Steps
1
Know what gossip is. Friendly work banter and gossip are worlds apart. But how do you tell the difference? Consider the following:
- Discussion: A friendly work discussion that talks about others keeps the references to other people general, friendly and supportive. The speaker is not obsessed with picking holes in another person's character but is merely imparting information about what another person or people have done in a matter-of-fact way, to further an objective, work-related conversation and to enlighten the listener about work relevant information;
- Gossip: Gossip tends to be talk that gains attention for the speaker. The speaker will often adopt a confidential tone and is using the information about somebody else to be the center of attention and will impart the details in a way that tries to undermine the credibility or likability of another person. The details may be given with moralizing undertones and character assassination may be the top of the gossip's agenda. Often you are told more personal details than you care to know about. The motivations behind gossip include attention-seeking, self-inflation, exaggeration and a me-versus-them mentality;
- Grapevine gossip: This is gossip pertaining to general change occurring within a workplace. Someone started it and now it is running about like wildfire. Usually this happens in an uncertain environment and is fueled by fear, poor communications from management levels and wild guesses by staff. It is less personal than gossip attacking another person but is as equally damaging and demoralizing.
2
Don't take work gossip to heart.
A lot of work gossip is just that - gossip. It is filled with innuendo,
rumors, errors and even deliberately malicious nonsense. Take it with a
pinch of salt rather than reacting personally or defensively. There is
no doubt that gossip must be dealt with strongly and immediately
but it will not help your situation as a team leader or colleague to
take it personally. Focus instead on the reality that there is an
underlying reason or series of reasons causing the gossip and focus on
dealing with it objectively as a task rather than as a personal attack
to be foiled in an emotional or angry manner.
3
Arm yourself with the facts.
Is there truth to the tall tales? Sometimes there is a kernel of truth
and this should be uncovered before addressing the problem so that you
are well placed to respond with facts rather than emotions. This is
especially important in relation to change management gossip where wild
ideas take root quickly and spread even faster; look for factual answers
by asking questions of the right people, namely, those who are in a
position to give definitive and accurate answers. You may also need to
seek additional facts from trustworthy sources such as internal
bulletins, official publications and meeting minutes if there is gossip
about changes or redundancies that might sideswipe your response.
4
Assess the context.
Which type of gossip are you dealing with - personal gossip or workplace
change gossip? Both require fast and firm treatment to prevent staff
morale from plummeting. The following two steps address each type.
5
Address workplace change gossip with speed, supportiveness and honesty.
During times of rapid change and uncertainty in a workplace, gossip
will naturally increase due to fear and anticipated negative outcomes.
It is important to realize this and to sort the fear factor from the
facts. If you are a team leader, be a source of reassurance to your team
by acknowledging their fears and worries. Armed with prior researched
facts, tell them what you do know; equally tell them what you don't know
and do not make things up. When you don't know something, tell them
that you'll find out. Be the rock that supports them and diverts gossip
back on itself.
6
Challenge a personal gossiper directly.
Some people gossip because they enjoy it or they feel insecure about
others in the workplace. Most gossipers are pure attention-seekers. A
persistent and long-term gossiper must be stopped in their tracks by
calling their bluff. View such people as attention-seekers and give them
some attention within limits by hearing them out in a closed-door
meeting:
- Inform the gossiper that you want to know what is really bothering them. Ask them why they are telling you the information (that you perceive as gossip). Forcing them to explain will cause them to realize that you have seen through their muckraking for what it is.
- Another tactic is to inform the gossiper that you are prepared to follow up the gossip with the targeted person. This will let the gossiper know that the information is going back to the targeted party and the gossiper will likely retract or apologize.
- Be positive and genuinely seek to assist the gossiper. Engage the gossiper in a conversation that lets them air their real grievances and be understanding but firm in your responses. Maybe they are peeved that they missed out on a training or promotion opportunity; maybe they are annoyed that the victim of the gossip has a special work deal or work hours that they also want to have. Dig a little deeper and see if there is a fair solution that can be reached.
- Be realistic. If the gossiper sees your direct approach of fair discussion as threatening and refuses to be forthcoming in what is really bugging them, be firm in letting them know that the gossip must stop. Often confronting a gossiper in this direct manner is enough to alert them to stop; or they may choose to move on under their own steam. At the end of the day, however, it may be necessary to make it clear that gossip is not tolerated at all at work, to the extent of letting go of a person who persists in this behavior.
- Remember the "kernel of truth" mentioned above. Whilst it is not appropriate to assume that the target of the gossip is deserving of the muckraking, sometimes the gossip's loose talk might have pointed out a weakness in a work practice or a person's skills that may need attending to. Do some discreet homework to see if perhaps there is need for improved communications, some staff training or other means for improving work morale that might have been overlooked in general. In other words, look for some positives a midst the negative situation that will allow your team and workplace to self-improve as a result.

7
Don't participate in work gossip.
If you participate in work gossip, you perpetuate it and you belittle
yourself. In particular, if you have leadership aspirations, or you are
already in a position of leadership, any participation in work gossip by
you will be viewed negatively and as anti-team spirited. Always ask
yourself about your motivation when discussing others in a
personal way within the work context; if you are talking about them to
ingratiate yourself with others or to make yourself appear better, than
it is likely that you are gossiping.
8
Make it company policy to discourage gossip.
It is important that staff members are aware of how gossip is treated
in your company. Make this a constructive and positive policy, however,
by showing what employees should do rather than telling what not to do.
For example, provide examples of what your workplace considers to be
gossip and provide examples of how to avoid this type of negative
interaction.source:wikihow.com
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