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Nothing to Sneeze About
By
Peter DeHaan, Ph.D.
May/June, 2002
A few years ago, I had a strange revelation.
It all began with a sneeze. In
doing so, I realized that I sounded just like my dad.
Not that there is anything wrong or strange about how my dad sneezes,
just that it is distinctive. At
first, I chalked this up to simple heredity.
But why then did it take four decades for me to become cognizant of
this similarity? A quick
empirical look at how other family members performed this uncontrollable
reflex did not support any sort of genetic connection.
Indeed, everyone else did, in fact, have a unique sneeze.
Since that time, I have become aware of other
mannerisms and gestures that my dad and I share. My conclusion is that this is not a byproduct of genes, but
rather environment. More
succinctly, as I spend more time with my father, I become more like him.
If this went no further than physical idiosyncrasies, this would be a
trivial observation. But there are more valuable and influential characteristics
that I subconsciously learned from dad over the years. A good, strong work ethic is a prime example.
Dad never told me to work hard and diligently – he merely did so and
I emulated his example. Others
traits include integrity, honesty, caution, sound decision-making, carefulness
with what I say, and an analytical prowess.
If I unknowingly learned these things by being around
my dad, what sort of things do those who spend time with me discover and then
model? While I hope they absorb
good and positive traits, I fear that they may also be acquiring some less
admirable tendencies. Each time a
child, friend, employee, or client treats me in a less than desirable manner,
I ask myself, "Did they pick this up from me?"
"Are they mirroring what they have seen me do?"
When parents see things in their children that they
do not like, they often do some soul searching and ask, "Where did they
learn this?" and "What did I do wrong?"
Although, children have many spheres of input and influence, parents
are a key source. The saying,
"The apple doesn't fall far from the tree," is accurate and correct.
Words can influence and direct, but actions are the prime training
tools. And when actions match
words, a strong and consistent message is sent.
I have seen this same principle carry over to the
work place as well, to both with employees and clients.
First, consider clients. Every
business has a few "difficult" clients – the kind that one wishes would
just go away. But if a company
has all difficult clients, some tough introspection is warranted.
Quite simply, one might wonder, "are my ‘bad' clients merely
treating me the way I treat them, according to what I taught them?"
I once saw this dramatically demonstrated through an acquisition, where
the prior owners were – well – less than honorable in their client
interactions. Dealing with their
client base was quite a challenge. It
took several years to get those clients to stop yelling at managers, cursing
staff, and aggressively challenging every bill.
But who is to blame them? They
were simply responding as they had been taught, according to how the former
owner acted towards them.
From the employee aspect, I have seen this occur on
several levels. First, through
witnessing how a shift supervisor destroyed the effectiveness of the employees
on her shift. Her staff became
lazy, took extra long breaks, and lost all loyalty towards the company.
The worst offenders were fired and replacements hired and trained; yet,
they quickly fell into the same mode. Eventually
the supervisor was investigated, revealing the reality that her position of
authority was too much for her to handle.
She had become lazy, took long breaks, and had no respect for her
employer. Her charges were merely
emulating the negative characteristics of their supervisor.
A new supervisor was brought in and things slowly turned around.
More dramatically, I have seen this happen throughout
an entire office. It seemed that
a good employee could not be found in the entire city.
Each new hire turned out to be a liar, a manipulator, and a denigrator
of company policy and procedure. Alas,
after endlessly turning over staff, the manager was scrutinized.
Ultimately, the manager's true colors were revealed, I found that she
was a compulsive liar, shamelessly manipulated her staff, and had open
contempt for company policy and executive directives.
This manager was let go and suddenly good employees could be found.
Though it took years to negate her damaging example, the office slowly
began to function as it should.
Lastly, I have had situations where a company owner
laments over his terrible employees. His
staff continually falsifies time cards, steals company supplies and assets,
and lodges complaints and files lawsuits on a seemingly continuous basis.
The owner is truly perplexed at why this is happening, but to even a
casual outsider the cause is clear. For
the owner underreports income on his tax return, cheats his employees out of
their rightful pay, and threatens to sue every vendor or client who causes
consternation.
True, not all children, friends, clients, and
employees are perfect, but when a consistent trend of unacceptable behaviors
is evident within the entire group, it might be time to look at one's self
and one's actions. After all,
what we do is nothing to sneeze about.
To read other articles written by Peter DeHaan,
go to From
The Publisher or check out his blog at
http://blog.peterdehaan.com. In addition to publishing Connections Magazine
and AnswerStat magazine (for hospital and medical related call centers), Peter
also publishes several related websites, including
MyArticleArchive.com.
He may
be reached at 866-668-6695, dehaan@connectionsmagazine.com
or www.PeterDeHaan.com.
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