How to Help Smart Employees Deal with Adversity

Beverly Flaxington

Beverly Flaxington is a practice management consultant. She answers questions from advisors facing human resource issues. To submit yours, email us here.

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Dear Bev,

I have a competent and expert team working with me. I have only hired from top-notch schools and those with experience. In terms of intelligence, I couldn’t ask for more but I believe the street smarts necessary for this work is missing for most of them. By street smarts, I mean the ability to encounter a problem and instead of raising it to me, as the senior partner, looking for a fix, being able to come up with a solution on their own. I have two staff members who actually have to leave the office when the markets don’t move our way and the clients call and give us heck for it. It’s part of the job to deal with frustrated and unhappy clients and these two have to “go out for coffee to decompress.” Is it one or the other? You get intelligence but you don’t get grit? Or you get a gritty doer but they don’t have the credentials I have been looking for? Can I teach them these skills at this point without just slapping them (proverbial) around?

D.W.

Dear D.W.,

Please no slapping! This has never been proven to be an effective behavior change method – with employees (or with children either, according to the research). I know you are kidding, but often times when people don’t do what we want them to do, we give them a verbal slap upside the head by belittling, insulting or pushing them to do things our own way. So be careful you don’t let your frustration level show.

I believe that problem-solving skills can be taught and managers can guide their teams to become better at dealing with blows and getting up, dusting off and going in for another round with confidence! The other good news is that research shows us that resilience can be taught. Even if they didn’t learn it in childhood, or at the Ivy League schools you hired them from, it isn’t too late for them to learn.