Saturday 18 January 2014

Making Friends at Work


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Starting a new job? One thing that might be on your mind is, essentially, how to make friends with co-workers.

Sometimes you get along immediately with your co-workers, with whom you might become life-long friends, there might be other instances where you cannot get head nor tails of how to break the ice with that new colleague you have been trying to talk to for so long. Both are reasonable and very real scenarios. Muovo would like to share with you the article below, relating an interview from BrazenLife with the life cocah Shasta Nelson, CEO of GirlfriendCircles.com and author of the book Friendships Don’t Just Happen. In this interview, Nelson tells us everything we need to know about making new friends at the office - including who should you pursue and who should you stay away from.

Question 1. If you really feel a connection with a coworker, is it a good idea to try to deepen that relationship? Or should “office life” and “real life” be kept separate?
No! I don’t think they should be separate at all! In fact, work really is one of the places to make friends where we have one of the biggest friendship challenges taken care of for us — consistency. That’s why it felt easy in school — we saw each other every day. In 'real life', it’s actually much more difficult to see each other regularly enough to build up that familiarity and comfortableness.

The office is perfect, since you both have to spend so much time there. I’d definitely try to deepen that relationship, so much so that I’d encourage you to practice being friends outside of work, too, so that when one of you leaves the job, you already have other structures in place for your friendship to continue.

Question 2. How concerned should you be about making friends in the office, even at the basic level of casual friendship?
People who have friends at work are way more inclined to report job satisfaction, and companies recognize that that’s one of the best ways to retain employees. We will put up with a lot of stress and non-ideal job descriptions if we like the people we work with, so I’d say it’s worth being a pretty high priority at work. Plus, this is where you spend most of your time, so it make sense that at minimum, you want to be surrounded by people you’re friendly with, even if they don’t all turn into consequential friendships.

Question 3. Are there any “rules” to making friends in the office?
I’d say two good principles are: to 1) take it slow, and 2) don’t let your friendship ever make others feel excluded in the office.

The first one is super important. Don’t over-share with someone. Vulnerability — sharing more about yourself with less of a filter — is one of the actions that develops a friendship, but I encourage everyone to engage in it step by step so that, really, you’re never taking a big risk as much as you are many, many small ones. But that’s even more important at work, where you don’t want to share too much with someone before you’ve co-created a trusting relationship with each other.

And the second rule speaks more to making sure your friendship is adding to the office dynamics, not excluding others or making people feel wary, left out or suspicious. While at work, invite more people to join in your friendly relationship, invite others to sit with you at lunch and try to do more of your eventual secret-sharing outside of the office.

Question 4. What are some good ways to explore deepening a relationship with a co-worker?
It probably starts with friendliness and chit-chat, talking about the weekend and what TV shows you’re watching. Then the next goal is to find a way to spend more substantial time together, so usually an invitation to grab lunch together, attend an event together or meet for drinks after work will help make that happen.

And this is where it may stay for a while: friendliness in the office, friendship for an hour here and there outside the office. In fact, if this is as far as it goes, it’s an incredibly valuable relationship that will increase your happiness at work. In some cases, you may want to grow it to the next step, and that means eventually starting to get together when it’s completely unattached to work, such as brunch on the weekend, a double-date with the boyfriends on a Friday night or getting together to watch your favorite TV shows one night.

Question 5. Can you — or should you — ever be friends with your manager? (Or, if you’re a manager, friends with your subordinate?)
This one can be tricky, because there is not a “one size fits all” answer. Our personalities, company culture and individual job descriptions will inform the decision. But in theory, I’d say yes. We can be friends with people even if we have different roles at work. Obviously, it requires both people respecting the other so much that neither one shares confidential information or asks for favors at work.

Question 6. Fights among friends are inevitable and can become even more hot-button if that friend is also a co-worker. What is your advice for dealing with conflicts with friends in the office?
This goes back to the second rule: Don’t let your friendship make others uncomfortable in the office. That means they shouldn’t know you’re fighting. You don’t gossip about each other, talk about other or take it out on each other.

Question 7. Is it appropriate to get into a friendship with someone who’s in a romantic relationship? Should you pursue a friendship with a co-worker if it could be misconstrued by their significant other?
Again, though, this is not an easy answer. Cross-gender relationships are a wholly different animal in this setting.

If the friendship could hurt people — in the office or in either of your lives — then one has to ask whether there are other feelings or motives at work. Because mature friends wouldn’t want to jeopardize their friends’ other relationships. At the least, recognize this relationship has a whole different level of complication and drama that may best be avoided simply by fostering other friendships, even if there isn’t as much chemistry.

Question 8. What should you do if you don’t feel a connection with coworkers, on even the most basic level? (Assuming that you enjoy your job.)
Bonds can always, always be developed in some form or another. The best place to start is with having enough conversations that you can start seeing where you both have similarities or where you “get” each other.

We all have more things in common than we realize, even if we have a 40-year age gap, opposite political views or are in completely different life stages. I believe that those who seek, find. Which means that if we say to ourselves, “I am choosing to like you; now I’m going to keep looking for the reasons,” we will always find them!

Happy work bonding!

Nikita Pisani at Muovo

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