[Written three years before the pandemic, this post is more relevant than ever now that most training is online.]
A challenge conflict styles trainers often face is limited time in workshops or little face-to-face access to people needing training. What then?
Here are options that can still bring good results, sometimes even better than a relaxed face-to-face workshop:
- "Key Insights about my conflict styles that I learned from taking Style Matters" - "Three things I want to try to do differently with others in my group (and why) as a result of learnings from Style Matters" - "Reflections on a week/month of effort to apply insights from Style Matters in relationships to others" - "My strengths and weaknesses in conflict styles - reflections following taking the Style Matters inventory". - "Two successes and two challenges I faced this week in applying insights from the Style Matters inventory." - "A personal response to Principles of Wise Response to Conflict
In all cases where you are working with reports or reflections sent to you, if your purpose is to facilitate learning, make at least some reply to journals, even if only a few sentences. If you fail to do this, the writers are more likely to experience your presence as that of an authority figure to whom they are reporting rather than as a coach. The coaching role, of course, is generally more likely to facilitate reflection and learning role than an authority figure role.
A percentage of people view a conflict style inventory as a test. When taking a test, the concern is to pass, be certified, demonstrate competency, etc. Then forget about it! But we're not interested in getting people to prove their competence. We want to help them get started on a lifelong journey of careful thought about how to best manage differences with others. So we encourage people to "take the numbers with a grain of salt", to view them as an opener in a conversation with self and others about how to grow through conflict.
We all know, of course, that a one-off, face-to-face workshop is immediate and direct in ways that remote learning is not. But that experience often ends when the workshop ends. Remote work, strangely enough, has some advantages when it comes to continuity. It's often easier to do followup by email, phone, or video than to set up a face-to-face meeting. If you're diligent about this, you can facilitate a reflection and learning process that surpasses what people would get in a typical once-and-done event.
When you subscribe to the blog, we will send you an e-mail when there are new updates on the site so you wouldn't miss them.