21 Feb 2008 11:05:49 | Jan B. King
Four Employee Behaviors that can Kill Your Business
I found it important to clarify for employees what
“deal-breaker” behavior was at my company. These are the things
I insisted would not be tolerated and would lead to immediate or
ultimate termination, depending on the nature of the infraction
of these hard and fast rules. Here are the behaviors I would not
tolerate:
1. Gossip. Rumors can be incredibly disruptive to a company. A
lack of information can get rumors started, and frank
explanations can usually stop them. However, some employees
thrive on the admiration of others when they seem to be “in the
know.” Define gossip as clearly as you can and tell employees
what you expect them to do when they hear it. First and
foremost, that you don’t repeat it. Along the same lines of
gossip, remind employees that all e-mail sent or received on
company computers is considered company business and not private
correspondence.
2. Violence or threatening or abusive behavior. Termination
should be immediate for any employee who engages in any form of
violent or abusive behavior. Workplace violence includes
threatened or actual abuse and can be verbal or physical. These
behaviors only escalate with time and are never excusable. Any
employees involved in workplace violence should leave the
workplace immediately and be placed on a paid leave of absence
for a few days while you investigate the situation and consult
with your attorney. Don’t assume this couldn’t happen in your
company—it’s estimated by the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) that two million Americans are victims of
workplace violence annually.
3. Dishonesty and theft. The term theft can include the theft of
time, office supplies, and the use of office equipment for
personal projects. Set standards for what is acceptable use of
company assets. Security experts say as many as 30 percent of
workers steal, resulting in an estimated loss of $50 billion a
year from U.S. companies and contributing to as many as
one-third of business bankruptcies.
As for dishonesty, I have a zero-tolerance approach. I dismissed
members of my accounting staff for what may seem to be petty
reasons: one for using $5 of petty cash as personal lunch money,
another for telling me he was home sick when he was out of state
on a long weekend vacation. If key staff members are not honest
with you about small things, how can you be sure they will tell
the truth “when it counts?”
4. Substance abuse. Substance abuse is more rampant than most
employers know. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
estimates that from 6% to 11% of adults are substance abusers.
Substance abuse costs U.S. employers an estimated $100 billion a
year. Call your attorney to make certain you follow the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requirements. Illegal
drugs are expensive and have led financially desperate employees
to commit fraud. They have also been implicated in violent
behavior in the workplace.
Commit to setting standards in your workplace and you will find
a calmer atmosphere, less turnover, and more attention to
productivity, growth, and profitability.
About Author :
Jan B. King is the former President & CEO of Merritt Publishing,
a top 50 woman-owned and run business in Los Angeles and the
author of Business Plans to Game Plans: A Practical System for
Turning Strategies into Action (John Wiley & Sons, 2004). She
has helped hundreds of businesses with her book and her ebooks,
The Do-It-Yourself Business Plan Workbook, and The
Do-It-Yourself Game Plan Workbook. See www.janbking.com for more
information.