User Log In
Mailing list...
Recent Blogs
- Bullying Behavior and Conflict Management
- Corporate Transformation Requires Personal Transformations
- Bringing Greater Consciousness into Organizations
- The Most Complex and Least Understood Mode: Collaborating
- Good and Bad Avoiding
- How to Use a Conflict-Handling Mode
- The Avoiding Culture in Many Organizations
Good and Bad Avoiding
by Ralph H. Kilmann
There are two kinds of “avoiding” to keep in mind: good avoiding and bad avoiding. Good avoiding is when you purposely leave a conflict situation in order to collect more information, wait for tempers to calm down, or because you’ve concluded that what you first thought was a vital issue isn’t that important after all. Bad avoiding, however, is when the topic is very important to both persons (and to the organization), but you aren’t comfortable with confronting other people: Instead, you’re inclined to sacrifice your needs for others—which undermines your self-esteem, leaves you perpetually dissatisfied, and prevents you from learning from others.
Bottom line: Only avoid when that approach to conflict serves to satisfy your needs as well as the needs of others—whether in the short term or long term. But don’t avoid conflict simply because that mode is unfamiliar or uncomfortable to you. With awareness and practice (which builds self-confidence), you can easily learn to get both your needs and the other person’s needs met—for the best of both worlds.









