Posted on 03/21/2017 8:40:43 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Dear Boss,
Ive been at my company for five years, in various roles with increasing responsibility. A few months ago, I was promoted to train the rest of a team that I was formerly a member of, with responsibility for both onboarding and continuing education (were in a medical field where there is a steady stream of new information we need to be well-versed in). Im a woman in my mid-30s and my team has been fantastic about supporting me as I enter this new managerial role (I do not have direct reports, but I manage the function).
The person who was hired to replace me, Fergus, is in his late 60s and has never worked in this area of medicine before. Hes done the equivalent job at other companies, so there are obvious parallels that qualify him for the job, assuming he completes his training at my direction. He is extremely bright and eager, and reports to Jane, who is my peer. During the interview process, I expressed concern that I hadnt been able to get a word in edgewise with Fergus when I interviewed him, and that I felt he might not be a good fit with the customers I used to work with. But we needed to backfill the position and so he was hired.
At a recent training meeting, Fergus began instructing other team members on aspects of the disease we specialize in. He repeated the last few words of my sentences to appear as though he was agreeing with me, and offered his opinions frequently including many that were simply not accurate. Jane gave Fergus frequent indications that he needed to back off, including putting up her hand to signal stop. Toward the middle of the day, I was raising a point about my companys experience with a particular aspect of treatment, and Fergus began to talk over me. I put up my hand and asked him to hold on, and he began to speak louder. I finally said, Fergus, Im in the middle of a sentence and I intend to get to the end of it you need to wait. Fergus talked even more loudly and then finally blurted out in exasperation that he was just trying to learn! He spent the rest of the afternoon sulking.
After the meeting, I spoke to Jane and she said that she was very happy with how I handled Fergus, but Ive been troubled by the situation ever since. Several members of the team have commented to me that they find his behavior to be inappropriate and irritating.
Im at a loss. Fergus cannot continue to talk over me and others and give misinformation. In the weeks leading up to this meeting, Jane had several conversations with him about the importance of listening and learning during onboarding, given that hes tried to jump ahead in the program several times. Im troubled to think that my age and gender could underlie his disrespect for me and his manager, and Im sick that hes going to be handling my old customers. Im concerned about how to handle him given that Im not his manager, Im concerned about his impact on team dynamics, and Im concerned that he might implicate me as the cause for his turbulent onboarding process. How should I proceed?
Oh, Fergus.
Its always interesting to see someone do this in an effort to seem important to others without realizing that they end up looking bad instead theres a bizarre lack of self-awareness about how other people see them.
And Fergus sounds like a pretty extreme offender, if hes able to keep going in the face of his boss telling him directly to stop. The sulking after finally being successfully shut down is a nice touch too.
But the good news here is that Ferguss manager sounds like shes seeing things exactly as youre seeing them. And more good news is that she doesnt sound shy about addressing it. Putting up her hand to signal stop and frequently nudging him to back off are excellent signs that shes comfortable being assertive and that shes not going to roll over and let Fergus steamroll over people.
Given that, I would focus on doing three things.
First, continue asserting yourself with Fergus exactly as youve been doing. Telling him to wait, refusing to let him talk over you, and telling him that he cant interrupt you are all exactly what you should be doing. Keep doing those things. And keep in mind that because dealing with a Fergus can be exhausting, at times it may feel tempting to give him more leeway, just so youre not constantly having to battle with him. Try not to give into that temptation, because if you dont hold the line, you risk reinforcing his worst tendencies.
Second, consider addressing the big picture with him, especially in the context of explaining what you need from him as part of his training. For example, you could say, Fergus, Ive noticed that you frequently interrupt or try to talk over me when Im speaking. I need you to let me finish before interjecting. I also hope youll take advantage of the knowledge that I and others here have about this program, since its going to be essential to you performing well in your role. And if that sounds a little heavy-handed to say to someone you dont manage, know that its not. Youre senior to him, youre training him for the job you used to hold, and hes being obnoxious.
Third, at some point it might make sense for you to nudge Jane to take more action. Its really good that shes dealing with Fergus in the moment and that shes talked with him about the importance of listening, but theres a point where more action than that will be needed. If this goes on for much longer, your role may be to say to Jane, Hey, I have grave concerns about Fergus at this point. Hes not been receptive to coaching, he doesnt listen, hes coming across as arrogant, and hes irritating people. Im concerned about how hes going to interact with my old clients. Are you sure that hes the right fit for the role? (If you feel awkward about that, keep in mind that as the person training him to fill your old role, you have standing to raise that question.)
One last thing, too. You wrote that youre troubled to think that your age and gender could underlie Ferguss disrespect for you. And they very well could! In fact, Im curious to know whether he works with any men close to his age and, if so, whether he behaves any differently with them. But thats more of a point of interest than something that should change how you approach the situation. The beauty of being in a position of seniority to Fergus (and with some power over him too, since youre training him and thus well-positioned to relay concerns to his boss) is that you can decide that you dont give a crap what he thinks about your gender or your age. Regardless of how he might feel and regardless of his level of respect for younger women at work, you can require him to stop interrupting and talking over you, you can tell him to stop and/or correct him when hes talking about something he doesnt know anything about, and you can assert your expertise and knowledge over his when you need to. (Of course, to some extent this relies on being in a workplace that supports you in doing those things and that doesnt coddle Fergus types, but it sounds like youre probably in one of those.) Having to do those things repeatedly can be exhausting which is why you should be prepared to call the question with Jane about whether Fergus should stay on but it can also be pretty gratifying when youre confident in your authority to enforce and act on those boundaries.
Make him a mouthful of sammich?
Ping.
How do I shut up a LEFTSPLAINER?
Signed, The World.
The guy is a chatterbox and you just tell him to be quiet.
If you are not a strong enough person to do that then you should not be in charge of anything.
What I found what works, is:
stop everything you are doing.
Call attention to Fergus.
Tell him he has the floor.
The room will go silent.
Ask him to explain the process\procedure\steps to take.
(If he takes you up on it)
Once he steps on a land mine, you stop his dissertation.
Tell him he is wrong.
Explain the correct procedure beginning from where you left off.
In either case, tell him in no uncertain terms .... no more interruptions.
Crush the patriarchy!
Insecure woman.
I have had great female and male bosses. I have also had horrid bosses of each sex.
This article is so wrong in so many ways. In short she does not know how to be boss and never will. It has nothing to do with her sex but her poor leadership qualities.
She could learn a lot of things relating to whatever it is she does, then she might not have to ask a man (the horror!) for help.
I have had great female and male bosses. I have also had horrid bosses of each sex.
This article is so wrong in so many ways. In short she does not know how to be boss and never will. It has nothing to do with her sex but her poor leadership qualities.
Agree completely with your first paragraph. However, leadership is a skill set, which means it can be learned. Becoming a great boss doesn't happen by accident, and mediocrity is practically the default. All of my best bosses were constantly working to improve themselves and their management skills. My worst bosses were people who just assumed their position meant they were experts in everything. There was never any growth, and they got progressively worse over time. This is the writer's first foray into management. Asking for help navigating new challenges is a promising sign.
Wut? She asked him to simmer down and learn the job she's already an expert in before he starts yammering on incorrectly about it.
Never interrupt a mansplainer. Because he’s a man.
In a couple more years, she’ll be in charge of water boarding.
Leftsplainer! I will keep that one.
Cisgendersplainers are also a pain.
This behavior isn’t gender-specific. I’ve seen it a lot, in both men and women.
And it ALWAYS gets worse, until eventually the person has to be fired so the rest of the team can function.
Dear person writing to your boss. It doesn’t matter if Fergus makes you upset. You’ve given notice. Let go.
Fergus didn’t just walk in the door - somebody liked him and his background enough to want to hire him. Your actions are undermining that higher-up’s decision. His supervisor may put her hand up to stop his input, but it’s inappropriate for you to do so because he is your equal. It is also inappropriate to speak harshly to him in a meeting setting. That’s what closed doors are for. What you’re really doing is trying to make yourself look more valuable going out the door and that’s selfish. Turn your criticism into a helping hand.
Fergus needs to let trainees know that he is the new trainer - because he is. You’re gone. If he just sits there while you decide whether he’s your perfect duplicate, you’re wasting the company’s resources. He should be conducting the training sessions, with you there to give him feedback - after the session in a quiet environment. Since he’s done equivalent work in other settings, and likely has a wealth of experience to draw from because of his age (btw, even mentioning his age in a letter to your boss is harassment), understand that he may have different insight than you. His responsibility is to please the hiring authority, not you. Have fun in your new career and don’t worry about Fergus. He’ll be just fine.
Testosterone?
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