The Rumor Mill Can Grind You Up
Are you familiar with the rumor mill at your business? You
can kid yourself that there isn’t one, but trust me; your employees know about
it. Once the rumor mill kicks in, it can be challenging to shut it down because
your statements and protestations are viewed as spin or damage control.
Communication is key to stopping the rumor mill before it has a chance to grind
you up.
Are you familiar with the rumor mill at your business? You
can kid yourself that there isn’t one, but trust me. Your employees know about
it… listen to it… take part in it. The path to the rumor mill begins with
employee uncertainty and lack of information. Once the rumor mill kicks in, it
can be challenging to shut it down because your statements and protestations
are viewed as spin or damage control. The economic situation we face today is
an ideal one for cranking up the rumor mill. Talk of recession, cutbacks and
layoffs are just the thing to get the rumor mill grinding.
A
few months ago, while Bear Sterns executives went public to affirm that they
did not have a liquidity crisis, the rumor mill said they did have a problem.
Consequently, there was a run on the bank and a loss of market capitalization
that eventually led to illiquidity. There is no doubt the situation was tight
prior to the rumors, but the firm’s bankruptcy is as much a result of the rumor
mill as it is unsound financial practices.
And the rumor mill is not limited to large companies. It
exists in every organization. Rumors
can be spread by malicious malcontents or by innocent employees simply
wondering out loud. In both cases, a lack of real information from leadership
contributes to their start. Different scenarios may be involved. One of them
could apply to you:
#1 – It’s business
as usual. Things are going well. But, employees may not know this. If they
do know it, it is because managers have made it a practice to give them a
state-of-the-union update every few months or so. Even in times of uncertainty,
this information flow must continue. Management understands that their workers
are entitled to know the status of the organization. And that, when people feel
they’re being treated honestly and with respect, they’re more likely to stick around
through the difficult period.
If employees don’t
know the firm is doing well, it is because nobody has told them. This practice
of withholding pertinent information from workers is not unusual--and it’s one
of the primary causes of the rumor mill. Left to their own imaginations,
employees will look at what is going on in the economy and extend this
uncertainty to their place of employment, thus damaging morale, decreasing
productivity, and potentially increasing turnover.
#2 – Business is
tight, but it’s nothing too serious. In this scenario, managers think they
there’s no need to reveal that things are less than rosy because, in the long
run, everything will be alright. Yes, in the long run, things may be fine, but
it is the short run that matters now. Many people are living paycheck to
paycheck, and the idea of lost income is a powerful threat. So, although you
may be okay in the long run, your workers want to know that their jobs will be
preserved in the short run as well as the
long run. Rather than not report at all, managers should update employees and
reassure them that, although business is off a bit, their jobs are safe and there
is no reason for concern.
#3 – Business is
bad. Every day, we read in the papers of business bankruptcies.
Unfortunately, that happens in good times as well as bad times. But a soft
economy increases the number of failed enterprises. Some misguided managers
tell themselves that “no news is good news” and bad news will only cause
employees to leave. Wrong. “No news”
is an opportunity for the rumor mill to grind on, and bad news is an
opportunity for the company to rally and come to together to meet the crisis.
Managers who keep silent miss the opportunity to stop the
rumor mill. Better to tell employees the truth and get them on your side than
to tell them nothing and let the rumor mill push them out the door.
Even in
the best of times, communication is one of the most neglected duties of
leadership. Rarely is it as good as it could be. With this already weak
foundation in place, we currently see firms doing less to disclose information
in the face of economic uncertainty when they should be doing more. These conversations don’t need to
be scripted, theatrical events--just honest, adult conversations about how the
firm is doing and what employees can do to help. Do this and the rumor mill
will not get a chance to crank up at your place. Don’t communicate , and it
might grind you up.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Wally Adamchik is the
President of FireStarter Speaking and Consulting, a national leadership
consulting firm based in Raleigh,
NC. You can visit the website at
http://www.FireStarterSpeaking.com or email him at wally@beafirestarter.com.
His book No Yelling (http://www.noyelling.net) was selected by Entrepreneur
Magazine as one of the best business books of Summer 2007.
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