How to Manage Insubordination?
by Ruth Mayhew, Demand Media
Many instances of employee insubordination can be attributed to a breakdown in communication.
Insubordination diminishes productivity
and destroys workplace relationships between employees and their supervisors.
Therefore, the focus on managing insubordination must be to reduce violations
through improved communication skills and mutual respect in the workplace.
There are a number of ways to approach this problem; however, one effective way
to address the topic is through supervisor guidance on communicating work directives
clearly and with respect for employee expertise.
Step 1
Schedule meetings with small groups of
supervisors and managers to discuss insubordination and how it affects
employee, as well as organizational, performance. Identify employee responses
considered insubordinate and examples of how supervisors should respond when
employees refuse to perform their job duties, in any manner. Ask supervisors to
contribute their own definitions of insubordination and how they respond to
employees in these instances.
Step 2
Evaluate their responses and determine
which supervisors and managers need leadership or refresher training in
leadership skills and communication techniques. Explain the importance of
workplace communication skills and how to gain employee trust and confidence.
Engage the supervisors and managers in role-play activities to demonstrate how
to properly assign job duties, as well as how to provide constructive feedback
to employees who report to them.
Step 3
Identify supervisors who require
one-on-one guidance related to workplace communication, supervisory skills and
employee insubordination. Determine what they perceive as insubordination. Take
a copy of the employee handbook to each meeting, along with pertinent files for
your conferences, such as employment files, work records and performance
appraisals. Be prepared to discuss specific circumstances where either
supervisors complain about employee insubordination or employees express
concerns about their supervisors’ work directives.
Step 4
Meet with supervisor and employee teams
to discuss those specific circumstances. Engage in conflict resolution measures
when the employee and supervisor cannot see eye-to-eye on workplace processes.
Consider reassignment of either the employee or the supervisor if incidents of
insubordination have caused irreparable damage to the employee-supervisor
relationship.
Step 5
Restate workplace policies pertaining
to insubordination during an all-staff meeting. Stress the importance of using
communication skills and mutual respect for employee and supervisor roles.
Remind employees that policies concerning insubordination apply to all
employees, supervisors and managers. Describe the company’s interpretation of
insubordination, how the company consistently applies working policies,
consequences of minor incidents and repeated instances of refusal to perform
assigned duties.
Step 6
Revise employment forms to include
insubordination as a reason for disciplinary review or corrective action.
Prepare employee handbook revisions to maintain consistency in workplace
policies. Distribute new or revised policies and handbooks to all employees and
obtain signed acknowledgment forms for employees’ receipt and understanding of
the policy.
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