About Us Contact Us Submit a Profile Site Map
Back to Homepage How-to articles, a self-managed strategic planning process,and profiles of successful mainstream business owners How to succeed as a professional solution provider serving mainstream business owners and how to create strategic conversations among your peers Presentations, in person and via conference call, to enhance your members success while leveraging your membership and education budgets.

Exclusive articles, profiles of successful business owners we've interviewed, and do-it-yourself strategic planning resources Newsletter Articles
Success Stories
B2B Peer Groups
Emerging professionals can benefit from our lifetime of experience marketing, selling, and delivering services to businesses up and down Main Street Effectiveness Strategies
Professional Resources
Mastermind Groups

We help organizations leverage their educational resources while enhancing the profitability of their members Leadership Development
Experience Exchange
Managing Differences

We also offer resources of value to everyone, from our article archives and Internet marketing tools to how to connect with your elected representatives Search iBizResources.com
Locate Congress @ Home
2,000 Contributed Articles
Internet Marketing Tools
Subscribe to our free iBiz Monthly Email Newsletter!Interviews & Profiles

Subscribe to our free iBiz Monthly Email Newsletter!

New articles, resources, and strategies for business owners added daily. All FREE! Click Here for Details!

©1999-2008 www.iBizResources.com
® All rights reserved





Don't Think Time Management - Think Conflict Resolution


Successful organizations, have one thing in common, an atmosphere free of conflict. Click here to learn how your organization can create an atmosphere of cooperation and shared goals!

David began, "I have a major time management problem. As an editor, I often get two clients calling with assignments. They call around ten AM and both want their projects completed by mid-afternoon. Then a third client calls around lunchtime with a crisis. So I have too many projects – all at once. The next day the phone is silent."

David’s dilemma made me think of Jennifer, who worked for two bosses, Blue and Green. Blue would give her an assignment to be completed by noon. Green would call five minutes later with another assignment – you guessed it – to be completed by lunchtime. Jennifer was stressed and frazzled all day long. We helped her negotiate with her internal customers – her management team – to set up a service delivery schedule that would be fair to everyone.

Whether your customers are internal or external, the key is to design consistent policies to avoid conflict. Here are some suggestions that worked for my clients.

1. Train your customers from the get-go.

Clients typically are nice people who have no clue about what it takes to deliver your service. For example, one client sent me a project, along with a ten-page single-spaced set of "notes." When I called with a question, she asked, "Can’t you just read the notes?" I explained that I might spend an hour searching for the answer to my question -- and I would have to charge accordingly. Sometimes clients will pay the fee as long as they get to remove themselves from the fray – but sometimes they’ll prefer to become more involved. It’s up to you to give them that choice.

2. Develop a conflict resolution plan before you need it.

As you face conflicting demands, develop a system so you won’t have to play referee every day. You can insist on 24 hours notice, command extra charges for rush jobs, or adhere strictly to first come, first served rules.

Working for a company? Get everyone to agree on a rule for setting priorities. Match your communication style to your organization’s culture. If nobody wants to negotiate, or if you’re working late on everybody’s projects (while the folks who assigned those projects left hours ago), your challenge becomes, "how to deal with unreasonable bosses."

3. Design your promises ahead of time.

When a client’s on the phone, it’s so tempting to say, "You only want to pay X dollars? No problem." Or you invite everyone in a class to send questions, which you promise to answer within 24 hours.

Off the phone, you realize you’ve just committed to an hourly rate that’s a fraction of your normal fee. (We’ve all done this at least once.) Either you deliver a half-baked solution or you put in lots of unpaid overtime. And either way, you’ll find yourself resenting the client and wondering why you got into this business in the first place.

Lessons learned: Conflicting demands? You’re not facing a time management challenge. You’re looking for a new strategy -- a way to mesh your preferred working style with the needs of your clients – and a set of policies to protect you from your own generosity.

About The Author

Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D., is an author, speaker and career/business consultant, who helps midlife professionals ceate their own mid-career makeovers. Your Next Move Ezine: Read one each week and watch your choices grow!
mailto:subscribe@cathygoodwin.com
http://www.cathygoodwin.com
http://www.movinglady.com
Contact: mailto:cathy@cathygoodwin.com




By: Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D.

If there was a simple process for maximizing your communications, would you master it?

    Sixty five percent of voluntary terminations are the result of unresolved conflict.

    A huge percentage of couples who get divorced say that the decision was based at least in part because they couldn't communicate.

    Success in business and in life requires an atmosphere of shared goals in order to be successful in the long run. "Strategic Conversations" can help.

    Strategic conversations, generically speaking, is a straightforward process that aligns five key principles of behavior and applies them to the various environments in which we live our lives.

    The process is an essential aide in the team building, leadership and management development, conflict resolution and conflict preventions processes.

    Formally, "Strategic Conversations" adds to the above a professionally facilitated peer group, think tank, and mentoring process.

    I strongly encourage you to investigate a process that will revolutionize your communication and growth strategies. You will receive their FREE research report, "The 5 Keys To Strategic Conversations" immediately!

    << Back to More Articles