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Where’s the Line ?

Right and wrong in a for-profit world

One-Upping the Rumor Mongers

April 9th, 2007 @ 5:56 am

3 Comments

Categories: Office Life, Personal Conduct, Workplace

Tags: Movie, Where, Where's The Line?

I have somebody in my own team who keeps spreading rumors about the other colleagues. She targets the employees with good track records and good reputations. Say someone is very good at their work and gets an appreciation from our boss, then this lady will start spreading rumors about them. How do we deal with people like this? Where's the line?

This is the sort of thing you see in mafia movies and high school teen dramas, where the bad guys and catty girls try undermining someone's power by bad-mouthing them. The good news, at least in Hollywood, is that the rats always get theirs in the end.

Unfortunately, your office is not a Hollywood movie. And this sort of office poison tends to go unchecked with no tidy resolution.

Every office has this woman (or man). Most have several. Their prevalence is sad; fortunately, everyone is so used to this behavior that they know how to spot it and, hopefully, disregard it.

The temptation is to give this woman a taste of her own medicine. There is some schadenfreude to be had in reversing the gossip channels against her. But this is where I'm supposed to tell you not to stoop to her level and simply report her to your boss and advise you to compile a list of her indiscretions and report them to human resources. That's the right thing to do.

Here's the fun thing to do, but don't do this: use her own sad insecurities to teach her a lesson that will, hopefully, put the brakes on her mouth garbage. To do this, you need a plan and some conspirators (so maybe this is a high school movie after all). Create a harmlessly juicy, and completely false, piece of gossip about one of your conspirators. Then you approach the evil gossip and tell her, but make her swear never to tell anyone. Of course, she will. Let her do her thing and…

When the news finally spreads back to your conspirator, both of you confront her. You tell her about the experiment, but say you created it because you wanted to defend her against the office perception that she is an out-of-control rumor monger. Let her know that she failed you, she disappointed you, and, as the movie comes to an end, you should hear her summing up her epiphany in a neat little voice-over.

But don't do any of this. Tell human resources. Have her officially reprimanded. Life isn't a movie. Really.  

Have a workplace-ethics dilemma? Ask it here, or email wherestheline@gmail.com.

 
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    1

    jim_moroney@...

    07/12/07 | Report as spam

    Office Rumors

    Those who spread rumors can damage an organization. The best way to stop the spread of rumors is to not listen to them. Whenever someone tries to spread gossip to me I always ask, "who told you this?". Usually the gossiper refuses to reveal the source. My response is to refuse to listen to unfounded allegations and raise the fact that people do get sued for slander. When I hear a rumor repeated by a manager, I point out that they are encouraging the spread of rumors by listening to them. Besides, is gossip a good use of valuable time? The best way to stop damaging rumors is for all of us to stop being "enablers".

  •  
    2

    thekongster

    07/16/07 | Report as spam

    Rumor Monger

    That's a great "theoretical" strategy to catch a rumor monger! would work well in social circles as well.

  •  
    3

    D-Tech

    07/17/07 | Report as spam

    They are everywhere and there's not much we can do..

    I've been in a situation similar to that described, however the individual built a little team of supporters and the head of HR was one of them. He also played the COO and CEO like puppets. I have to admit that he was good at the backstabbing, harassment, manipulation game. It wasn't long before he had gained complete control over the company and had chased all the good people away. The rest of the company had pretty much figured out what was going on, but where afraid to do anything about it because as soon as someone was seen to be a risk, he slandered them. He got a lot of good people fired for no reason.
    Sometimes you have to abandon ship and let it sink. For me it was very difficult as I was the bread winner and had no financial cushion. But sometimes there are worse things then poverty.
    Here?s hoping that someday things will catch up to those who enjoy destroying the lives of others for personal gain or just sick entertainment...

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