In%20Mixed%20Company%20Chapter%20Ten - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

In%20Mixed%20Company%20Chapter%20Ten

Description:

In Mixed Company Chapter Ten Conflict Management In Groups Conflict Defined Conflict is the expressed struggle between two interconnected parties who perceive ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:114
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: irig151
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: In%20Mixed%20Company%20Chapter%20Ten


1
In Mixed Company Chapter Ten
  • Conflict Management In Groups

2
Conflict Defined
  • Conflict is the expressed struggle between two
    interconnected parties who perceive incompatible
    goals and interference from each other in
    attaining those goals.

3
Destructive and Constructive Conflict
  • Moderate amounts of conflict can be a
    constructive force in groups if the conflict is
    managed competently.
  • The principal difference is how competent the
    communication is when transacting the conflict.
  • Destructive conflict is characterized by
    dominating, escalating, retaliating, competing,
    defensive, and inflexible communication patterns.
  • Constructive conflict is characterized by
    communication that is We oriented, de-escalating,
    cooperative, supportive, and flexible.
  • The principle focus is on trying to achieve a
    solution between struggling parties that is
    mutually satisfactory to everyone.

4
Styles of Conflict
  • A communication style of conflict management is
    oriented toward conflict.
  • Since conflict can be an essential catalyst for
    growth in a system, increasing conflict may be
    required to evoke change.

5
Collaborating Problem Solving
  • The collaborating style is a win-win cooperative
    approach to conflict. It attempts to satisfy all
    parties. Someone employing this style has a high
    concern for both task and social relationships in
    groups.
  • A collaborating style has three key components
    confrontation, integration, and smoothing.

6
Confrontation Addressing the Problem
  • The overt recognition that conflict exists in a
    group and the direct to manage it effectively is
    confrontation.
  • Not all issues are worth confronting, members who
    confront even trivial differences of opinion or
    cant let a momentary flash of pique go
    unattended.
  • Groups have to decide which issues and concerns
    are priorities and which are tangential.

7
Confrontation Addressing the Problem
  • Integration, a collaborative technique that
    devises creative solutions that are mutually
    satisfactory for all parties in conflict.
  • The act of calming the agitated feelings of group
    members during a conflict episode is called
    smoothing.
  • Since collaborating is such an effective
    communication style for solving conflicts of
    interests, why isnt it always used in the
    solutions.
  • Collaborating usually requires a significant
    investment of time and effort along with
    greater-than-ordinary communication skills.
  • Collaboration is based on trust.
  • Parties in a conflict sometimes do not share the
    same emotional investment in finding an agreeable
    solution for all involved.

8
Accommodating
  • Accommodating style yields to the concerns and
    desires of others.
  • Someone using this style shows a high concern for
    social relationships but low concern for task
    accomplishment.
  • Yielding on issues of incidental concern to your
    group but of major concern to other parties while
    holding firm on issues of importance to your
    group usually achieves mutually advantageous
    outcomes.

9
Compromising
  • We give up something to get something. Someone
    using this style shows a moderate concern for
    both task and social relationships in groups.
  • When an integrative solution cant be achieved,
    when a temporary settlement is the only feasible
    alternative or when the issues involved are not
    considered critical to the group, comprising can
    be useful.

10
Avoiding
  • A communication style of withdrawing from
    potentially contentious and unpleasant struggles.
  • Someone using the avoiding conflict style shows
    little concern for both task and social
    relationships in groups.

11
Competing
  • Someone using a competing or forcing style shows
    high concern for take but low concern for
    relationships in groups.
  • Someone using a competing or forcing style shows
    as a means of furthering personal more than group
    goals (Me-Not-We-Orientation)
  • Making friends and developing a positive social
    climate are secondary and expendable.

12
Communication Styles of Conflict Management
Style Task-Social Dimension
Collaborating (Problem Solving) High task, high social
Accommodating (Yielding) Low task, high social
Compromising Moderate task, moderate social
Avoiding (Withdrawing) Low task, low social
Competing (Power-forcing) High task, low social
13
Task Conflict Routine or Non Routine
  • A routine task is one in which the group performs
    processes and procedures that have little
    variability and little likelihood of change.
  • A non-routine task is one that requires problem
    solving, has a few set procedures, and has a high
    level of uncertainty.
  • Conflicts about routine tasks often have a
    negative effect on group performance, while
    conflicts about non-routine task often have a
    positive effect.

14
Relationship Conflict
  • If a relationship is one of trust and
    cooperation, regardless of the power disparities,
    then collaborating has real potential.

15
Interconnectedness of Task and Relationship
Conflict
  • Recognizing the interconnectedness of task and
    relationship dimensions of groups can be critical
    arises.

16
Values Conflict
  • Values are the most deeply felt views of what is
    deemed good, worthwhile, and right.
  • Beliefs are what we think is true and probable.
  • Values conflicts are especially difficult to
    manage when members of different cultures clash
    over divergent worldviews.

17
Negotiation
  • Negotiating strategies are the ways we transact
    these joint decisions when conflict arise.
  • Conflict spirals- the escalating cycle of
    negative communication that produces destructive
    conflict.
  • Reformed sinner strategy initially competes or
    acts though, then cooperatives and relaxes
    demands.

18
Graduated and Reciprocated Initiatives in Tension
Reduction (GRIT)
  1. Issue a sincere public statement expressing a
    desire to de-escalate the conflict.
  2. Specify the concession to be made, clarifying
    what, when, how, the action will be undertaken.
  3. Follow through and complete the concession, but
    do not make this contingent on reciprocation by
    the other parties.
  4. Encourage, but do not demand, reciprocation from
    the other parties.
  5. Make no high-risk concessions that leave you
    vulnerable or in an indefensible position. Dont
    give away the store.

19
The Four Principled Negotiation
  • Principled negotiations changes the rules from
    competitive to cooperative. The four basic
    elements to this approach with corresponding
    principles for each element.
  • Separating the people from the problem.
  • Negotiating interests first, not arguing
    positions, is critical.
  • Positions are the concrete things one party
    wants. Interests are the intangible motivations
    needs, desires, concerns, fears, aspirations-that
    lead a party in the conflict to take a position.
  • Generating a variety of options is another aspect
    of principled negotiation which rests on
    establishing objective standards for weighing the
    merits and demerits of any proposal.

20
Anger Management
  • The difference between constructive and
    destructive anger depends on tow conditions the
    intensity and duration.
  • Intensity of anger can very from mild irration to
    outright rage.
  • Duration or how long it lasts determines whether
    anger is constructive or destructive.

21
Managing Your Anger
  1. Reframe self-talk
  2. Listen non-defensively
  3. Deliberately calm yourself
  4. Find distractions

22
Managing The Anger of Others
  1. Be asymmetrical- do not strike back in kind
  2. Validate the other person
  3. Probe
  4. Distract (Shifting the other persons focus)
  5. Assume a problem orientation
  6. Refuse to be abused
  7. Disengage
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com