Business-Busting Conflicts are Frequent in Startup Teams
/In the years I’ve worked as mediator, conflict coach, trainer, and confidant, I’ve seen hundreds of startups in conflict crisis mode — in the midst of amazing ideas, great funding, market possibilities and bright futures.
For a variety of predictable systemic reasons they had gone over the cliff so not only did they need to get their jobs done, they needed to also rebuild their teams, and in some cases, their close relationships, from the bottom up.
Back in 2013, I pulled together some statistics and takeaways on startups who fail due to conflict, drawn from my personal experience, interviews with founders, and some curiosity-inspired digging. As far as I can tell, the stats still hold up today, and I’m still working with startup teams on these same issues. So it feels worthy and important to share this information again.
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When we join a company, partnership or team, our expectation is that everyone involved will exhibit professional behavior toward us and each other. Instead, it’s highly possible that we may become one of the more than 60 million adults in the United States who are affected in some way by bullying behavior at work.
What kind of behaviors are we talking about? Our definition is any interpersonal behavior that causes emotional distress in others sufficient enough to impede their productivity or disrupt organizational functioning. It isn’t just a personality conflict — it’s a chronic pattern of disrespectful behavior.