How to Be a Terrible Employee
According to articles appearing in the Wall Street Journal and
Linked In, two characteristics are required to be classified as a terrible
employee. First, terrible employees are not good listeners. Second,
terrible employees do not work well in teams. The following paragraphs
explain why an employee must not have these characteristics to be successful in
the modern workplace.
Good listening skills are required to create happy relationships
with customers and co-workers (Nishi, 2013). The reasoning behind this
statement is that when you listen intently to another person’s concerns, you
show him/her you care and can better empathize with that person. After
people feel that you understand and care about them, they trust you more.
Following this increase in credibility, a feeling of mutual friendship
inevitably forms over time. This friendship will increase business (in the case
of a customer) and decrease workplace stress (in the case of a co-worker).
The ability to work in a team is just as important as good
listening skills. If a single member of a team creates tension through
gossip, dishonesty, or laziness, the productivity of the entire team
will decrease. The key to having a productive team is to “Create a
positive environment where people want to come to every day” (White, 2014).
Creating this positive environment requires each team member to do their
part.
I hope that no one reading this blog wants to be classified as a
terrible employee. Instead, I assume that your goal, like mine, is to be
exceptional. Following the principles of being a good listener and
developing the ability work well in teams will help you and me reach our goal
to be exceptional.
References
Nishi, D. (2013). How to tell if you are a bad employee. Wall
Street Journal. Retrieved from
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424127887323932604579053113397566606
White, J. (2014, April 28). Seven management traits that will make
all your employees quit. Retrieved from
https://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20140428194310-68335342-7-management-traits-that-will-make-all-your-employees-quit
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