 |
How To
Get Cooperation from Other Departments
- Other departments may appear to slow you down. In dealing
with them, begin with an assumption that they are as competent as you
are. Everyone is doing his or her best, and everyone is busy. Remember
that ultimately, you're all on the same team. Your positive attitude
will get better results than antagonism. Treat them as you would like
to be treated.
- Handle your special requests of other departments
as you would handle a task that you would delegate:
- Clarify the task to be done and the standards to
be met.
- Establish a timetable.
- Ask if there is anything else that the person needs
to complete the task.
- Confirm the commitment that they made (don't make
it for them).
- If others let you down; be careful not to react with
one of two opposite emotions; aggression and passivity. Aggression is
fighting back, yelling, name calling, threatening to go to a higher
authority, becoming impatient and being forceful. Passivity is giving
in, ignoring an issue, procrastinating, apologizing or running away.
- Be assertive instead. Use the person's name. Say please
and thank you. Ask, don't tell.
- Be straightforward with your request. "Our department
needs this delivered to us by tomorrow." Adding an explanation
helps to validate the request. Then ask if there's anything else they
need, or anything you can do to help the process. Clarify the agreement
made.
- If the person objects, repeat the request, stating it
slightly differently each time. "Jillian, I'd like to get a copy
of that report by tomorrow." She answers that she's too busy. "I
can understand how you've got a big workload. (Avoid the dreaded "but")
I do need the report finished by tomorrow so can we find a way to complete
it somehow?"
- Ask "Would it be helpful if I
" Sometimes
they can do a better job if you help first. Your offer also displays
genuine empathy.
- Use the phrase, "What would have to happen..."
For instance, "I understand most of the staff have left for the
day, but what would have to happen for this to be finished by tomorrow
morning?" Sometimes the person might suggest a solution that you
can help achieve: "Well I'd have to send it over in a taxi and
we're not allowed to do that." Maybe they can't authorize a taxi,
but you can.
- Don't appeal to a higher authority. If you say "I
need this done, and I can get my boss to speed things up if I have to,"
you may not be successful. Instead, build a relationship. Take an interest
in things that are important to them.
- If problems persist, keep a log of transactions. Include
the date you sent something to another department and the date you got
it back. Use this to support process improvement, not to blame someone.
- Create routines for standard requests from other departments
that are repeated. For instance, automate your expense report. This
isn't bureaucracy, it's efficiency.
- On the other hand, remove routines that were created
for occasional exceptions that no longer occur. Old routines may be
slowing other departments down.
- Ask what the holdups are. Convene a meeting to outline
your concerns. The other department might identify blocks that can be
removed.
Top of Page | More
Tips
|