• Home
  • Professional Coaching
  • Entrepreneur Coaching
  • Workplace Bullying
  • News
  • About Us
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Contact
Executive Coaching Programs What is Executive Coaching Coaching in Action Client Material
Confidence in Selling Client Material
Overview/ Definition Bullying Behaviors Who: Bullies/ Targets Why Bullies Bully For Employers Research Services Action Plan - Phase I Action Plan - Phase II Take our survey and map your strategic response to bullying
About Kathleen Testimonials Press Room Kathleen's Books
Ezine Ezine Archives Articles Kathleen's Books Affiliates Suggested Reading

Archive for the ‘bullying’ Category

« Older Entries

Building a Work Team – Too Many Superstars?

Monday, July 26th, 2010

If you are building a work team – think about this:

‘Work groups that have too many star employees can curtail a company’s effectiveness. Managers should curb their desire to hire numerous high-status employees; in so doing, they will help ensure greater collaboration and fewer ego-driven conflicts among team members.’  This is according to

Too Many Cooks Spoil the Broth: How High Status Individuals Decrease Group Effectiveness (read the full article here)
Authors: Boris Groysberg, Jeffrey T. Polzer, and Hillary Anger Elfenbein
Publication:  Organization Science (forthcoming)

I wonder how this will impact the HEAT basketball team which is replete with high-status, extremely well paid, mavericks.

It is clearly in evidence when looking at escalating bullying type behaviors. The more threatened leaders feel the more abrasive and aggressive they become-competition is in the blood and in the brain. How do you calm down your ’super-stars’?

Tags: Abrasive Manager, bullie, bullying, executive coaching, team building, workplace bullying, workplace policies
Posted in Abrasive Manager, bullying | No Comments »

Info & Insights from the Workplace Bullying Institute

Monday, June 14th, 2010

I agree with the Workplace Bullying Institute that mediation is not a tool that works well, if at all, in bullying type of problems. Why? Because there is either an implicit or explicit power differential. That is either the aggressor is using emotional abuse or structural power to overtake the target. Those conditions don’t disappear when a mediator arrives. Mediation implies that both parties are wrong and there is something to settle between the two parties. But workplace aggression isn’t about misunderstandings or mutual blame or settling a financial dispute. Workplace aggression is a complex combination of psychological factors, structural conditions, and power differences. A good executive coach who is skilled at handling aggression among people can sort through the circumstances and offer solutions. Be sure the coach is sophisticated enough to make referrals for psychological counseling, where needed, is able to uncover the structural problems (corporate culture and mores, quality of supervision, degree of accountability on both performance and behavior, team functionality, etc.) and then propose strategies to fix them.

Workplace aggression is more than a simple mis-understanding, and more complicated than a simple power differential.

Here’s more info and insights into workplace conflict, aggression and bullying and whether or not mediation helps: Workplace Bullying Institute

Tags: bullie, bully, bully boss, bullying, executive coaching, mediation, workplace bullying, workplace bullying institute, workplace policies
Posted in bullying | No Comments »

Article from the Chronicle of Higher Education

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Here’s an interesting article from the Chronicle of Higher Education on bullying in academia.

Researchers are proposing mediation for bullying situations even though the research shows overwhelmingly that mediation doesn’t work. That’s been my experience too. What does work are strong and enforced rules prohibiting bullying, great coaching for bullies and their managers, improved supervision and insights to the plethora of causes of bullying and abrasive behaviors.

Read the article, and the comments for different perspectives on bullying issues:

Workplace Mediators Seek a Role in Taming Faculty Bullies

Tags: bullie, bully, bullying, bullying in academia, workplace bullying, workplace politics
Posted in bullying | 2 Comments »

Negotiation Tips for Managers

Friday, May 28th, 2010

From my perspective, and maybe this is heresy, but negotiations are lose/lose propositions. You’re both giving things up. If you’re lucky, you’ll give up what is least important to you and hold on to what’s most important. And that brings us to point two of this report: Know what your CounterPoint wants! This is great advice, however, when you’re dealing with a bully, you cannot predict what the bully wants. You can assume he/she wants power, control, to win, but that’s not always the case. Sometimes the bully’s aggression comes from fear of the unknown, fear of failure, frustration from poor communication skills, or the habit of making all priorities have the same weight so everything is urgent or important and therefore, the bully cannot determine where to give and where to hold firm. If the bully doesn’t know, you can’t predict. You can make some assumptions but you could easily miss the mark. 

Read More…

Tags: bully, bullying, confidence, confidence connections, corporate success, workplace bullying
Posted in bullying, career, confidence, professional | No Comments »

The Dirty Little Secret of the Workplace: The Bully Isn’t Wearing Any Clothes

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Fear of the witnessReading a list of standard bullying behavior can be a revelation for some people.  Far too often we become so accustomed to witnessing acts of incivility that we develop a blind eye to it.  This is especially true in the workplace.  Verbal insults, withholding of key information, and other blatant, aggressive and manipulative behaviors are sometimes considered standard practice, to the extent that, not only are they tolerated, but they are overlooked or dismissed entirely.  

But what do we do when our perceptions are telling us otherwise? You may recall the fairy tale about a Self-centered Emperor who cared only about his clothes.  Two con artists come along who promise to make him the finest suit of clothes woven from a fabric that is invisible to anyone who is unfit for his position or “just hopelessly stupid”.  The Emperor buys into the idea, and even though he cannot see the cloth himself, he pretends that he can for fear of appearing unfit for his position or stupid; and his ministers do the same. When the suit is supposedly finished, the swindlers pretend to dress him and the Emperor then parades himself before his subjects. At first, everyone remains silent, but then a child in the crowd calls out that the Emperor isn’t wearing any clothes.  The entire crowd then bursts into an uproar as they all begin to claim their perceptions.

Read the rest of the article…

Tags: assertiveness training, bullie, bully, bully boss, bullying, confidence, confidence connections, Kathleen Schulweis, women bullies, workplace bullying, workplace policies, workplace politics
Posted in bullying | No Comments »

« Older Entries


  • Categories

    • Abrasive Manager
    • blog
    • bullying
    • business development
    • career
    • clients
    • coaching
    • confidence
    • confidence connections
    • cornerstones of confidence
    • job search
    • kschulweis
    • not selling
    • professional
    • selling
    • Social Media
    • stress
    • stress relief
  • Workshops

    Workplace Bullying: Everything you Need to Know But Wish You Didn’t


  • Coaching Programs

    Confidence Selling

    Kolbe Evaluation Package

    The Language of Connection

    Building Confidence e-Course



  • Join me on:





  • Biznik - Business Networking
  • As Featured On EzineArticles
  • Member of:

    International Association on
    Workplace Bullying and Harrassment
  • Blogroll

    • Civility in the Workplace
    • Defending the Digital Workplace
    • Delaware Employment Law
    • Employee Rights Blog
    • Employers Lawyer
    • Employment Blog
    • HR Lawyers Blog
    • Joy of Human Capital
    • Law Memo
    • New Work Place
    • New Workplace Institute
    • Ohio Employment Law
    • Opie Web
    • The Mediation Channel
    • The People Group
    • Today's Workplace
    • Workplace Bullying Institute
    • Workplace Prof Blog
    • Workplace Violence News


  • Coaching is tax deductible (In the U.S., all expenses of continuing education undertaken to maintain and improve business and professional skills are tax deductible - Treas. Reg.1-162-5, Coughlin vs. Commissioner, 203F 2d 307). 

Categories

  • Abrasive Manager
  • blog
  • bullying
  • business development
  • career
  • clients
  • coaching
  • confidence
  • confidence connections
  • cornerstones of confidence
  • job search
  • kschulweis
  • not selling
  • professional
  • selling
  • Social Media
  • stress
  • stress relief

Archives

  • July 2010
  • June 2010
  • May 2010
  • April 2010
  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009


Confidence CoachingTM with Kathleen Schulweis
1132 S. Point View St, Los Angeles, CA 90035
(323) 935-6477

Site Design by Salter Virtual Assistants