Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been called out by a subordinate with my tone. He didn't like the way I seemed hostile and "sounded like I was telling [him] what to do." He noted that my hostility was not in my words or my volume but rather my tone. It boiled down to him not liking the fact that I used an imperative sentence on an already late deliverable ("Please send me the report."), and he'd prefer me to ask a question (" Did you have time to look at the report?" with the implication that he will send it to me). I prefer a more direct way or communicating.
Based on past experiences, I don't think he would ask a male supervisor to change his"tone". Are we just a bad fit? What do you suggest?
But isn't that your job as his manager? You give him tasks, he does them. As long as you're speaking in a matter-of-fact normal voice, I don't see what his problem is. He's obviously just not used to working for a woman. Is he much older than you? Or a just-out-of-college kid? Either way, he needs to be educated on workplace norms. Women actually can be managers now -- it's 2016.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been called out by a subordinate with my tone. He didn't like the way I seemed hostile and "sounded like I was telling [him] what to do." He noted that my hostility was not in my words or my volume but rather my tone. It boiled down to him not liking the fact that I used an imperative sentence on an already late deliverable ("Please send me the report."), and he'd prefer me to ask a question (" Did you have time to look at the report?" with the implication that he will send it to me). I prefer a more direct way or communicating.
Based on past experiences, I don't think he would ask a male supervisor to change his"tone". Are we just a bad fit? What do you suggest?
But isn't that your job as his manager? You give him tasks, he does them. As long as you're speaking in a matter-of-fact normal voice, I don't see what his problem is. He's obviously just not used to working for a woman. Is he much older than you? Or a just-out-of-college kid? Either way, he needs to be educated on workplace norms. Women actually can be managers now -- it's 2016.
Anonymous wrote:Does he report to you or is he just lower down on the totem pole?
Anonymous wrote:Did the subordinate bring it up with you directly? Or your boss or HR? That sets the stage on how I would handle it going forward.
Anonymous wrote:I've been called out by a subordinate with my tone. He didn't like the way I seemed hostile and "sounded like I was telling [him] what to do." He noted that my hostility was not in my words or my volume but rather my tone. It boiled down to him not liking the fact that I used an imperative sentence on an already late deliverable ("Please send me the report."), and he'd prefer me to ask a question (" Did you have time to look at the report?" with the implication that he will send it to me). I prefer a more direct way or communicating.
Based on past experiences, I don't think he would ask a male supervisor to change his"tone". Are we just a bad fit? What do you suggest?