MEETING SPECIAL How
to Save a Meeting That’s Gotten Tense
On March 30, 2017, Salt Lake County Mayor Ben
McAdams stood in front of crowd of over 1,000 angry
citizens. McAdams had
recently floated the idea of situating a new homeless resource center in Draper, a city 20 miles south of Salt Lake City, Utah. What began as an
orderly public meeting soon degenerated into chaotic shouts, curses, and
political threats as one Draper resident after another told the mayor
emphatically that this would not happen in their backyard.
As volume increased and value declined,
McAdams stood up. He was greeted by boos, hisses, and invective. Residents
competed noisily for his attention in a way that guaranteed no one would be
heard. In one remarkable moment, McAdams drew close enough to a microphone that
his voice penetrated the din. Wearing a kindly and serene expression, he
uttered a simple, sincere statement that brought remarkable and immediate
quiet: “This is your meeting. If you want to yell and shout, you are welcome to
do that all night long. I will listen as long as you want.”
I’ve spent thirty years watching this happen —
but have rarely seen the effect with such immediacy as happened that night in
Draper.
It can be surprisingly easy to bring order to
a chaotic meeting — and to turn conflict back into conversation — if you know
how. Perhaps you don’t have an angry mob yelling at your meeting but there are
lots of crises that managers face when a meeting goes off the rails. Here are
some examples:
Mutual monologue. The conflict is
more apparent than real. People are struggling to be heard, repeating points
with increasing intensity. You’re scratching your head trying to understand
what all the excitement is about.
Battle of the silos. Team members are
fighting for resources or authority to advance their parochial interests.
Hidden agenda. The stated
conversation is different from the real conversation. For example, we’re
discussing the location of an office and it appears personal commute distances
are driving the decision.
Pandemonium. The problem isn’t so much presence of
conflict as lack of order. The discussion shifts from topic to topic with no
resolution. The result is lots of heat but very little light. It always falls
to the manager to impose order.
Wounded warrior. The discussion has
left someone feeling personally hurt. They are now lashing out
opportunistically to salve their ego.
These are only a few of a much longer list of
group productivity killers. Regardless of what’s happening in your specific
meeting, the principal cause of most conflicts is a struggle for
validation. This means that most conflict is not intractable because
the root cause is not irreconcilable differences, but a basic unmet need.
Take Chris and Alan, for example. Chris is
trying to staff projects. Alan is focused on staff development plans. Alan
needs to pull employees off projects to attend trainings. Chris is frustrated
because their absence interrupts project work. When overlapping and divergent
interests (as exist in every team) are combined with communication that invalidates
someone’s needs, the result is almost always escalating conflict and personal
animus. For example, in a meeting where Alan is trying to get team input and
support for an ambitious development effort, Chris takes pot shots at the fuzzy
nature of the training objectives.
A naïve observer might conclude that the
conflict is about competing goals or personal friction. It isn’t. The problem
is that an unskilled manager is abetting invalidating communication. The
solution is as straightforward as the problem: offer and deliver agitated
participants a trustworthy process — one they can trust will allow them to be
heard.
Here are four steps for turning conflict into conversation:
1. Interrupt
the chaos.
All emotions have a tempo. Calm emotions like happiness and
connection are slow and deliberate. Emotions of arousal like hostility and
defensiveness are fast and confused. Pulse quickens, thoughts race, and words
fly. One of the best ways to change the emotion of a group is to change its
tempo. As you attempt to intervene, decelerate your pace of speech. You may
need to raise your voice a decibel or two to be heard above the rumble. But
once you’ve attracted attention, lower your voice and speed. For example, you
might say slowly and calmly, “Hey team, let me take a moment to point out
something I’m noticing.”
2
Shift to process.
Call
attention to what is happening in a matter-of-fact way. This helps in three
ways: First, you give egos and tempers a chance to cool by changing the subject
of discussion from the immediate problem to the
problem-solving process. Second, you help the group soften their
judgements of one another by giving them a unifying common enemy: the
ineffective process. And third, you advance team maturity by inviting all to
take responsibility for inventing a more effective process. Be careful not to
shame anyone for their role in the confusion. Lay out what appears to be
happening, without assigning blame, and the consequences of continuation on the
current path. Once you’ve described the obvious, ask the group to confirm your
observation. This is a critical psychological step. When they explicitly
acknowledge the process problem, they become committed to supporting the
solution. For example, you might continue with, “We’ve been at this conversation
for about 25 minutes now. In my view we are repeating a lot of the same
arguments, but getting nowhere. I suspect we could go another three hours and
be in the same place. Do others see this the same way?”
3
Propose a structure.
Offer a
process that ensures all will be heard and slows the pace in order to quell the
emotions. Then ask for commitment to it. For example, you might say, “Carmine,
I don’t think we’re giving you a chance to lay out your arguments for the
office remodel. How about if we hear you out first. The rest of us will attempt
to restate your arguments until you feel we understand them to your
satisfaction. Kam, then I suggest we do the same with your view of why we
should put it off for three more years. Will that work?”
4
Honor the agreement.
Odds
are that even with the new structure, lingering emotions will incite a few
attempts to breach the boundaries. When this happens, you need not become
punitive. All you have to do is point out the discrepancy, and ask if they want
to continue with their commitment. For example, “Kam, you are beginning to
explain why remodeling now is a bad idea. I think our agreement was to allow
Carmine to continue until she has been well heard. Do you want to continue with
that process or propose something different?” Given that the team bought into
the structure, Kam is likely to conform to the healthier structure – or the
others in the room will encourage him to.
This is exactly what Ben McAdams when he
approached the podium during the public meeting about the homeless resource
center. He remained calm and patient while the crowd erupted into jeers and
shouts. When he sensed a slight lull, he interrupted the chaos and shifted their attention to process with
his statement, “This is your meeting. If you want to yell and shout you are
welcome to do that all night long, I will listen as long as you want.” Then
sensing that they might be ready for his response, he proposed a structure: “If and when
you’d like to hear what I have to say, I’ll take my turn. But not until it is
quiet. I won’t yell to be heard.”
The crowd quieted down and he began to speak.
Soon a man from the audience came on stage and stood intimidatingly close to
Mayor McAdams. Rather than fight for control, McAdams simply honored the agreement. Facing the
audience, the mayor said, “It appears someone wants the microphone, I’ll sit
down and wait my turn unless you direct otherwise.” As the mayor gave way to
the new arrival the audience yelled for the man to sit down and let the mayor
speak. After a few uninterrupted minutes the mayor said something many took
exception to with shouts and profanity. He once again honored the agreement by
sitting down until their fury was dispelled by an even larger group who yelled
at them to let the mayor finish.
In spite of the fact that the majority of
those present adamantly disagreed with the mayor, their fury dissipated when
offered a trustworthy process. They were capable of subordinating their
immediate demands when they had confidence they would be truly heard.
While there are times when foes are so
entrenched in their positions that simple interventions like this will be
inadequate, for the vast majority of workplace group tiffs, this works. Next
time conflict starts to boil up in your meeting, try focusing on the process
rather than the content, and chances are that you’ll be able to defuse the
anger and frustration long enough to move forward.
- Joseph Grenny
https://hbr.org/2017/12/how-to-save-a-meeting-thats-gotten-tense?
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