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How To Have Great Relationships
G’day. I’m Michelle McQuaid, and welcome to Thank God It’s Friday! This week’s
letter comes to us from Sophie who writes, “Hi Michelle. I’m a
student counselor, and recently I’ve been moved away from my
team to a new campus we’ve set up. I’m really enjoying the work, but missing having
my colleagues around me. We just don’t feel like a team
anymore. I feel like my work is suffering. What can I do to
rebuild and protect these relationships?”
Sophie, that is a great question to ask. Because more than we do each day at work, it’s who
we do it with that has the biggest impact on our levels
of engagement and wellbeing. So let me give you three really
simple tips to help you protect and build your relationships.
Firstly, make sure you create some connection rituals with people that you value. Now this
might involve a regular morning coffee, a monthly lunch,
drinks after work on a Friday, whatever works for you and your
colleagues. It’s simply a regular date in the diary to make sure that you’re going
to prioritize catching up and having some time together. Research shows
that if you can spend around three hours with other
people each day in positive interactions, your chance of having a good day goes up by
10 percent.
Secondly, make sure you’re showing your appreciation for colleagues. Gratitude is
like a magic tonic when it comes to creating a positive cycle
within our relationships. So before you log off each day at work,
take the time to thank at least one person who might have helped you today, or just given
a laugh, or made your job a little bit more enjoyable.
Finally, at all costs, avoid social comparisons. Now, this can be pretty difficult when you’re
surrounded by brilliant people who seem to be getting promotions,
and pay rises, and benefits from your boss that you’re
not. But it’s a sure-fire path to ruining your relationships. So if you’re finding
yourself comparing yourself a lot with your colleagues, see if you can notice
what’s triggering off that sense of jealousy, and try to take
three positive steps to overcome that perceived shortcoming. It might be enrolling yourself
in a new class. It might be asking for a conversation with
your boss about what you can do to show the things that you’re
achieving at work. Whatever it is, do something positive about it rather than getting stuck
in that grip of rumination and negativity.
Now if I’m completely honest, as an introvert who has had that old soundtrack playing of
not being good enough, having great relationships at work
is often something that I’ve struggled with. I was often so busy
trying to prove my worth that I came off as pretty intimidating and scary to my colleagues
when actually all I really wanted to be was liked. For me, the
most powerful tools have been using my strengths of curiosity
and gratitude to turn down that negative self-talk and do something more positive that’s focused
on others. My strength of curiosity has helped
me get interested in what brings out the best in people and
ask questions that show that I respect them, and I value the things that make them tick.
My strength of gratitude means that each day before I leave
the office, I take the time to genuinely thank someone for
the difference that they’ve made in my day. Not only does it make them feel good, but
I leave the office smiling. Using these strengths dramatically
improved the quality of my relationships, so that my
colleagues were much more willing to collaborate together on projects, but I also felt more
supported and happy at the office. And long after the job
was left, the friendships have remained.
Knowing with doing is a waste of your time, and you’re too good for that. So take action
now, and step it up. Take this week’s challenge, and make
sure each day before you log off and leave the office, you take
the time to thank at least one person. Make sure it’s genuine. Be specific about what
you appreciate and why, and if you can, tell them about the difference
that it made in your day. Now you can do this in
person, by phone, over email, whatever works best for you. Just take the time to say thank
you. Then head on over to michellemcquaid.com, tell
us who you thanked and why, how did you feel doing it?
If you like this video, then subscribe and share it with your family and friends. And
if you want more great tips on how to get ahead at work, then head
on over to michellemcquaid.com where you’ll hear it all first.
In the meantime, stay strong. You are good enough, and you deserve success and happiness
when it comes to your job. Make sure you join me next
week when we’ll talk about the secret to ensuring stress
isn’t hijacking your success at the office. Thank you so much for watching. Take care.
# # # #
Want to know more about how you can use your strengths to get the respect, recognition,
and rewards you deserve at work? Then hurry, head on over
to michellemcquaid.com, and sign up for our new online
training. Become a workplace superstar so that you can create success on your own terms.
There’s a special introductory price, but only until
Christmas, so this year give yourself the best gift of all and
discover how and what it is you do best at work.
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