of you are taking notice of that behavior and pushing back,
you're putting her on notice that this behavior is not going to be tolerated and that other people
are going to call it out.
And I think that certainly will apply
some important peer pressure
for her to behave a bit differently.
Yeah.
Understood.
So we have to end the conversation here,
although I would imagine we could keep going.
And I also imagine there's lots of listeners
who can take a lot away from this advice
on how to deal with difficult colleagues.
Cindy, I wanted to say thank you so much for coming and talking with us and bringing this
question. It's such an important one. Thank you, Amy. And thank you, Celeste. I'm so thankful that
you had me and it's up to me now to implement the solutions you suggested. I would pick one
and try starting with that and then see. That's probably a good idea. Yeah, one step at a time.
And best of luck.
It's not an easy situation,
but it sounds like you've got some things you can try out.
I look forward to hearing how it goes.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
This episode is part of Women Amplified's series,
That's a Good Question,
where host Celeste Headley brings in a guest expert
to coach a listener through a problem.
Other questions that
the show has taken on include, how do you make the leap from being a tactical contributor to a
strategic leader? Plus, how, in a male-dominated industry, can you get senior leadership's
attention without them dismissing you as aggressive? Have you got a question that you'd
like Celeste and an expert to coach you through? Submit it by going to conferencesforwomen.org
slash good dash question. That's conferencesforwomen.org slash good dash question.
Women Amplified is a production of the Conferences for Women, whose mission is to promote,
communicate, and amplify the influence of women in the workplace and beyond. The organization puts
on four conferences a year,
publishes a newsletter, and hosts a free quarterly virtual speaker series on justice,
equity, and inclusion. Thanks for listening. I'm Amy Gallo.