Staff Insubordination Policies
by Ruth Mayhew, Demand Media
Insubordination might be overt or covert refusal to do the work assigned.
Insubordination policies are intended
to regulate employee behavior. However, if they restrict the way employees
communicate with their supervisors, they could have unintended consequences,
such as trepidation among employees and overzealous supervisors criticizing
employees at the mere suggestion that they aren't obeying work orders. Small
businesses, in particular, have to determine the level of authority they want
supervisors to have concerning insubordination policies. Considering the close
working relationships that occur in small businesses, it could be wise to simply
stress that mutual respect is required and leave it up to employees to abide by
basic rules of professional courtesy.
Guidelines
Before your company can develop and
implement a workplace policy on staff insubordination, you must define
insubordination. Defining insubordination is difficult if you're trying to
include specific behaviors and actions that you believe are inappropriate.
Instead of creating a list, focus on the elements that constitute
insubordination. The three elements include a work directive from the
employee's superior, acknowledgment from the employee and the employee's covert
or overt refusal.
Leadership Role
Providing guidelines -- rather than a
list of employee responses that might be insubordinate -- gives your leadership
team members the latitude to decide what they believe are inappropriate
workplace behaviors. After you establish the guidelines for insubordination,
give supervisors and managers the authority to use their discretion in
determining what's inappropriate behavior based on the relationship that each
supervisor has with her employees.
Training
Before you put the guidelines in place,
train supervisors and managers on how to evaluate insubordinate behavior and
actions. Leadership training shouldn't dictate how supervisors and managers
should react to employees -- it teaches them to use their critical thinking and
communication skills in dealing with their employees. Training also encourages
supervisors to look at the type of relationship they have with their staff in
gauging whether an employee response crosses the line into insubordination.
Discipline
Just as putting insubordination into a
box is difficult, so is deciding what type of discipline is appropriate when an
employee's behavior warrants it. Discipline for insubordination can range from
a verbal disciplinary counseling for the first occurrence to termination for
employees who are repeatedly insubordinate. If your company has a progressive
disciplinary policy, then it must be enforced consistently. On the other hand,
if you give your supervisors latitude to determine what constitutes insubordination,
you must also give them the authority to determine the appropriate discipline.
Policy Language
Determine what constitutes
insubordination on a case-by-case basis and state that in your employee
handbook. Constructing a list of behaviors and actions and matching the
discipline to the offense is practically impossible, particularly if you give
supervisors and managers authority that's consistent with their positions. Use
policy language in your handbook that stresses the importance of mutual respect
in the workplace instead of attempting to create an exhaustive list of
inappropriate employee responses to supervisor work orders.
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