Tuesday 15 October 2013

The good, bad and the UGLY - Resolving E-conflict

Communication in humans covers an amazing range from affirmation to aggression. We use words, gestures and conversations to build people up and tear them down. Technologically assisted communication can also be deployed across the whole human spectrum. It provides a new, novel arena and platform for conflict.

People Resolution’s investigation, mediation and coaching casework contains growing evidence of E-conflict - miscommunication, inappropriate behaviour, bullying and harassment conducted via email, social media, phone, internet forums, texts. There is also the latent, smouldering conflict cased by a lack of certainty and disagreements about some behavioural conventions regarding the use of technology, devices and on-line communication – a lack of agreed E-tiquette - for example:
·         Managers have told us that they find it distracting and disrespectful if other participants monitor or even answer their phones / emails during a meeting
·         People are asking to record a conversation on their phone for ‘future reference’ and there is no policy / guidance for this
·         Some people broadcast / copy others into emails for no apparent reason or bombard others with emails at times of day well outside normal working hours

This is a difficult are as I mentioned in a recent white paper - Part 2 of the ABC Guide to Conflict Resolution – Resolution Architecture.
·         E-tiquette is not sufficiently well developed or universal to enable easy agreement about what is OK for some people and not others
·         Many online modes of communication are all about speed of delivery and reply and therefore meaning may get lost or confused in the speed
·         Generational/cultural differences may cause significant disagreements about what is appropriate and what is not.
I have not found a lot of effective practice in this area. Most conflict resolution and mediation training and provision do not even cover this area. People Resolutions is currently researching the extent and nature of E-Conflict and what organisations are doing to update their conflict resolution practice in this area. Could you let us know?
What is your experience of E-conflict – what types of situations and challenges have you come across?
What measures have you put in place to encourage user friendly and socially constructive use of technology assisted communication – do you have guidance on E-tiquette?
What specific measures have you adopted for effect E-conflict Resolution e.g?
        Use of on-line mediation, facilitation
        Effective collection of electronic evidence for formal investigations
        Manager training on preventing and managing e-conflict.

I have started this as a discussion in a number of Linked-In groups, or you can comment on this blog or email to set up a conversation with me on john.crawley@peopleresolutions.com