"He Hate Me": Turning Their Bad Attitude Into Your Great Results
"He Hate Me" was the nickname of Rod Smart, a leading rusher in 2002 for the
Las Vegas Outlaws of the now defunct XFL pro football league. Looking for an
edge, the XFL allowed players to put nicknames on their uniforms. "I was always
saying, 'he hate me,' all through camp in Vegas," Smart said. "If I didn't get
the ball, I'd talk to the other running backs and say, 'he hate me, man; this
coach hate me.' I was always saying that." Smart put He Hate Me on the back of
his number 32 jersey, and now the name lives in lore even though XFL has been
out of business for years.
When I first saw Rod Smart play and his "He Hate Me" jersey, I thought, "Forget
about football. That's a leadership lesson!" That's because "He Hate Me" and
leadership often go hand-in-hand.
Clearly, leadership is not about winning a popularity contest, it's about
getting results -- not just average results but more results faster
continually. To lead people to get the latter,you often must challenge them to
do not want they want to do but what they don't want to do.
That's where "He Hate Me" comes in. When you move people from being comfortable
getting average results to being uncomfortable doing what's needed to get great
results, strong feelings, hatred and anger, are often triggered. Having people
resent you, even hate you, comes with the territory of being a leader. In fact,
if you are not getting a portion of the people you lead angry with you, you may
not be challenging them enough.
This does not mean you let their anger fester. You absolutely must deal with
it. After all, you can't motivate angry, resentful, "He Hate Me" people to be
your cause leaders.
Here is my four-step process to help you deal with angry people you lead. (1)
RECOGNIZE. (2) IDENTIFY. (3) VALIDATE. (4)TRANSLATE.
RECOGNIZE: Recognize that if you don't face up to the anger of the people you
lead, that anger will eventually wind up stabbing you in the back.
Many leaders could care less about people's anger. They say in effect: "People
should do what I tell them to do. Period. Their feelings are irrelevant." If
'my-way-or-the-highway' is your way of leading, don't engage in this process. I
submit, however, that such leadership is far less effective than the leadership
that motivates people to be your ardent cause leaders.
Making motivation happen involves first understanding if people are angry with
you or not. Often, people won't tell you they are angry. They'll try hide it
from you either out of embarrassment, trepidation, or wanting a sense of
control.
Here are ways you can recognize that people are angry with you. The first is
that you can see it on their faces or their body language. The second is that
you can tell it in a drop off in their performance. The third is that you hear
from other people they are angry. The fourth is they actually tell you they are
angry.
IDENTIFY: Identify the causes of their anger. This may not be as simple or as
easy as you think. They may be angry, but they may not want to talk about why
they are angry or even admit to you that they are. Don't back them in a corner.
Don't make judgments. Don't get angry yourself. Get interested. Don't say, for
instance, "You're angry ... " Instead, ask open-ended questions like, "Are you
angry with me?" -- a question that seems on the surface only slightly different
but that will make a big difference in the consequences of your interactions
with them.
Once you and they have identified that they are angry, come to an agreement as
to the actual reasons why. Drill through superficial reasons to the bedrock of
why. They may say they are angry because you are giving them more work to do.
But digging further, you may find out that they believe the supposed extra work
will set them up for failure, and they might lose their jobs. So, they are
really angry not simply for work-load reasons but for job security reasons.
VALIDATE: Validate their anger. Their anger is real and important to them. It's
who they perceive themselves to be (at the moment they feel angry) in their
relationship with you. Many people embrace their anger. They may see it as the
one thing that they can control in an environment in which they feel out of
control. If you try to ignore that anger or belittle it, they will feel you are
belittling them.
Tell them that you know they are angry and that you want to find out why. Avoid
saying things like, "I know you're angry ... but ... " That "but" can harden
them against you. Saying, "Help me understand why you feel angry about what I'm
doing." can get you farther than the "but." This is not to condone their anger
nor approve of it but simply to come to an agreement with them that it exists
and that you intend to do something about it in a way that will be mutually
beneficial.
TRANSLATE: Their anger is your opportunity, an opportunity to translate their
anger into your results. Because, as you'll see, their anger can be great raw
material for results.
People get angry for many reasons. * Their time is being wasted. * Their
individual worth is not respected. * They feel threatened. * Their efforts are
not appreciated. 5. They are not given voice or choice in their work. * Their
values are not recognized or given credence. * Their leaders cannot do their
jobs well. * Their leaders focus on their own needs. * Their leaders don't
understand and acknowledge their needs. * Their leaders don't provide clear
direction. * They are being overworked. 11. They are being set up to fail.
Here is a process for translating their anger into your results.
I call it the problem/solution/action process. The key to this process is that
people's anger usually stems from an unresolved problem. A. With their help,
identify the problem. B. Come to an agreement with them as to the causes of
that problem. C. Help them find a solution. D. Challenge them to take action to
solve the problem. E. Link that action to increases in results.
You can apply this process to any of the aforementioned reasons people get
angry. As an example, let's apply it to the first reason. Often, a key
challenge in getting others to take new action is their complaining you are
wasting their time.
-
Draw up two lists, one composed of the aspects of their job they believe waste
their time, and the other of the aspects they feel are crucial.
-
Come to an agreement with them on which aspects are truly a waste of their time
and which aren't. Without such agreement, they may remain angry with you. For
instance, they may feel that their having to complete a particular report or
aspects of that report wastes their time. If you think that such reports are
absolutely essential, you cannot continue this process unless you convince them
that the reports are essential or that you will change them to make them
essential.
-
Once you come to that agreement, work on each aspect in the "waste of time"
list by applying this analytical tool: Decide if you want to leave it alone,
change it, or eliminate it. There is no fourth choice!
-
If you have chosen to change it, have them suggest actions they will take to do
so. Note the sequence here. Your first step in changing an aspect is to elicit
from them what needs to be changed and the actions required to affect the
change. If need be, you can always veto their choice. But if you first let them
make that choice, you may find that they have delineated actions that tap a new
vein of results. At the very least, they will be committed to those actions,
since they go right to the heart of solving the problem of their anger.
-
Link those actions to increases in results. For instance, now that they have
reduced, eliminated or changed a particular aspect of their job that was a
problem for them, how will that translate into money saved/earned?
Be advised: You may be confronted by "professionally angry" people who will be
angry and stay angry no matter what you do. Just being you or just being a
leader or just being you as a leader gets them angry, and nothing you can do or
say seems to change that. But keep working the four-step process. It's your
best way of remedying even the "professionals" anger.
2005 © The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
PERMISSION TO REPUBLISH: This article may be republished in newsletters and on
web sites provided attribution is provided to the author, and it appears with
the included copyright, resource box and live web site link. Email notice of
intent to publish is appreciated but not required: mail to:
brent@actionleadership.com
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The author of 23 books, Brent Filson's recent books are,
THE LEADERSHIP TALK: THE GREATEST LEADERSHIP TOOL and
101 WAYS TO GIVE GREAT LEADERSHIP TALKS. He is founder and president of
The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. - and has worked with thousands of leaders
worldwide during the past 20 years helping them achieve sizable increases in
hard, measured results. Sign up for his free leadership ezine and get a free
guide, "49 Ways To Turn Action Into Results," at
www.actionleadership.com.
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