Office Politics: Survival of the Savvy
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Article Title: Office Politics: Survival of the Savvy
Author's Name: Patsi Krakoff, Psy. D.
Author's Email: patsi @ customizednewsletters.com
Author's Website: www.CustomizedNewsletters.com
Word Count: 664
Office Politics: Survival of the Savvy
©2006 Patsi Krakoff, Psy. D.
There's one skill everybody at work wishes they were better
at, but you won't find it taught in MBA courses: office
politics.
Tales of political sabotage, power plays and turf wars are
part of any organization's history. Nonetheless, political
competence is the one skill everyone wishes to have more
of-but no one admits to it.
Political competence is the "ability to understand what you
can and cannot control, when to take action, who is going to
resist your agenda, and whom you need on your side. It's
about knowing how to map the political terrain and get
others on your side, as well as lead coalitions," according
to Prof. Samuel B. Bacharach who wrote Getting Them On Your
Side, 2005.
Many individuals have good ideas that, if implemented, could
yield positive results for their companies. Sometimes these
ideas fail because the leaders who propose them cannot gain
support from key people.
Defining Political Savvy
It's naive to suggest that all office politics are
destructive and unethical. If you define politics in such a
narrow and negative way, you overlook the value of political
awareness and skill. When political astuteness is combined
with ethics and integrity, it can produce positive results
for you, your team and your organization.
By avoiding or denying its existence, you underestimate how
political behavior can destroy careers, a company's
reputation and overall performance. If you define politics
in only negative terms, you are naively under-political,
which leaves you vulnerable to overly political,
self-serving individuals.
Three Phases of Political Competence
Political competence can be developed in an ethically sound
way with this three-phase process:
1. Map Your Political Terrain
First, identify all stakeholders-anyone who has an interest
in, or who would be affected by, your idea-and how they will
react. Some resistance is inevitable. You must anticipate
others' reactions, identify allies and resisters, analyze
their goals, and understand their agendas.
2. Get Others on Your Side
Build your coalition-a politically mobilized group committed
to implementing your idea because doing so will generate
valued benefits.
How do you win support? You need to be credible. You
communicate credibility by letting potential allies and
resisters know about your expertise, demonstrating personal
integrity, and showing you have access to important people
and information. Through informal conversations, meetings
and office drop-ins, you need to explain your position.
3. Make Things Happen
You must win others' buy-in by making it clear there's a
payoff for supporting your effort and drawbacks for not
joining your coalition. Show how implementing your idea will
ease their workload, increase their visibility within the
organization, or help them cut costs in their unit.
Once you've persuaded people to join your coalition, you've
established a base that will legitimize your idea. Coalition
members will then use their networks to evangelize for you.
Mastering only certain parts of the three identified phases
will not yield success. Some people sabotage themselves by
failing to complete all three phases when attempting to
generate and implement change.
Reducing Risk through Politics
There are risks with any course of action you take. You
sometimes have incomplete or inadequate information when
making a decision. Building a coalition through dialogue
with its members pushes valuable information to the
surface.
You are open to criticism and politically vulnerable
whenever you make a decision. Politically competent leaders
reduce risk by getting as many people as possible on their
side. Building a coalition is a search process for the best
solution.
Building a coalition, bringing people together and
solidifying/expanding your base will leave you less
vulnerable to criticism. It's more difficult to attack a
leader who has built a large base of support throughout the
organization.
Resources on Office Politics
Bacharach, S. 2005. Get Them on Your Side. Adams Media
Corp.
Brandon, R. & Seldman, M. 2004. Survival of the Savvy:
High-Integrity Political Tactics for Career and Company
Success. Free Press.
Kleiner, A. 2003. Who Really Matters : The Core Group Theory
of Power, Privilege, and Success:. Doubleday.
Patsi Krakoff, Psy. D. writes articles for business and
executive coaches and consultants. She provides articles on
leadership and executive development for sale, and formatted
into customized newsletters. Get Patsi's Secrets of
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