|
Case Study - Bella & Eliza's Conflict
The Situation
Eliza and Bella both worked in administrative roles for a large company.
Eliza had been with the firm for about 12 months and Bella had been with
them for some 20 years. Eliza was a newly recruited graduate and Bella
had no credentials but they worked together in the same division
performing the same work.
Eliza complained to their divisional manager that Bella had been
withholding information from her on several occasions and had been
aggressive with her in staff meetings and that Bella ‘talked down to
her’ even though they worked at the same level.
The manager reassured Eliza that everyone knows that Bella can be a bit
abrasive and that she doesn’t mean any harm by it. She informed Eliza
that she would have a chat with Bella when an opportunity arose but that
it would not be in Eliza’s best interests to make a big deal out of it
and that in the mean time it is probably best to just ‘stay out of
Bella’s way’ when she was in ‘one of her moods’.
Over the next couple of months things got very busy for the manager and
so she did not follow up with Bella. Bella’s behaviour towards Eliza
continued and Eliza had assumed that the manager had spoken to Bella and
so was even more worried as it did not seem to produce any change.
As work pressures increase on the whole division over the next few
months the relationship between Eliza and Bella deteriorated and it
escalated to breaking point when an incident occurred during a staff
meeting at which Bella lost her temper with Eliza and humiliated her in
front of other staff.
Eliza then went on sick leave as she was feeling ‘stressed out’ by it
all.
HR became involved at this stage and offered Eliza and Bella mediation
as a way of trying to resolve the situation.
The Mediation
ScotCoach mediators met with Eliza and Bella individually and explored
with each of them how they saw the issues and what they each thought
would need to happen in order to move forward.
Eliza and Bella were then brought together in a joint session and the
Mediators assisted them both to listen to what the other person had to
say, to explore together what had happened and to arrive at workable
ways that they could agree on for how to move forward.
The individual sessions and the joint session only took a day in total
and at the end of the process Eliza and Bella had reached an agreement
about how they would resolve their differences in the future.
The Underlying Issues
It emerged during the mediation that Eliza had felt that Bella was
trying to control her and prevent her from working effectively. Bella
realised that she did feel threatened by Eliza’s qualifications and
angry because she felt that her 20 years of experience was not being
valued in the same way.
However during the mediation Eliza was able to let Bella know that she
had great respect for Bella’s experience and wanted to have the chance
to learn from her and share problems with her as she knew that having a
degree did not mean that she knew everything to do the job.
This represented a huge breakthrough for them both and having
established this as a new foundation for mutual trust respect they
agreed that they would always be open with each about what was happening
at work in the future and work as a team rather than against each other.
Added Value
It also emerged that Bella had been asking her mangers for some time to
support her to gain some qualifications that would reflect the depth of
her knowledge and experience, but there had always been a reason why
this could not happen and then when Eliza was brought as a graduate
entry level person she felt betrayed and brushed aside by her employer.
This explained why the manager had been observing Bella being ‘in a
mood’ at work at different times but rather than addressing these
concerns in a meaningful way Bella’s concerns or her behaviour were not
given any priority.
Subsequently Bella explored these issues with her managers and it was
agreed that she would receive support from her employer to become
qualified. As a result Bella stayed in her post and brought even more
value and loyalty to her organisation.
|