Are you a timid business owner or Human Resource person?
Do you have trouble dealing with employee insubordination? We believe
the best way to handle this problem is to react immediately. Waiting
can make matters worse. When other employees see a coworker getting
away with insubordinate behavior, it encourages them to act the same
way.
But you must confront the insubordinate worker using the policies
or procedures in place. A systematic, unbiased approach is necessary.
If you just blindly react to the employee in question, it can create
chaos in the workplace. Not only is this uncomfortable, but you lose
the opportunity to bring the employee back into the fold. Also you
risk your reputation with the other workers and possibly with your
management. This will affect your ability to manage all employees in
the long-term.
That said, effectively dealing with this problem in a professional
manner is stressful for most managers. Let me explain.
Employee insubordination clearly tells you that
your worker does not respect you. This disrespect can occur in many
different forms. For
example, an employee may talk back to you during inappropriate times.
Also, he or she may not listen to your directions or regularly "forget" what
you told them to do. Even worse, this worker may ignore your previous
attempts at discipline.
Employee Insubordination Tools
So you must deal with the problem employee immediately and professionally.
How do you go about doing this?
First review your current policies and procedures. If you are a small
business owner and do not have such policies, now is the time to create
them. Not only is it important to have a set of workplace rules, but
every employee should be familiar with them. These rules can take the
form of a handbook or just a simple posting or bulletin.
Part of these rules should be to meet with the problem employee. Why
is this important? Sometimes employees have troubles related to their
life outside their work environment. Everyone has a story. If you take
the time to sit the employee down, and draw them into a conversation
that is not accusatory or confrontational, then they may explain what
is going on with them outside work. If this is the case, nine times
out of ten the employee will return to good behavior.
However if this tactic fails, then you must make full use of your
policies and reprimand the employee. Your job, as business manager
or owner, is to enforce the workplace rules.
Start down the path towards termination. Often it is difficult to
fire an employee over a single incident of insubordination. You may
have to meet regularly with this individual, set goals and resolve
problems on an ongoing basis. Once the employee realizes you are checking
the situation, their behavior may improve. If not, you are already
down the path of ending their employment.
Be aware that employee insubordination can severely damage your business.
Employees that disrespect authority in the workplace can lose potential
clients, anger current customers or endanger their coworkers. At the
very least, it can lower overall productivity. Arm yourself with policies
and existing rules and tackle the situation head-on.
By doing this you may bring the errant employee back into the fold.
And if the insubordinate worker elects to buck the system, you are
better-off without him or her. This way of handling insubordinate workers
will help preserve a more orderly workplace making it better for all
of your employees.
This
is how you get rid of a bad employee.