Thursday, November 14, 2019
5 Ways Youre Unintentionally Scaring Your Co-workers
5 Ways Youre Unintentionally Scaring Your Co-workers 5 Ways Youre Unintentionally Scaring Your Co-workers If you overheard a few co-workers talking about you outside the office, what would you want to hear? Brilliant? Insightful? Truly inspirational- she has enough willpower to hold off on eating her lunch until 12:01 PM every day? All of the above, of course. Well, what if instead you heard: means well, butâ¦, yes, that email thing she does is horrifying, heâs without a doubt taking years off my life. Thatâs not as fun. So, how can you avoid this hypothetical situation from ever happening? Well, you can make sure that youâre not accidentally committing any of these common mistakes that tend to scare people. And not scare, like âBoo! Iâve been hiding under your desk all day!â- but scare like forcing people to ask themselves questions like: âDoes this mean Iâm getting fired tomorrow?â and âDo I have to cancel my vacation now?â Confident that youâre not that person? Trust me: So is everyone else. Why not double check and make sure youâre definitely not doing any of the following on a regular basis. 1. Delivering All Updates Using Your CAPS LOCK Voice You receive an email from a client that the presentation needs to be revamped by end of day tomorrow. Do you: A) Forward the email to your co-worker with a few thoughts on how this can be best be accomplished. B) Spot him heading out for the day, chase after him and yell, âCrap, I need to send you that client email. Weâre royally screwed! No way weâre keeping this account and hitting goal this year.â While it can be tempting to go with B when youâre in the heat of the moment, itâs much more helpful for everyone involved if you take a deep breath, decide who needs to be looped in (hint: not everyone), and write out your thoughts on practical next steps to take. If those steps include âsleeping over at the office to get this doneâ and âfinding innovative new ways to say the f-word,â take another breath and try again. 2. Sending Emails With Vague Subject Lines Do you know whatâs horrifying to get in your inbox when your teamâs currently struggling with goals and the boss has made it clear that things are not good? An email that says âTeam Adjustments.â Before you can even open it, youâre mentally calculating if you can survive on plain pasta until you find a new job. But then âteam adjustmentsâ turns out to mean that youâre all moving to the floor upstairs. Iâm a big believer in being as specific as possible in subject lines in general, but you should definitely be extra cautious about sending vague ones when everythingâs not going 100% great at your company. Even if you feel confident in your positionâs security, thereâs likely someone on your team whoâs secretly panicking about getting fired and is currently reading into every little thing. So before you send out your next email, do your (paranoid) co-workers a favor and make sure that the subject canât be misinterpreted. 3. Using Any of These Words Without Context Except, problem, urgent, wait. In an article that goes into depth on the topic of unintentionally horrifying words, Muse columnist Sara McCord writes that these words âthat you might use regularly make people think fire drill, resulting in an almost visceral response.â And itâs true. How often has a co-worker said, âWe might have a problem with the deck,â and youâve thought, âCool! That makes me feel good inside and out.â While itâs nearly impossible to avoid them altogether, do make sure that youâre providing as much context as possible so that you can avoid that fire drill feeling. For example, the sentence above becomes, âEverythingâs in place for the deck tomorrow; there might be one slight issue with the timing, but I think weâll be able to fix that pretty quickly if we can meet with the marketing team today.â 4. Sharing Cringe-Worthy Secrets Personal secrets, company secrets, your colleagueâs secret relationship with your CEO- no secret is a good secret when youâre sharing for gossip-y reasons. Not only because youâre now responsible for contributing to a cliché middle school environment at your adult workplace, but also because it puts a lot of pressure on the people you share them with. Especially if theyâre not just juicy, but also involving unethical behavior. Now theyâre the ones lying awake at night wondering what to do. Trust me, I know how hard it can be keep something under wraps, especially if youâre not sure what you personally should be doing with the information. But telling the person sitting next to you wonât help. Instead, if you find yourself in this situation and are truly worried about the implications, bring it up to your manager, or your HR department, or to someone outside the company who you respect and trust to keep it confidential. And if itâs not that grey area, but still in the âI wish I didnât know about that relationshipâ area, just keep it to yourself- or to a couple of your closest non-work friends over happy hour. 5. Coming Up From Behind When Someoneâs Wearing Headphones OK, doing this literally scares people. There are few things more frightening than typing away at your computer, turning around to say something to a person nearby, and seeing a human figure looming ominously above. So, if you find yourself in a situation in which you need to speak with someone whoâs wearing headphones, approach him or her from the front or the side, or send a message first that youâll be coming by shortly (and shortly does not mean âIâm mere steps away from youâ). And there you have it: five incredibly common habits that just happen to make your co-workers break into a cold sweat. Are they overreacting? Sure. But who among us doesnât have that one pet peeve, that one trigger that they could do without. Be the person who makes your colleaguesâ lives easier, not scarier. Did I miss any common habits? Tell me on Twitter! Photo of annoyed person courtesy of Westend61/Getty Images.
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