Work gossip: 3 golden rules

Work gossip: 3 golden rules

EVEN well-intentioned workers can find themselves caught up in inappropriate talk.

A recent column invited the readers of The New York Times to share personal rules for separating harmless small talk from potentially troublesome gossip. Here are my three golden rules.

  1. If the matter is about myself, I only discuss it with a colleague if I would be comfortable with everyone knowing it.
  2. If it is about someone else, I only say it if I would also say it directly to the person I’m talking about.
  3. If in doubt, I keep quiet.This exercise started several weeks ago with a question from a reader who was worried that repeating harmless-seeming information about a co-worker’s holiday plans may have accidentally got that colleague in trouble.

I was sympathetic since this sounded like small talk inadvertently gone bad. But a number of you countered that, in fact, this reader was a blabbermouth who deserved blame for the whole episode. Here is my distillation of the highlights from readers’ gossip rules.

  1. All about you

    Before you worry about what others might say about you or what you say about others, think about your own sharing habits. Susan Peppercorn of Positive Workplace Partners, a career coaching firm, offered her observations. Don’t get too personal. A good rule of thumb in any business relationship is not to reveal anything you don’t want to be repeated. She said this could be tricky because we crave social connection and we spend a lot of time at work. Just be thoughtful about how you connect.

    Employees who have friends at work report higher levels of productivity and job satisfaction than those who don’t. But we don’t need to spill our guts to office friends. As a different reader pointed out, the social media age seems to encourage us to broadcast our personal lives. Be careful about that in the context of the workplace, Peppercorn said, because it is a de facto social network with no privacy settings. Know your fellow gossiper. Don’t share information with someone unless you can trust their discretion.

  2. Other people’s business

    Suppose you’re good at staying mum about your own business, but your colleagues can’t seem to stop sharing theirs. When does talking about someone else cross the line from benign conversation to thoughtless indiscretion? Ruth Levine Arnold, a social communication coach, wrote in to offer her guidelines. One strategy is to restrict water cooler small talk to weather, sports, entertainment, music and so on. Facts and scores are pretty safe, she said. To me, gossip generally means that people are talking about the personal affairs of someone who is not present without permission.
    Even sharing what seems like workday details about other colleagues – like their holiday plans – can spiral out of control as they’re passed around, Arnold said.

    Another said it was often best to avoid speaking for someone else. I have one basic guideline: let people tell their own story. For example, someone asks, “What is Anna’s ethnic background?” Even if I know, I respond: “I think you should ask Anna that question.” Another reader added that it was better to err on the side of discretion. You will never have the reputation as being someone who “always knows”, but you will always have the reputation as a trustworthy person.

  3. Who is listening?

    A few readers zeroed in on another dimension of workplace chatter – the audience. Even if you’re thoroughly confident that everybody knows about Colleague X’s new hobby or family news, never chat about an absent third party when a manager is listening, said one reader. No matter how chummy the atmosphere, one should never include an administrator in any discussion of a personal nature. This is not to say managers are inherently devious or untrustworthy. It simply acknowledges that there may be conflicts or agendas you don’t know about. Tailor what you say depending on who can hear it.

    The last reader confessed to participating in office chitchat, but said she tried to be careful about what she discussed. There are a lot of things to talk about besides other people. If I do hear anything about a third party, I never repeat it. An interesting and pleasant corollary to that rule is that most people know that I never repeat what I hear about others.

This article first appeared in The New York Times.

Making work friendships work

Making work friendships work

AN EMPLOYEE has a fulfilling job at a good company. All that is missing are friends. Here’s how to decide whether this is truly a problem and if so, how to resolve it. ROB WALKER replies to one of his readers on workplace friendships.

Q: I have an interesting job with a company that makes me proud. But even after six years, I don’t have any friends at work. There are a few people I exchange pleasantries with, but no lunch or coffee mates. This had never happened to me in my three decades of working. I still have close friends from all of my previous jobs. My department is small and isolated from the rest of the company; our work doesn’t allow for much socialising. What’s more, I don’t feel a connection with any of my three direct colleagues. I’ve joined a sports club at the company, which has been fun but hasn’t yielded the social bonds I had hoped it would. Is this okay? Is it enough to enjoy the work, but not the environment? Should I look for a job where I’d feel more comfortable? I have a family and plenty of friends outside the office, but it is not fun to feel alienated for 40-plus hours a week.

A: Having some degree of social bonding at work can be good for both your career and your well-being. At the same time, I think many people overrate workplace friendships. Yes, it is best if everyone gets along, but expecting colleagues to be genuine friends may set the bar too high. The point of work isn’t socialising, it is work. Still, some elements of your situation do seem a little extreme.

Most notably that you say you feel not just uncomfortable, but even “alienated”. That’s such a harsh word that it seems almost at odds with the rest of your description. Morra Aarons-Mele, the author of Hiding in the Bathroom, which is, in part, a career and workplace guide for the introverted or socially anxious, wrote: “Here’s what’s really important at work: feeling good at work. “If that, for you, is having people to eat lunch with, then that’s important.”

It can change at different points in a career, she added. When you’re in a new city or just new to the workforce, for instance, work mates may be more of a priority. It doesn’t seem that you have trouble making friends generally. But given your situation, you could experiment with some of the “baby-step strategies” that a socially anxious person might use, she said. Pick the one person you’re most comfortable with and reach out with some simple gesture that signals openness and interest, such as: “I’m going to go out and get a coffee. Would you like one?” The idea is to take a small step and see where it leads.

Similarly, you might give some thought to what you mean by friendship in the workplace and whether you can define it more simply. If your deeper social needs are met outside work, maybe on the job you could just aim for a slightly heightened version of the cordiality that already exists. If you like your job, it seems a drastic step to leave it because you don’t have coffee mates. It is not as if you can somehow guarantee that you’ll have that in a new gig.

I’m an advocate of always staying open to new opportunities. If you really feel alienated, it is worth seeing what’s out there that might make you happier. But it is also worth seeing if you can find little ways to slightly enhance your relationships with a colleague or two and see how that feels.

This article first appeared in The New York Times.

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