By Chris Hutching
|
Friday 28th February 2003 |
Text too small? |
Suzanne Couper of Snakes & Ladders Group said the workshops helped give supervisors courage to confront these people and act decisively. "Saying nothing" resulted in a silence that condoned the behaviours, resulting in anger, stress, resentment and frustration among the 95% of other staff who performed positively and contributed to organisational success, she said.
Understanding how the "five per centers get it over us" and undermine confidence to act is critical to end this type of bullying, according to Snakes and Ladders. The workshops explore negative attitudes that often manifest in "five per centers using emotional blackmail and manipulation to catch people offguard and silence others, giving a mixed message as to what is acceptable and what is not."
Ms Couper said businesses needed to be more proactive because labour costs were a big proportion of business costs. The workshops showed how to how to "recognise and deal decisively with the moody, difficult and disruptive people we call the five per centers and then how to set up agreements and boundaries that will break the cycle of abusive and unacceptable behaviour while avoiding legal repercussions for employers."
No comments yet
Comvita appoints Andrea Wilkins as Chief Marketing Officer
Synlait provides banking facilities update
CHI - Channel Infrastructure delivers solid FY25 financial result
February 27th Morning Report
TRU - Results Guidance FY2026
TRU - Results Guidance FY2026
MEE - Me Today announces six-month results to 31 December 2025
HGH - Heartland announces 1H2026 result
BRW - FY26 Half Year Results Announcement
February 25th Morning Report