Conflict can occur at many levels within an
organisation, team or between two individuals. How does conflict
initially arise? Normally, conflict occurs because there is a
divergence in views or opinions on what has happened, the facts, where
you are going, the aims, goals and aspirations, how you get there, what
methods and measures you take to complete a course of action and ethics
i.e. the values or boundaries that exist for your or the group's
behaviour i.e. what is acceptable or unacceptable practice. In many
situations conflict occurs as a result of subconscious behaviour and
often the individuals concerned are unaware of how they actually
reached the point where they are at loggerheads with others. Often we
assume that it must be the other person who has the problem and that we
don't do anything ourselves to cause the conflict. However, before you
accuse another person of having the attitude problem ask yourself if
any of these apply to you - do you:
Always
believe that you are right and only your opinion matters;
Tough
it out and refuse to give way on any issue;
Threaten
others in order to get your own way;
Instantly
react in a situation, never count to ten first before responding;
Talk
in a sarcastic or cynical way to others;
Undermine
others so that their position is weakened;
Don't
hold anything back, say anything that comes into your head;
Explode
in anger when you think that others let you down.
OR
Praise
the positive, before discussing the negative in any situation;
Resist
the need to use anger when you feel you are losing control;
Orchestrate
how you argue a point so that it appears to be a win-win result for
everyone;
Base your approach to
others on how you wish to be treated yourself - with respect;
Listen
to others and then explain clearly and calmly why you disagree with
them;
Empathise
with others and understand why their approach is different to yours and
determine how you are going to reach consensus;
Manage
communication effectively.
So next time you are
heading for conflict ask yourself who is it that has the problem?
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