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The power of talented workers and how to deal with it

By Jo Hanlon

HAVE you ever had to consider how to manage those staff members in your organisation who are technically brilliant and very good at their job, but who have or are judged to have idiosyncratic or dysfunctional behaviours and attitudes?

They may behave in a way that is not aligned to the company culture and are seen as getting away with things that other staff are normally pulled-up on.

Unfortunately, this can result in the view that this staff member is being afforded special status in the organisation, leading to bad feelings, gossip and potentially a real resentment build up.

What do you do, as their high level of skills and talents may, in your mind, more than make up for the complaints that you are receiving.

Employers often say to me; “I just wish they’d all grow up and get on with it”. Easier said than done; however something needs to be done if you want to keep everyone engaged in doing their job and not gossiping and resenting you.

Increasingly diverse workplaces or an increase in your workforce means you are likely to have behavioural and attitudinal differences that may be due to:

• Dramatically different personality styles and working preferences.
• A diverse range of role specific skills and attributes.
• A resistance to change.
• Hiring minority groups.
• A melting pot of cultural norms.
• Varying lifecycle stages and home circumstances.
• Acute or chronic mental or physical health issues.
• Staff with physical or mental disabilities or undergoing rehabilitation regimes (workplaces usually have prior notice of this and employees are supported by case workers or specialty job placement agencies).
• Diagnosed or undiagnosed Autism Spectrum Disorders, ADD or ADHD, or
• Plain and simple bad behaviours and attitudes.

Firstly, the nature of the issues needs to be identified and if it’s simply a case of a person behaving badly, that needs to be addressed as soon as possible and not ignored.

One bad egg that refuses to change no matter how talented, is usually not worth the damage they can cause.

Job descriptions should contain technical skills and competencies required and company values and culturally based behaviours, this allows objective assessment and timely, appropriate management of problem staff.

Specific education and training, personal awareness and staff development, mediation and teambuilding exercises may also be useful to help smooth the waters, building tolerance and understanding.

If however there are genuine reasons for these behavioural differences which are not likely to change and you want to keep this person, a practical and realistic plan needs to be created and implemented to ensure the situation is dealt with appropriately for the benefit of all.

I am sure you know that businesses (PCBUs in WHS speak) and workers have a duty of care and legal obligation to prevent and deal promptly with workplace bullying, discrimination or harassment which may occur due to different attributes that exist between people.

There is also a requirement for every business to have in place a comprehensive suite of workplace policies and procedures (readily available from many sources), that all staff are trained on.

Communicating clearly on what are acceptable behaviours aligned to your company values is key to ensuring a common approach by all staff and building a strong culture.

Done well, this does not squash individuality but simply provides guardrails on laws of engagement with each other based on human decency.

Where there is a significant impact of the individual’s behaviour or attitudes on staff morale but you choose to keep them on, it may help to re-define the scope or delivery of their role to limit their impact on and involvement with others without being exclusionary or unfair.

Working remotely or teleworking may be useful options. Just remember, there is a fine line between bending over backwards to accommodate the specific needs of an individual and causing significant detriment to the rest of the team.

Jo Hanlon is a HR coach and business consultant who runs Mind Your Ps. Visit www.mindyourps.com.au

 

 

 



editor

Publisher
Michael Walls
michael@accessnews.com.au
0407 783 413

Access News is a print and digital media publisher established over 15 years and based in Western Sydney, Australia. Our newspaper titles include the flagship publication, Western Sydney Express, which is a trusted source of information and for hundreds of thousands of decision makers, businesspeople and residents looking for insights into the people, projects, opportunities and networks that shape Australia's fastest growing region - Greater Western Sydney.