Disciplinary Action for "Attitude"??
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We have an employee who is pretty much driving us "nuts"!! He is sooo.. negative and constantly "whining".. feels he is over-worked (which is is NOT) and is just constantly complaining to everyone about pretty much "anything"... We must work as a team here, and he is really causing many employees (and his supervisor) some real aggravation. I know it's extremely hard to discipline someone for "attitude", but there must be a way!! Any suggestions? (He has been verbally talked to, but in no way is improving..)
Comments
I agree with Rockie talked to him to see where his head is at as far as his position with the company.
I teach our supervisors to speak "specific behavior", which is something that we people either see or hear and can mentally put words on to identify the actions being witnessed. "Be happy at work" is in the eyes and the ears of the be-holder, like "work safely", or "work fast" and many other terms, we all have an idea but what is the standard on which I am being graded and evaluated? If I am to work happily for one supervisor, the boss, to whom I answer, the supervisor must show me (to see or hear)what it is that I am expected to achieve to obtain success!
If I do not understand all treats and discipline will not assist me in representing myself in any different frame of behavior.
Animal trainers are great communicators, don't forget we are animals, and we respond in kind with great satisfying actions for those that communicate with us and not to us.
It is easy to terminate someone with a bad attitude, just send them on their way! It is much easier to communicate with employees and save an otherwise lost but valuable sole.
May we have have another Blessed day!
PORK
"Whack them before they whack you. Watch for this scenario: an employee who continually complains about management, who thinks her boss is treating her badly because of a "personality conflict," and who's constantly in the human resources office talking about how unfair things are. She's an unhappy person, and it's your job to see that she'd be happier someplace else. Sooner or later, someone with that mindset will morph from an at-will employee into one protected by the law by claiming that management is treating her differently because she's in a protected category. So whack her before she whacks you.
And our experience tells us that one of the most unethical things a manager can do is keep an employee in a job for which she isn't suited. Every day, every hour, every minute she spends in that job is one less day, one less hour, one less minute she could be at a different company making a true contribution. Even though it's natural not to want to confront a problem (at least for me), it's unethical not to."
This may be a dramatic move, but just because you hired the employee at one time, and they may have made a contribution at one point, does not mean you need to let them hang around, display a bad attitude, and generally muck up the works. You can encourage your supervisors to document problems, but if this is just a general bad fit, consider terminating and replacing the worker with someone more likely to get the work done and improve the atmosphere.
Anne Williams
Attorney Editor
M. Lee Smith Publishers, LLC
examples. examples. examples. Just the facts. 'She snorted, rolled her eyes and people don't like her and she's not a team player' will lose it every time in every hearing venue.