Fri, May 25, 2012, 1:06 AM EDT - U.S. Markets open in 8 hrs 24 mins

5 Signs You May Be a Bad Coworker

Fantasy Finance

I get a lot of mail at Ask a Manager from people consumed with fury over habits their coworkers have -- habits that I bet most of those coworkers aren't even aware of.

Here are five signs that you might be the one pushing your coworkers to the limits of their sanity:

More from USNews.com:

America's Best Places to Find a Job 2009

10 Power Breakfasts of Successful People

Cities Where Jobs Recovery Will Be Slowest

1. You dump last-minute work on people when you could have avoided doing so.

There will always be projects that pop up at the last minute, but don't be the coworker who sits on something and doesn't assign it out until late in the game. You'll come across as inconsiderate, and maybe disorganized, too.

2. You complain about people without telling them your beefs directly.

We've all had the frustrating feeling of discovering that a coworker is complaining to others about something we did, but won't bother to come talk to us about it directly. When you talk to someone directly, not only do you act more fairly by giving them the chance to know about your complaint and to respond to it, but you may also learn new information that makes you see things in a different light.

More from Yahoo! Finance:

Jobs With High Pay, Minimal Schooling

America's Best Young Entrepreneurs of '09

Best, Worst Commutes in the U.S.

Visit the Career & Work Center

3. You exude negativity.

Suggestions, new practices, the new guy down the hall-you hate them all and you make sure people know it. You may think that you're demonstrating your value by pointing out flaws all the time, but if you find fault in every suggestion, you'll lose credibility, and eventually people will start finding ways to avoid your input altogether.

4. You bring your personal life to the office in ways that make people uncomfortable.

For instance, I used to work with someone who was constantly making personal calls that involved yelling and swearing at the person on the other end. Crying wasn't unheard of either. She never noticed that everyone around her was cringing in discomfort.

5. You're chronically defensive.

You bristle at the slightest hint that your work wasn't perfect-even when the hint is imagined. As a result, your coworkers spend more time trying to avoid you than talking to you because they don't want to deal with your prickliness.

If you recognize yourself in any of the above habits, you may be the irritating coworker that colleagues are complaining about to me. Try a one-month moratorium on the behavior and see if any of your relationships improve.

Alison Green is the author of Managing to Change the World: The Nonprofit Leader's Guide to Getting Results. She is chief of staff for the Marijuana Policy Project, a nonprofit lobbying organization, where she oversees day-to-day management of the staff as well as hiring, firing, and staff development. Her writings have been published in the Washington Post, the New York Times, Maxim, and dozens of other newspapers. She blogs at Ask a Manager.

 

1 comment

  • MJ  •  1 month 5 days ago
    Perhaps a few of these "bad coworker" isssues would disappear if:
    people acutally took what you tell them seriously - in most cases an ombudsman MUST intervene and hear both sides. It's also too dangerous to do this; do you want to be involved , without any credible witness, in a discrimination suit????
    negativity could be dispelled by a feeling of trust in the employer and sense of fair play and lack of favoritism for ALL employees AND by the fact that every new thing coming down the pike is NOT the best thing. If something isn't broken, suggesting a fix only makes more work for everyone else.
    defensiveness could be removed by not being blamed for things not of your making, receiving praise for jobs well done, and doing away with a "one-upmanship" attitude. See also comments 1 and 2.
 
Recent Quotes
Symbol Price Change % Chg 
Your most recently viewed tickers will automatically show up here if you type a ticker in the "Enter symbol/company" at the bottom of this module.
You need to enable your browser cookies to view your most recent quotes.
 
Sign-in to view quotes in your portfolios.

Trading Center

Yahoo! Finance on Facebook

  YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER