Networking Dilemmas

One major dilemma that occurs in any networking process is  ‘I really need your help – but I don’t like you’! What do you do when faced with a situation where you need to network with someone who you don’t like? They might be a bigot; someone who left your sister up the aisle, or scrounged drinks off you for the last 2 years. Maybe just being in the same room as them brings you out in a cold sweat or you just yearn to tell them how you really feel. But what happens when you discover that he or she has access to someone else who can help you with a major problem at work or get the promotion you are desperate for?

This situation can lead to a great deal of tension. Tension for you as you worry about ‘do I’ or ‘don’t I’ decisions; tension for the other person because they are not sure why you will not join their network; and tension between you because of the undiscussibles that don’t get surfaced. One of the ways to reduce this tension is to break the situation down to a series of options and choices as seen in Figure 3

Network partner choices

The decision tree tries to classify the choices that can be made when placed in such a difficult state of affairs. When faced with the situation where you have someone who you are not happy to work with, you have one of four options:

·         Need to work with them -

1)       Develop with Integrity – Often we might decide to work with someone that we don’t want to work with because it will help us to achieve certain personal goals. This is a common situation that we all face at different times. We meet the partner’s boss at a Christmas dinner and they turn out to be loud and offensive, but it is important to support our partner and so make the best of a bad situation. The difficulty comes in weighing up our personal value system. To what extent is doing something we don’t want to do against the value we place on being able to achieve something else that is important. There is no right way to make this decision, but in certain cases we might decide to subjugate our short values to achieve a longer-term goal.

2)       Develop with purpose – Sometimes we really would sooner not work with someone but choose to put up with the situation because of a greater good. This might be a decision to undertake some charity work by working with a local prison to help coach the inmates who are about to be released. In doing this you might be faced with someone who you find morally offensive and who acts against everything you stand for. However, you decide to look at the greater good and work on the basis that your choice is designed to help the person change and only by working with them will you be able to help them develop in the long run.

§         Don’t need to work with them- 

3)       Decline with truth - In this case you decide that you are unable to network with the person and decide to tell them why. This is a difficult call to make because you have to know why you are making the undiscussible discussible. Are you telling them about your dislike because you want to dump your feelings or do you believe that there is an ethical reason why it is important so let them know why you cannot work together.

4)       Decline with grace – With this choice you make the decision not to work with the person but to not tell them the real reason for the lack of engagement. Again, only you can make the choice, but sometimes there is little benefit for either party in giving unsolicited feedback and it is easier to withdraw from the relationship with grace and discretion.

Life is about managing trade-offs and so is managing networks. In an ideal world you could form a really effective network that consists purely of people that you like and want to spend time with. However life is rarely like that. Unless you have an independent source of income and don’t really need the benefits of a professional network there will be people who you need to associate with but are less keen on. The trick is to understand the tradeoffs you are prepared to make before building the network so that you don’t get yourself into potentially embarrassing and complex relationships. If you don’t think about where you would draw the line in the sand before you come cross a situation, how do you know when you have crossed it?

 

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(c)  Mick Cope