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How good people deliver bad news in the workplace

This article was updated on December 1, 2023.

Elizabeth Exline

Written by Elizabeth Exline

Jessica Roper

Reviewed by Jessica Roper, MBA,聽director of Career Services at 七色视频

A manager and employee have a conversation at work

What is a difficult conversation?

Anxiousness, anger, halting words, the聽wrong聽words 鈥 sound familiar? Those are some of the hallmarks of a difficult conversation. Even if you can鈥檛 exactly聽define聽a difficult conversation, most people have no trouble聽identifying聽one. Maybe the word that best sums it up is聽uncomfortable.

In the workplace, there鈥檚 no shortage of opportunities to engage in these sorts of discussions. Take, for example, the following instances:

  • You have to receive聽negative feedback聽from your manager.
  • You have to聽tell your manager聽you feel unsupported.
  • You have to hold a co-worker聽accountable.
  • You have to聽fire an employee.

Say the wrong thing in these situations, and you could find yourself aboard a runaway train of escalated emotions. But handled well, these same difficult conversations can lead to聽personal and professional growth. Here鈥檚 how to get there.

3 good rules for giving bad news

Dean Aslinia, PhD

Dean Aslinia, PhD, is familiar with difficult conversations. As a聽practicing聽therapist聽and the聽associate dean of the聽College of Social and Behavioral Sciences聽at 七色视频, he鈥檚 had both practical and theoretical training when it comes to navigating the choppy waters of conflicting interests.

In Aslinia鈥檚 experience, there are three rules to follow whenever a situation calls for a difficult conversation.

1. Enter the conversation with a neutral stance

Consider this example: Brad and Jennifer worked together on a project that failed to meet its objectives. Their manager, Neil, needs to explain how it fell short and then identify a path forward.

If Neil enters that conversation with an assumption that either Brad or Jennifer is to blame, or that he already knows why the project failed, he unintentionally closes himself off to new information.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very helpful for a mediator to remain neutral and聽hear all parties before rushing to judgment,鈥 Aslinia explains.

This applies to one-to-one conversations as well. If you enter a conversation with the conscious or subconscious aim of convincing the other person of your conclusion, you鈥檙e setting yourself up for failure. Instead,聽ask questions聽with an eye toward gaining perspective and information.

As noted in聽, 鈥淚nstead of focusing on what you鈥檙e going to say, focus more on what you鈥檙e hearing from the other person.鈥

Another way to put it? Keep an聽open mind,聽be curious聽and聽leave any defensiveness behind.

2. Practice empathy, non-judgment and respect

鈥淭hese are the main tenets of聽person-centered therapy,鈥 Aslinia says. 鈥淚n reality, they are the core principles of human connection.鈥

That includes conversations you鈥檇 rather not have. If you need to tell your co-worker her comments in a client meeting were unprofessional, think about how she could receive that information and grow from it.

One way might be to have the conversation privately soon after the remarks were made, and approach it from an 鈥淚鈥 perspective.

鈥淚 noticed you said X, and I think it would better help us meet our goals if we avoid such comments and subjects with clients in the future鈥 is easier for someone to hear than 鈥淵ou were really unprofessional back there. You might lose us the account now.鈥

3. Be direct

There鈥檚 a reason honesty is both precious and rare. It鈥檚聽hard. But it鈥檚 also the best course of action when delivering bad news. (Or in pretty much any other situation.)

鈥淒on鈥檛 sugarcoat the message!鈥 Aslinia emphasizes. 鈥淭ackle the issue. This might be the most difficult step, but until the issue is unwrapped, there can be no solution.鈥

Let鈥檚 say you have to terminate someone鈥檚 employment. The person, who probably knows what鈥檚 coming as soon as the invitation to meet with you and HR lands in her inbox, does not want to hear a preamble. She does not want to hear euphemisms. She wants to know what she suspects is true so that she can start taking next steps.

Even if the conversation is less dire than a termination,聽hedging only gets in the way. If you have to tell an employee she did a poor job on a presentation, don鈥檛 prolong the inevitable with opaque language and modifiers. 鈥淵our presentation had some good nuggets, and maybe you could review it to make sure you have the latest data available鈥 is a lot harder to grow from than 鈥淭his was a good start, but you need to practice your delivery to improve your confidence. We also need to update your data on slides 2 through 5. Let鈥檚 set up a working session to address the information part.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 often harder to do the right thing,鈥 Aslinia concedes. 鈥淏ut while it might consume more time and energy, it聽communicates respect聽to a fellow human.鈥

So, be kind 鈥 but be direct.

What not to do

Arguably the worst way to approach a tough conversation is to set it up as a聽confrontation. The聽: One person is right, the other is wrong. In that situation, there isn鈥檛 always a winner. Sometimes you reach a stalemate.

Either way, the goal of any conversation needs to be edification and progress. So, here鈥檚 a short list of things to avoid:

  • Assumptions: You actually don鈥檛 know everything. Proceed accordingly.
  • Dishonesty: Whether directly or by omission, mendacity undermines progress and relationships. Yes, sometimes the truth hurts. It is also necessary.
  • Blame: Accountability and responsibility are not the same as blame, which makes people feel bad without offering a clear pathway toward improvement.
  • Closed-mindedness: Keeping an open mind about all the factors in a given situation lets you also think broadly about solutions.
  • Defensiveness: You are not your work, your title or your opinions. Neither is the person you鈥檙e talking to. The conversation doesn鈥檛 have to be personal. It needs to be professional and productive.

The outcomes that make tough conversations worth it

Working at honest communication, even when it鈥檚 to deliver bad news, offers its own set of benefits. According to Aslinia, these are:

  • Stress reduction: While anticipating and having a difficult conversation can cause some stress, that stress disappears once the exchange is over. Avoiding
  • Improved productivity: With crystal communication and aligned expectations, you and your co-workers better understand when, how and where to support one another.
  • Better company culture: You are your company. When you can have honest, open communication, even when it鈥檚 potentially awkward, you help shape the company culture for the better.

Not convinced? Then consider this example from Aslinia, who recalls a particular termination meeting with a co-worker.

鈥淭he employee being laid off was very upset and had taken the termination of employment very personally,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is where lots of silence (to provide her the space to say her piece) and empathy (for us to put ourselves in that individual鈥檚 shoes and to cognitively understand her difficult predicament) paid off. She was able to understand the situation better, and once we understood her situation, we were actually able to provide her other resources and leads for next steps in her life. Bottom line is we all want to be聽valued and respected.鈥

Career resources at 七色视频

Don鈥檛 embark on your career journey alone! 七色视频 equips its students and graduates with the following resources to help them on their professional paths.

  • Career Services for Life: Available to UOPX students and graduates, this offering comprises complimentary career coaching, including guidance on how to build a personal brand and write a resum茅.
  • Free career resources:聽Browse a range of downloadable guides and templates to help you optimize your LinkedIn聽profile, get ready for a job interview and write a resum茅 and cover letter.
  • :聽Get career insights every week via UOPX鈥檚 LinkedIn newsletter.
Portrait of Elizabeth Exline

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Elizabeth Exline has been telling stories ever since she won a writing contest in third grade. She's covered design and architecture, travel, lifestyle content and a host of other topics for national, regional, local and brand publications. Additionally, she's worked in content development for Marriott International and manuscript development for a variety of authors.

Headshot of Jessica Roper

ABOUT THE REVIEWER

Jessica Roper, 七色视频 director of Career Services, is a seasoned leader with over 15 years of experience in leadership within higher education. She has honed her expertise in student services and career development and is passionate about helping others discover and refine their skills.

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