How To Take the Personal Out of the Workplace.

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Joanne Victoria, real estate educatorHow To Take the Personal Out
of the Workplace
by  Joanne Victoria

Bringing your emotional baggage into the work place is inappropriate for all the reasons you may imagine. Yet employees, managers and business owners do it all the time.

The question is, how do you handle it? How do you look at your manager and think, "No one is going to tell me what to do!" What if a client, peer or prospect gets you on a Bad Day?

How do you take the personal out of the workplace? It requires discrimination and distinction. If you are having communication problems at work, look at how you view your manager, boss or employee. Does he or she represent a parent, mate or partner? Are your frustrations about what is and is not working in your life manifested on the job?

Learn to leave it at the door. Decide that what you do in the workplace is your contribution - to yourself, your peers and the community. This is your opportunity to commit to what you are best at doing and get paid for it.

Examine your values. Values are how you live your life, about what is important to you. Choose values that help make you what you truly are. Your personal values and professional values can be the same.

Warning! Many businesses like to say they are like a family. Be cautious if you are enticed by this. Employees, managers and business owners may manifest characteristics found in your personal family. Why is this important? What can happen is, you may take on the role that you do in your own family. If you are passive at home and come to work as a manager, what does that look like? Confusing at best.

When a passive person has to function in a different role on the job, they may revert and act like the aggressive parent. Potential can best be realized under a thoughtful and caring leader. Attempt to facilitate, to make it easy for everyone to achieve their best.

As a manager or business owner, you have to know what your values are; what the values of your company are, as well as the values of the people you manage. The basic rules of respect and acceptance apply. The Golden Rule is: "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you", not: "Do it to them before they do it to you".

People who bring emotional baggage into the workplace can be temperamental, grasping and neglectful. Even more frustrating is that they act out all their pent-up, misplaced emotions on the job without consideration for others. Employees and co-workers react to this, work efforts and results go by the wayside, and profit and productivity go down.

Leave your unexpressed feelings at the door. Take a break if you become frustrated. Know that you are at work to provide results. Heal yourself first, determine your values, then you will be a better employee, manager or business owner.

Joanne Victoria - NEW DIRECTIONS: Working with people who want to simplify

their lives in order to achieve more of what they really want. Programs include One-on-One Coaching, Group Coaching, Workshops and Presentations. Visit Joanne's website to read inspirational articles on personal and business development, enjoy her E-Newsletter, or order her new book - 'Lighting Your Path! How to Create The Life You Want'.

1001 Bridgeway #144, Sausalito, CA 94965.

Tel: (415) 491-1344 Fax: (415) 485-9295,

Web: www.JoanneVictoria.com

New Directions - Joanne Victoria is a Northern California writer who works with independent professionals and professional practice and small business owners who want to streamline their operations in order to achieve more. Sign up now for Joanne's FREE monthly e-zine Lighting Your Path!-Find Your Inner Truth at: mailto:JoanneVictoria-subscribe@topica.com 
Vision Coach, Speaker, Author: Tel:415-491-1344 mailto:joanne@joannevictoria.com http://www.JoanneVictoria.com/programs.htm

 
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