Stage-3: Resolving Conflicting Perspectives
Remember the Origin of Conflict:
Only the value set of the boundary issues must emerge from compartmentalizing responsibility for joint work.
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Even if few see themselves as arbitrators or negotiators, every manager must recognize that if the organization cannot grip those issues around which powerful divisions and disciplines come into conflict, achievement will be limited, crises will recur and failure, even disaster, may result.
● Production, marketing and R&D divisions will always have very different views on a particular new product or service. These must be reconciled to maximize the chances of success for any innovation.
● Both line-managers and personnel specialists have responsibility for staffing matters. So a workable division of effort must be found if there is not going to be omission or duplication of work with dissension and bad feelings.
Groups Develop Values
Organizational compartments—sections, like departments, divisions, units &c, have a coherence and logic based on their activities, and also supporting values according to the type of organization and sectional work. The strength of compartments lies in their budget-holding, planning powers, management authority, facilities and other resources. Most empire-building is sectional in nature.
Professional disciplines, by contrast, are like permanent tribes, whose members spread across society and are not confined to one organization. Their strength lies in their work methods and supporting values—which never fully align with management values. Tribes may also cleave to doctrines or theories.
Purely disciplinary-tribal perspectives must be validated because they are the basis for the self-respect and pride that experts have in their work. However, such perspectives must align with the work of the section where members are employed, or work will be subtly or overtly sabotaged according to how the particular expert feels.
read● Achievement is necessarily weakened by a dysfunctional culture. If legitimate and predictable differences of view are ignored by senior managers, then progress slows or divergent courses of action emerge causing aggravation and inefficiency.
● Note that the focus here is on culture rather than achievement. Power-based clashes over pay, benefits or unfairness must be handled effectively to achieve—irrespective of the cultural stage or state. Read more.
● The needed strong self-serving dialectical ways of deciding that dominate stagnant or chaotic public sector bureaucracies.
must not be confused with the wishy-washy andThe perspective here for explaining is: organizations first and the within them second.
To explore THEE that explores rather than . Two relevant sections are posted: one deals with effects of politics on choices in organizations ]; and the other identifies political activities within organizations.
more deeply, you can approach it from a perspective that puts . This perspective emerges from a different part ofDialectical Values & Principles
Disruptive contention, resentments and paralyses must be handled from the outset, but dialectical conventions can only be effectively emphasized and reinforced after a thorough accountability-based restructuring. The new cultural features are as follows:
In handling the situation:
● Grip divisive issues sooner rather than later.
● Be on the look out for areas of growing dissension and indicate a determination to resolve controversies positively.
● See in advance the good that will come out of airing group disagreements on major matters.
● Involve yourself, and all parties to the issue, and develop a basis for discussion.
● Treat inter-departmental differences as valid.
● Insist on a positive attitude to perspective-based conflict from all concerned.
● See any dispute as an opportunity to move forward jointly and sensibly, rather than as an irrational impediment.
● Explain that achievement can only be realized if everyone pulls together at the same time as doing their own thing.
● Allow and expect disciplinary members to work within both their own and 'foreign' departments.
● Discover the potential for joint contributions to meet organization-wide problems or challenges.
● Expect each side to genuinely try to find a way around difference, even while they play their own hand and bargain.
● Monitor progress on any agreements to ensure that working together persists.
● Recognize and reconcile the interests of all parties to any dispute at the outset and in the final outcome.
● Assign validity to divergent perspectives.
● Agree a consensus choice only if it is genuinely workable and aligned with existing accountabilities.
● Be prepared to conciliate or mediate when tensions run high.
● Resist the temptation to resolve disputes by pulling rank or clever manipulations.
● Avoid pandering to the powerful and neglecting the weak.
● View appeals to higher management for arbitration or decision as a last resort.
In handling the group:
● Respect tribal loyalties and ideals, without submitting to them.
● Positively welcome varying perspectives even if they clash.
● Accept and tolerate the validity of differing values and judgements in various sections and disciplines.
● Work to sustain good relationships by involving all affected staff in key decisions.
● View any disconnection, isolation, blaming, alienation and denigration amongst disciplines as serious problems to be overcome.
● Never imagine you can eradicate tribalism or have perfect harmony.
● Take as a principle: when matters are genuinely uncertain, the best result comes from the strongest possible debate.
● Set up and organize these debates sensibly and carefully.
● Ensure attendance, effective representation and high quality presentations.
● Agree the issue(s) to be tackled, and give all parties access to the relevant facts.
● Keep the needs of the organization in mind, allow the various parties to present their case, to bargain, to make bids and to offer counter-proposals.
● Maintain decorum at all times, and keep discussion friendly.
● Realize that the same data can support directly opposite views in poorly understood situations.
● If emotions are running high, use a neutral coordinator or external facilitator to handle the meeting fairly.
● Don't personalize irritations.
● Take agreed conclusions seriously, document agreement and instigate action.
● Satisfy both organizationally-created divisions and disciplinary groups.
● Treat genuine claims as valid, however divergent from organizational requirements.
● Take soundings, link with representatives and opinion-formers and consult widely.
● Don't confuse representative and executive arrangements.
● Ensure that people see their deeply held views being well-articulated and presented in the correct forums.
● Orchestrate communications to and from groups, taking particular care when writing or speaking about contentious or controversial matters.
In handling yourself:
● Realize that your own achievement does not depend just on your personal qualities (pragmatic) and position-cum-expertise (structuralist).
● You are also dependent on the support you get from your group and on its status and influence within the organization.
● Whether you like it or not, you are tribal at core. If you do not seem to be tribal, ask yourself where your tribalism lies so you can take it seriously.
● This means that you must recognize and affirm your loyalty, use your group representative when appropriate, maintain group solidarity, close ranks behind unfairly treated colleagues, and be prepared to compromise your personal aspirations (to a degree) to support your group.
● Strive to put your tribalism in the service of the organization.
The creation of a
markedly reduces tensions, releases progress, and increases comfort (not least for the CEO): so:- Check the installation of dialectic values, &/or
- Move on to their degeneration.
Originally posted: 17-Jun-2011