How to Confront Employee Insubordination
by Arnold Anderson, Demand Media
There is a proper way to handle an insubordinate employee.
Insubordination from an employee can
lead to problems with other employees in the office. According to Mott
Community College, insubordinate behavior by one employee can cause a drop in
departmental morale and it can give the impression that the manager is losing
control of employees. There are steps that a manager should follow before
confronting employee insubordination. Reacting emotionally is the wrong
response and that can cause you to make the wrong decision.
Step 1
Review the employee's records to see if
there is a history of this sort of behavior. If there is no history, then
examine the situation to see if there may be some underlying cause. If there is
a history, then consider implementing company discipline.
Step 2
Discuss the situation with human
resources to discuss possible options. If you feel that the situation would
benefit from a talk with the employee, then it may not be necessary to
recommend disciplinary actions. An habitually insubordinate employee will need
to be reprimanded. Have human resources work with you on developing the proper
paper work for disciplinary actions.
Step 3
Schedule a personal meeting with the
employee to discuss the situation. Try to only give one day's notice on the
meeting time as you want to address insubordination immediately before it
starts to affect morale in the office. Include a human resources representative
present at the meeting.
Step 4
Discuss the situation with the employee
at the meeting and find out the circumstances that cause the insubordination.
Maintain a professional demeanor and tone at all times. Avoid emotional
conflict, and do not allow the situation to escalate into a shouting match.
Step 5
Dispense the solution that you feel is
appropriate. If you feel satisfied that you and the employee have come to an
agreement, then ask human resources to make a note of that in the file and
close the issue. If the employee has not responded to rational conversation,
then issue disciplinary action according to human resources guidelines.
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