Book Description Tripp and Bies educate
employees and managers about the right and wrong ways to deal with workplace
conflict, specifically revenge. The authors have amassed dozens of lively
stories, insights and counter-intuitive truths to bring to the book. Not
only will managers and employees find this information useful and
entertaining, but most readers will find applications in their home lives as
well as in their work lives.
The core argument is that revenge is
about justice. Avenging employees are not unprofessional, out-of-control
employees; rather, they are victims of offenses who feel compelled to seek
justice on their own. The authors address specific questions, such as:
* What kinds of offenses result in revenge?
* Why do some victims
respond more aggressively to harm than others?
* What role does the
organization play in how victims respond to offenses?
* What's the best
advice for managers who wish to prevent their employees from seeking
revenge?
Most employees experience the desire for revenge, and are
ready to settle their own scores at work when management won't enforce
justice. This book offers a model that sequences avengers' thoughts and
behaviors, from the beginning of the conflict to its end. The model is
grounded in scientific research and organizes disparate findings into a
whole.