Sunday, 13 September 2009

How to cope with office politics


Over the weekend, the Sunday Times published the following article. IT was in the Women's section of the paper which is interesting.
How to cope with office politics - Times Online

There was also a questionnaire.
Take the office-politician test - Times Online

The interesting point about this article was that it was 'encouraging' people to forget their morals whilst fighting for their job. Now, I know more than most about daggers in the back having been an opera singer. One story that's true, is that I was up for 2 roles over a year with a small professional company: not one that has ACE funding! Dates were discussed and the feedback I had after the audition and subsequent phone calls with admin and the director was very positive. Then everything went quiet.... A very inferior (in my opinion) singer was cast for both roles although they weren't suitable for her. A few years later, I was on a tour and a member of the company's board was singing. I'd forgotten the disappointment but he revealed the real story of the casting: the other singer threatened everything from cutting up the director's clothes, to leaving threatening messages on answerphones. What clinched it for her was when she threatened to take her life - she even staged a mock suicide (over the phone) to get her way. Of course no one has any respect for her (and didn't then) but she got her way. This article would encourage immoral shenanigans like this in order to keep your job.

So: getting back to the article; many people, particularly women were encouraged to 'keep your head down' and work hard. This is particularly a trait of women (at school they should be good) and people of my parents' generation who had a job for life. Yet the questionnaire would consider you to be 'naive' and up for losing your job in the next cull. The opposite "The loser" who basically throws their toys out of the pram every time something goes wrong also gets the red card.

Interestingly our opera 'friend' would be a Machiavellian: a trait that can keep your job, whilst 'star player' also wins on the job keeping stake. The premise of this article is that you have to forget your upbringing and morals to keep your job. You need to point the finger at others when things go wrong and blow your own trumpet when things go right.

We can all cite examples of people taking credit for work you or others have done; we also see examples of people putting the boot in on The Apprentice. The trouble is that if one isn't careful, they could reach the top - think Mandelson...

I'm not a work psychologist, but the message I have here is - keep sending positive messages - verbally/by email/actions etc of your work. If you can't stand someone and have to work with them, openly discuss it so that you can come to a working agreement and be more focused on the project. Be visible - working - bringing in good news stories - being there - available. Keep your head up; shoulders down. Even if you're worried about your job, don't give the impression you are.
Lastly: have at least 2 'good news' stories that you can discuss with anyone you bump into at work each week. You can always spin a neutral story. Focus on yourself: your team and the work you are involved in.

Good luck. More information from
http://www.executivevoice.co.uk

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