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Story Events - until Feb

Three ways to manage a yelling boss

Speaker, educator and executive life coach Monique Caissie recently wrote a blog for the Canadian Huffington Post describing how she handled a former boss with a nasty temper. Here are a few snipets from her story, including her three tips for managing your bossโ€™s temper tantrums.

Caissie started working at a company where the boss had forced out two secretaries and an office manager within the space of a year. At the interview, he claimed his previous employees โ€œdidnโ€™t get himโ€. Another employee who was leaving warned her about his temper, but she accepted the job anyway.

On her second day, the boss shouted at Caissie to get a file for him. She deliberately brought him the wrong one, waited for his expected rant to end and calmly told him she couldnโ€™t hear him clearly when he yelled, got him the right file and explained that she was happy to help if he stayed calm.

The boss went on to โ€œfireโ€ Caissie four times during her employment, but she would always remain calm and wait for him to realise what heโ€™d done and retract his statement, usually negotiating a pay rise out of the situation.

So what are Caissieโ€™s tips for success?

1 Set boundaries โ€“ The sooner you set and stick to boundaries the better. A temperamental boss will test them from time to time, but you have to stand your ground. Caissie learned this from working with dogs but says it works with executives too.

2 Stay calm โ€“ A temper tantrum might be upsetting and will probably take you off guard, but keeping your cool is the best course of action. Caissie continuously reminded her boss that she couldnโ€™t understand him when he yelled until eventually he stopped shouting on his own.

3 Develop a consequence for negative behaviour โ€“ Parents are taught to look for natural consequences for their kidsโ€™ tantrums and Caissie says that lesson applies to adults too. Come up with a very real cost for your bossโ€™s shouting, such as threatening to leave if the behaviour doesnโ€™t improve.

Sometimes even the most professional person has to face up to the fact that theyโ€™ve had enough. Your emotional health is too important to sacrifice it for the sake of a job. If your bossโ€™s abusive behaviour continues, itโ€™s time to consider whether a new job is the answer.

Read the original article at huff.to/1MBwVQD