Monday 14 July 2014

How Do You Deal With a Negative Co-Worker?

Often it’ll fall to you as a human resources professional to handle negative co-worker, and this week on the Frank Kelly blog, I’m going to let you know how.

You will be A Negative Employees First Port of Call

No employee is perfect. The simple reality of working life is that everybody has their good days and bad days, and everyone occasionally has an issue in the workplace that they feel they have no choice but to air their grievances over.

Of course, as a human resources professional you will be their first port of call; after all, it is your job to manage people. Handling a co-workers negativity is no desirable task, but it is one that you will have to engage in, to ensure that their negativity odes not impact the company’s bottom line.

Frank Kelly’s Top Five Tips for Dealing with a Negative Co-Worker

In my experience I have found that there are a number of ways to negate the risk posed by a negative co-worker, and these are the top five that you can use as a human resources professional to do just that:

Listen: How can you address a disgruntled employees concerns if you don’t know what they are. Always make sure that you listen attentively, so you can handle their grievances effectively.

Be Sensitive: Whether you think their complaints have any validity or not, your co-worker feels as though it does, which means, even if they haven’t got a point, you can’t just dismiss what they are saying. Always use sensitivity when dealing with a negative co-worker.

Be Firm But Fair: It is your task to determine whether the employee’s complaints have any validity, and whatever you decide, you need to take what they have to say into consideration and be confident in how you decide to deal with the problem, to ensure that the employee is mollified.

Stay Uninvolved: It is not your task to personally weigh in on the issue at hand, rather act as a liaison between the aggrieved party and the management, therefore you need to ensure that you keep yourself uninvolved from the issue at hand.

Don’t Be Judgemental: Whether you think the employee in question has a valid concern or not, it is not your place to judge them. Do so, and you’ll likely only exacerbate the problem and ensure that the employee’s negativity infects the larger workforce.


Dealing with a negative co-worker is a balancing act, and unfortunately, it is a balancing act that will fall to you to negotiate. Ensure that you follow these five tips from the Frank Kelly blog to make sure that said employee’s negativity does not become a drag on your company’s bottom line. 

Thursday 3 July 2014

What Are the Personality Traits A HR Professional Needs to Have?

If you want to work in HR, you need to be a certain type of person, which is why on the Frank Kelly blog this week, I've outlined the personality traits any HR professional needs to have.


Managing People is a Considerable Task

Taking on a role in human resources is certainly not an easy task. You are essentially a people manager, and as it turns out, effectively managing people so that they prove an asset to your company’s bottom line, is a considerable task.

Between recruiting staff, training them, administering them, serving as the first port of call for specific people management issues etc. human resources is a job description with many elements. In my experience, there are several personality traits that often prove essential to carrying out this job 
description effectively, including….

Conscientiousness: Often as a HR professional, you are dealing with sensitive issues, which require you to think through how you handle the matter at hand.

Empathy: Dealing with people requires them to be able to communicate with you. People often feel far more comfortable communicating sensitive issues with a HR professional who has the ability to emphasise; thus communicate with them on their level.  

Efficiency: You are often dealing with facts, figures, records etc., and you need to be able to handle them efficiently, so that the company you work for runs smoothly.

Inquisitiveness: One of the roles that will often fall to you as a HR professional is recruiting and training new staff. You need to be inquisitive so that you can make sure that not only are they right for the vacancy in question, but that they receive all the essential training they need to prove an asset to the company.

A Desire to Help: Above all, you need a desire to help if you want to make it as a HR professional. Essentially, this job is about helping people, and if don’t have a desire to help, it will translate into what you do, and employees will pick up on it, making it far harder for you to succeed in the role of ‘managing people.’


At the end of the day, it takes a certain type of person to take on the role of HR professional, but once you take it on, it can be the most rewarding job you've ever had; you just need to know how to work with people.