About us
-
Contact us
Forgot password?
Click here for DeskDemon UK
FORUMS
FEATURES LIBRARY
INVITE
BLOGS
GROUPS
POLLS
ALBUMS
VIDEOS
LISTINGS
Home
Networking & Community
Career & Jobs
Meetings, Events, Travel
KnowledgeDesk
Office & Technology
Lifestyle
Free Subscription
AdminAdvantage E-magazine
Our Favorite Newsletter
» Click for international newsletters «
AdminAdvantage
Our Favorite
Browse Forum
Recent Topics
Welcome to the DeskDemon Forums
You will need to
Login in
or
Register
to post a message. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
PA and Secretary Community - Deskdemon.com
>
General Discussion
>
Admins 4 Admins
>
Small rant...new boss and people from their old job
>
Message #70647
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
« previous
next »
Print
Author
Topic: Small rant...new boss and people from their old job (Read 1995 times)
Cathy S
Hero Member
Posts: 638
Re: Small rant...new boss and people from their old job
«
on:
August 13, 2009, 05:19:00 pm »
I am still thinking about the how to suggest you address the overall situation and with whom ... but one thing is for sure you need urgently to find a way to reiterate that you are not his scapegoat.
I had an example of this the other day where my boss was told I had given his availability incorrectly ... I keep an audit trail of everything and was able to demonstrate that I had done nothing wrong. My boss knew that I would have this trail but that only comes with working with someone over time.
So first off please make sure you do keep a trail of what you do on behalf of this person. Then you need to let them know directly that you are not to blame for their lateness, etc. You may be able to adapt this technique: Ask to have a brief discussion and explain using BOFF (Behaviour, Outcome, Feelings, Future) - eg:
B
“I have just taken a call from Mr X's office and I understand that
you told him that I had given him the wrong time for his appointment
; I had e-mailed his Secretary with the arrangements, as well as phoning her,
O
and
it is clear that he was given the correct time which was also the time in your diary
.
F
I am
upset
that you took this action but
I also feel it undermines your professional image
with an important client.
F
I am committed to working with you to help you establish yourself in XYZ Corp; which means I recognise the importance of your appointments being appropriately scheduled. If you need me to allow additional time between appointments
in future please let me know so we can ensure you are not late again
."
It takes a little practise to phrase the statements in a careful way that makes the point but is not accusing. Practice on friends and family first if you can. But remember the longer you leave this unaddressed the worse it will get.
It is equally powerful for giving positive reinforcement - so if there is something your boss does really well, that makes you feel valued and you feel you can develop with/for them use that as an introduction phrased as a BOFF.
Do please let us know how you get on.
Logged
You will need to
Login in
or
Register
to post a message.
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
Print
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
General Discussion
-----------------------------
=> Sound Off!
=> Admins 4 Admins
=> Article Archive
=> Topical Climates
=> The Humour Zone
-----------------------------
BreakTime University
-----------------------------
=> BreakTime University
Loading...