Disrespect at work

Kido Butai

Protestant
When working with clients, how do you respond when a user becomes angry, makes insinuations, foul language, etc? This happen to me the other day.
"Here we are 1 week before testing, and this is still a problem. What the hell have you been doing all this time?"
"Have you even read the Gid d**n follow-ups!!"

I was very close to speaking very sternly and saying something like: "ok stop right there and let's keep this professional. We don't need to get rude and disrespectful."

I held my tounge. Now I feel weak and feminine. But I guess it was wise to keep it cool. I donno. A part of me has the capacity to say screw this, I don't need that shyte.
Then again.... another part says man up and fix the problem.
 
When working with clients, how do you respond when a user becomes angry, makes insinuations, foul language, etc? This happen to me the other day.
"Here we are 1 week before testing, and this is still a problem. What the hell have you been doing all this time?"
"Have you even read the Gid d**n follow-ups!!"

I was very close to speaking very sternly and saying something like: "ok stop right there and let's keep this professional. We don't need to get rude and disrespectful."

I held my tounge. Now I feel weak and feminine. But I guess it was wise to keep it cool. I donno. A part of me has the capacity to say screw this, I don't need that shyte.
Then again.... another part says man up and fix the problem.
I'd say bring it up with your immediate supervisor. Ask how he wants you to handle situations like that. Some jobs, they kind of expect you to grin and take it. In others, I've had supervisors call the customer and rip into them for behaving that way. It depends a lot on the industry and your corporate culture.
 
When working with clients, how do you respond when a user becomes angry, makes insinuations, foul language, etc? This happen to me the other day.
"Here we are 1 week before testing, and this is still a problem. What the hell have you been doing all this time?"
"Have you even read the Gid d**n follow-ups!!"

I was very close to speaking very sternly and saying something like: "ok stop right there and let's keep this professional. We don't need to get rude and disrespectful."
I think it depends on the profession. Only you really know what you can get away with. That said, if you know how to carry yourself, know to not get carried away or get bogged down into a slugfest, then I would correct their feminine behavior. When people get riled up and raise their voice and start speaking fast, don't match their energy. Let them talk, make them wait for your response, then say whatever you want in a deliberate, but not weak, tone.
 
If someone snaps at you like this, it's on them and it's best not to take it personally or to react with the same energy. Try not to let it bother you, but if it does then you've got something to work on.

Take a breath and try to respond to the essence of what they said, but calmly and within your frame.

Be humble enough not to be offended. It's their anger, usually coming from pride, that made them act this way. Don't let your pride take control or make you feel bad later.

You might feel later that you didn't stand up for yourself, but if your goal is to remain balanced under stress like Jesus, and you prioritize that outcome, you'll see things in a different (less petty) way.
 
Thick skin goes a long way. But if it's a hostile work environment, you are well within your rights to tell said person that you don't think the unprofessional language is appropriate and helpful... Further that you're trying to be solutions oriented and only providing feedback on how you expect to be engaged with.

But if you say something you better keep your cool and not let anyone see you flustered or you're fucked.

That said. I've always worked in stressful environments and you can curse at a situation someone and still not have people feel like it's directed at them directly.

Your mileage may vary...but I've never had a problem with being cursed at... It's more people being directly condescending when I'm making all efforts to give them what they want.
 
There´s a consequence for your actions. If the client is worth it keep your mouth shut. At best you can just say: "Sorry I didn´t understood your last comment please repeat it or explain better. " This is the most civilized and professional way of handling this type of situations. Asking the person to repeat what they said.



Other times. It´s not worth it for your mental health. And you should get it out of your chest. It´s just income and leads you lose. But it´s not the end of the world. Also there´s respect you need to have. It´s not good if a business relationship degenerates.

Once I told someone who was in a meeting who made a rude comment. To stare down the rest of the meeting. I told him something like: "You are an imbecile. You will be allowed to sit here for the rest of the meeting. But if you look up or even worse look at me I will straight up punch you in the face. I will beat you up merciless." This became known as the eyes on the floor move by my friends. He never looked up. Even when he shook my hand.

It´s hard to tell. Once I did get up and punched a dude. Couldn´t hit his face. Cause he blocked it. But he was happy about it. Like if we were being real. The guy didn´t insult anyone. But was just saying too much nonsense. I kept telling him he was wrong. And he kept at it. I knew the project 100x times better than him. It was about real estate funds.

 
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^ Some great posts above.

dean winchester good job GIF


*excluding the response involving the story about punching someone

yes GIF


When working with clients, how do you respond when a user becomes angry, makes insinuations, foul language, etc? This happen to me the other day.
"Here we are 1 week before testing, and this is still a problem. What the hell have you been doing all this time?"
"Have you even read the Gid d**n follow-ups!!"

I was very close to speaking very sternly and saying something like: "ok stop right there and let's keep this professional. We don't need to get rude and disrespectful."

I held my tounge. Now I feel weak and feminine. But I guess it was wise to keep it cool. I donno. A part of me has the capacity to say screw this, I don't need that shyte.
Then again.... another part says man up and fix the problem.

On Reacting to Overt Disrespect and Aggression at Work

Unless the situation involves a clear and immediate physical threat to yourself or someone else... there is almost no professional situation which will be improved by matching or escalating beyond another person's aggressive or emotional behavior.

Lying dormant within all of us is an instinctual compulsion to react to raised voices, insulting language and disrespectful behavior with matched or raised force. Personal disrespect and social aggression triggers a fundamental instinct to protect ourselves, our self-esteem and pride, and our reputation and social status. Understanding and accepting our automated threat responses and the unconscious default mode of self-defense is central to managing future conflict, keeping cool, and getting the outcomes that serve you best in the longer term.

On that topic, here's a video timestamped to the relevant section (5:10 - 9:50):



Reacting with emotionality only serves to worsen the situation for everyone involved.
  • First, it makes the other person even more upset and more defensive, and may impact your relationship moving forward.
  • Second, colleagues and other witnesses will lose respect for you.
  • Third, acting out of anger is unpleasant and raises your immediate cortisol, heart rate, blood pressure and perception of stress.
  • Fourth, social-emotional contagion is inevitable, as other people you come across will be influenced by your state. Be mindful of not taking your anger home to your girlfriend/wife.
  • Fifth, in the longer run, chronic stress and anger leads to poorer health.
The continuous state of heightened physiological arousal associated with chronic anger is closely linked to an increased risk of heart disease. Chronic anger can lead to the development of atherosclerosis, a condition where the arteries become clogged with fatty deposits which restricts blood flow to the heart. This condition increases the risk of coronary artery disease, heart attacks and strokes. Additionally, the inflammation caused by chronic stress and anger can damage the arterial walls, further contributing to heart disease.
Source

Thus, it's important to do what you can, both in advance and in the moment, to stay calm and in control. A related video (2 minutes):



Similar advice is also made explicit in the Bible, notably James 1:19
Therefore, my beloved brethren, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath

On the Specific Follow up

All environments have unique contexts so the specific actions that would be aligned with your professional goals should be adapted to your individual situation. This is where in-house consultation with a competent and trusted colleague or ideally a senior figure would be wise, especially if there is an ongoing relationship or partnership to maintain.

With that in mind I can't offer any specific advice based on the present level of information shared, so I'll share a resource for consideration (a timestamped video). This guy uses a lot of concepts that are best applied to legal or similar professional contexts so YMMV, however he is an excellent communicator and it could be worth checking his related content for topics that most interest you:

 
I punched the dude. I can even add more. In the room was a senior banker, a chamber of commerce VP and the dude who got punched who is now in Dubai. The fund involved two billionaires. It was a mix of crypto and real estate. Real estate for stability crypto for growth. I looked at the chamber of commerce dude and said wtf is this idiot saying I´m tired of hearing him. Got up and punched him. I knew what he was saying was 100% wrong. But he kept pushing it arrogantly.

Btw the dude I punched is one of the most talented I ever met. But he is a slob.

There are many issues in letting disrespect go unchecked: First is accumulating baggage in your mind and this will take a toll on you mentally. Accumulating frustration. The second is letting this accumulation explode into an undeserving different person. Third you will need to blow off steam. Regardless of where and with who your frustations will sooner or later be unloaded. It´s better you do it with the person who deserves it.

In business you can charge more to idiots. If the person is an headache charge him more. And send him to a junior.

As I´m getting older I don´t fight so much. I just let imbeciles be imbeciles. As long as they are not near me. Everyday you cross by an idiot when you are walking on the street. But he doesn´t need to know you. Or interact with you. He is an imbecile. Good for him. Let him do his thing. You do yours. As long as there is no connection. Great. I exit myself from retards around me.

I don´t think people around you will gain respect if you let an insult pass. It´s the opposite. But each one has their own experience.

Once I arrived at a meeting where everybody was screaming. And the opposing side was a beautiful women. I was wtf are these idiots attacking a beautiful women? So I asked if she wanted water. She said yes. I went to get it personally. She relaxed and we reached agreements. It deescalated fast. Escalating further would have been useless.

The best option is asking the person to repeat the insult. Or making a wit comeback. Escalating is the last resort. But you cannot take too much baggage or you will explode sooner or later.

A friend of mine when clients start to bitch he replies to them: You can do it by yourself if you want. If its so easy do it. No? So stfu.
 
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