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What should you do when eye contact makes your subordinate uncomfortable?
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I am a newly promoted engineering supervisor, with a team of four engineers reporting to me. I have worked with them for several years before being promoted and we have a great, friendly dynamic. That has not changed, but what has changed is that I now have 1-on-1 meetings with them to discuss their tasks and performance (all great, no hard conversations). In these meetings, we sit across from each other and talk.
Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time. It doesn’t bother me that they are looking around, but I don’t know what to do myself in this situation. I want my employees to be comfortable and able to talk openly to me. They don’t interact with customers so I have no need to change them, and they are both excellent at their jobs.
My natural response is to just keep looking at them and smiling, but I worry this is not helpful. Looking away myself feels dismissive. I am hoping someone who doesn’t like eye contact can offer me some tips!
I’m asking what I can do body language wise to reduce their nervousness. The relationships are good, we just never had conversations like this before as peers (one on one, task-focused) and so I don’t have any experience to inform me.
Does me keeping looking at them make it worse? Should I try to look away more? Should I try to ditch the sitting across from each other and try sitting on the same side of a table?
Second Edit: Thank you so much, everyone! I’ll add a couple of things for further clarification, but I have great ideas for improvements thanks to y’all.
Intimidation is not a significant factor - I came in as the ‘lead’, formed the good relationship I reference, was the only one who went for the promotion — I was the obvious choice, and there were no hard feelings. It was a very seamless transition. I imagine there are some nerves present as we move through this transition, but I generally think it’s more about who they are as people (some don’t like eye contact!).
One is male and another one is female, so it is not obviously gendered. There are two other engineers who make an ‘expected’ amount of eye contact, so these two I am discussing are a contrast in their lower amount in the same situation. They do make eye contact with me at intervals, I just think they, as people, don’t like eye contact very much. If just not messing with them is sufficient, wonderful! That’s what I’m hearing.
I don’t know they are uncomfortable necessarily, more like, I, a social person, have not encountered this situation and myself am uncomfortable. Based on input, they don’t care what I do really, which is a relief!
communication united-states
|
show 3 more comments
I am a newly promoted engineering supervisor, with a team of four engineers reporting to me. I have worked with them for several years before being promoted and we have a great, friendly dynamic. That has not changed, but what has changed is that I now have 1-on-1 meetings with them to discuss their tasks and performance (all great, no hard conversations). In these meetings, we sit across from each other and talk.
Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time. It doesn’t bother me that they are looking around, but I don’t know what to do myself in this situation. I want my employees to be comfortable and able to talk openly to me. They don’t interact with customers so I have no need to change them, and they are both excellent at their jobs.
My natural response is to just keep looking at them and smiling, but I worry this is not helpful. Looking away myself feels dismissive. I am hoping someone who doesn’t like eye contact can offer me some tips!
I’m asking what I can do body language wise to reduce their nervousness. The relationships are good, we just never had conversations like this before as peers (one on one, task-focused) and so I don’t have any experience to inform me.
Does me keeping looking at them make it worse? Should I try to look away more? Should I try to ditch the sitting across from each other and try sitting on the same side of a table?
Second Edit: Thank you so much, everyone! I’ll add a couple of things for further clarification, but I have great ideas for improvements thanks to y’all.
Intimidation is not a significant factor - I came in as the ‘lead’, formed the good relationship I reference, was the only one who went for the promotion — I was the obvious choice, and there were no hard feelings. It was a very seamless transition. I imagine there are some nerves present as we move through this transition, but I generally think it’s more about who they are as people (some don’t like eye contact!).
One is male and another one is female, so it is not obviously gendered. There are two other engineers who make an ‘expected’ amount of eye contact, so these two I am discussing are a contrast in their lower amount in the same situation. They do make eye contact with me at intervals, I just think they, as people, don’t like eye contact very much. If just not messing with them is sufficient, wonderful! That’s what I’m hearing.
I don’t know they are uncomfortable necessarily, more like, I, a social person, have not encountered this situation and myself am uncomfortable. Based on input, they don’t care what I do really, which is a relief!
communication united-states
13
Do you bring anything with you to meetings, things you might have to glance at every so often? Like a notepad for example.
– Kozaky
yesterday
Do you think they have developed an inferiority-complex? Because, not long ago you were working with them as a colleague (same level, I assume), and now you have been promoted as a Supervisor?
– Dashamlav
yesterday
4
Did you notice this behavior also before becoming their superior? Were they avoiding eye contact when you were also peers, when discussing tasks at your desks or when you meet them for lunch?
– Xander
yesterday
6
Did you try sitting on the same side of the table?
– BЈовић
13 hours ago
2
"Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time." Are they actually uncomfortable? I don't always maintain a lot of eye contact, and as long as the person I'm talking with doesn't mind that, the fact that I'm not maintaining eye contact lets me remain comfortable. What would be uncomfortable is if I had to try to maintain eye contact. Are you asking them to do that?
– Joshua Taylor
6 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
I am a newly promoted engineering supervisor, with a team of four engineers reporting to me. I have worked with them for several years before being promoted and we have a great, friendly dynamic. That has not changed, but what has changed is that I now have 1-on-1 meetings with them to discuss their tasks and performance (all great, no hard conversations). In these meetings, we sit across from each other and talk.
Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time. It doesn’t bother me that they are looking around, but I don’t know what to do myself in this situation. I want my employees to be comfortable and able to talk openly to me. They don’t interact with customers so I have no need to change them, and they are both excellent at their jobs.
My natural response is to just keep looking at them and smiling, but I worry this is not helpful. Looking away myself feels dismissive. I am hoping someone who doesn’t like eye contact can offer me some tips!
I’m asking what I can do body language wise to reduce their nervousness. The relationships are good, we just never had conversations like this before as peers (one on one, task-focused) and so I don’t have any experience to inform me.
Does me keeping looking at them make it worse? Should I try to look away more? Should I try to ditch the sitting across from each other and try sitting on the same side of a table?
Second Edit: Thank you so much, everyone! I’ll add a couple of things for further clarification, but I have great ideas for improvements thanks to y’all.
Intimidation is not a significant factor - I came in as the ‘lead’, formed the good relationship I reference, was the only one who went for the promotion — I was the obvious choice, and there were no hard feelings. It was a very seamless transition. I imagine there are some nerves present as we move through this transition, but I generally think it’s more about who they are as people (some don’t like eye contact!).
One is male and another one is female, so it is not obviously gendered. There are two other engineers who make an ‘expected’ amount of eye contact, so these two I am discussing are a contrast in their lower amount in the same situation. They do make eye contact with me at intervals, I just think they, as people, don’t like eye contact very much. If just not messing with them is sufficient, wonderful! That’s what I’m hearing.
I don’t know they are uncomfortable necessarily, more like, I, a social person, have not encountered this situation and myself am uncomfortable. Based on input, they don’t care what I do really, which is a relief!
communication united-states
I am a newly promoted engineering supervisor, with a team of four engineers reporting to me. I have worked with them for several years before being promoted and we have a great, friendly dynamic. That has not changed, but what has changed is that I now have 1-on-1 meetings with them to discuss their tasks and performance (all great, no hard conversations). In these meetings, we sit across from each other and talk.
Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time. It doesn’t bother me that they are looking around, but I don’t know what to do myself in this situation. I want my employees to be comfortable and able to talk openly to me. They don’t interact with customers so I have no need to change them, and they are both excellent at their jobs.
My natural response is to just keep looking at them and smiling, but I worry this is not helpful. Looking away myself feels dismissive. I am hoping someone who doesn’t like eye contact can offer me some tips!
I’m asking what I can do body language wise to reduce their nervousness. The relationships are good, we just never had conversations like this before as peers (one on one, task-focused) and so I don’t have any experience to inform me.
Does me keeping looking at them make it worse? Should I try to look away more? Should I try to ditch the sitting across from each other and try sitting on the same side of a table?
Second Edit: Thank you so much, everyone! I’ll add a couple of things for further clarification, but I have great ideas for improvements thanks to y’all.
Intimidation is not a significant factor - I came in as the ‘lead’, formed the good relationship I reference, was the only one who went for the promotion — I was the obvious choice, and there were no hard feelings. It was a very seamless transition. I imagine there are some nerves present as we move through this transition, but I generally think it’s more about who they are as people (some don’t like eye contact!).
One is male and another one is female, so it is not obviously gendered. There are two other engineers who make an ‘expected’ amount of eye contact, so these two I am discussing are a contrast in their lower amount in the same situation. They do make eye contact with me at intervals, I just think they, as people, don’t like eye contact very much. If just not messing with them is sufficient, wonderful! That’s what I’m hearing.
I don’t know they are uncomfortable necessarily, more like, I, a social person, have not encountered this situation and myself am uncomfortable. Based on input, they don’t care what I do really, which is a relief!
communication united-states
communication united-states
edited 18 mins ago
Peter Mortensen
57747
57747
asked yesterday
user35316user35316
732128
732128
13
Do you bring anything with you to meetings, things you might have to glance at every so often? Like a notepad for example.
– Kozaky
yesterday
Do you think they have developed an inferiority-complex? Because, not long ago you were working with them as a colleague (same level, I assume), and now you have been promoted as a Supervisor?
– Dashamlav
yesterday
4
Did you notice this behavior also before becoming their superior? Were they avoiding eye contact when you were also peers, when discussing tasks at your desks or when you meet them for lunch?
– Xander
yesterday
6
Did you try sitting on the same side of the table?
– BЈовић
13 hours ago
2
"Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time." Are they actually uncomfortable? I don't always maintain a lot of eye contact, and as long as the person I'm talking with doesn't mind that, the fact that I'm not maintaining eye contact lets me remain comfortable. What would be uncomfortable is if I had to try to maintain eye contact. Are you asking them to do that?
– Joshua Taylor
6 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
13
Do you bring anything with you to meetings, things you might have to glance at every so often? Like a notepad for example.
– Kozaky
yesterday
Do you think they have developed an inferiority-complex? Because, not long ago you were working with them as a colleague (same level, I assume), and now you have been promoted as a Supervisor?
– Dashamlav
yesterday
4
Did you notice this behavior also before becoming their superior? Were they avoiding eye contact when you were also peers, when discussing tasks at your desks or when you meet them for lunch?
– Xander
yesterday
6
Did you try sitting on the same side of the table?
– BЈовић
13 hours ago
2
"Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time." Are they actually uncomfortable? I don't always maintain a lot of eye contact, and as long as the person I'm talking with doesn't mind that, the fact that I'm not maintaining eye contact lets me remain comfortable. What would be uncomfortable is if I had to try to maintain eye contact. Are you asking them to do that?
– Joshua Taylor
6 hours ago
13
13
Do you bring anything with you to meetings, things you might have to glance at every so often? Like a notepad for example.
– Kozaky
yesterday
Do you bring anything with you to meetings, things you might have to glance at every so often? Like a notepad for example.
– Kozaky
yesterday
Do you think they have developed an inferiority-complex? Because, not long ago you were working with them as a colleague (same level, I assume), and now you have been promoted as a Supervisor?
– Dashamlav
yesterday
Do you think they have developed an inferiority-complex? Because, not long ago you were working with them as a colleague (same level, I assume), and now you have been promoted as a Supervisor?
– Dashamlav
yesterday
4
4
Did you notice this behavior also before becoming their superior? Were they avoiding eye contact when you were also peers, when discussing tasks at your desks or when you meet them for lunch?
– Xander
yesterday
Did you notice this behavior also before becoming their superior? Were they avoiding eye contact when you were also peers, when discussing tasks at your desks or when you meet them for lunch?
– Xander
yesterday
6
6
Did you try sitting on the same side of the table?
– BЈовић
13 hours ago
Did you try sitting on the same side of the table?
– BЈовић
13 hours ago
2
2
"Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time." Are they actually uncomfortable? I don't always maintain a lot of eye contact, and as long as the person I'm talking with doesn't mind that, the fact that I'm not maintaining eye contact lets me remain comfortable. What would be uncomfortable is if I had to try to maintain eye contact. Are you asking them to do that?
– Joshua Taylor
6 hours ago
"Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time." Are they actually uncomfortable? I don't always maintain a lot of eye contact, and as long as the person I'm talking with doesn't mind that, the fact that I'm not maintaining eye contact lets me remain comfortable. What would be uncomfortable is if I had to try to maintain eye contact. Are you asking them to do that?
– Joshua Taylor
6 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
14 Answers
14
active
oldest
votes
Go take a walk around the block while you two talk. That's what we do here and it works pretty well.
18
Have to upvote this - takes out the "pressure" of a room etc etc
– Solar Mike
yesterday
9
Signed up to upvote. Gets people out of their chairs as well, which has its own benefits.
– miken32
yesterday
9
This is a great answer. When people are uncomfortable in a situation and you don't want to change them, don't try to 'fix' the problem, just change the situation so the problem disappears.
– davnicwil
yesterday
5
No, you were talking about "pressure" of a room which is an entirely different thing. The room is not at fault but the fact that some people feel awkward facing other people. You could have people seated side by side in a room and it would likely work just as well as a walk. And most likely there's no "pressure" at fault. It's not the perception of high expectations or seriousness that causes people to avoid eye contact. They are just a bit socially awkward, that's all.
– user31389
yesterday
4
I've seen this a couple times now, and it really is a neat way to get quick 1-on-1 meetings without the tension inherent in sitting down in a little room together.
– Steve-O
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
I'm one of those people
I believe you are reading too much into this!
Don't start with team-building exercises, surveys, etc. Leave it be.
If you are getting the results you need from these sessions, that's what matters.
Some people just naturally don't like eye contact in one-on-one conversations. Me included! That includes me being in positions of power or otherwise.
Look wherever you want. The important thing is you listen and respond.
34
I was about to answer exactly the same. People are just introverts or don't like eye contact. People going overboard methinks.
– Xander
yesterday
37
If we aren't looking at you, we don't know where you're looking :) Do whatever you want. Dance if you want.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
13
@user35316 as someone else who also feels uncomfortable with eye contact, please understand that "taking the social pressure off" won't solve the problem, because it is not necessarily a problem! Don't take a lack of eye contact as meaning they feel uncomfortable. It's entirely possible that encouraging them to make eye contact will just make them more uncomfortable -- if they even are.
– Captain Man
yesterday
12
@user35316, I know I do this too, and it has nothing to do with social pressure or discomfort. I just simply have a hard time maintaining eye contact while thinking about the answer to whatever question you just asked me. If I'm thinking about looking at your eyes, I'm not thinking about the conversation we're having. It's just not how my brain works.
– Seth R
yesterday
7
I also avoid constant eye contact with people. I don't think OP should assume any social pressure. I'm not shy, anxious, or particularly introverted. I just find it weird to stare down the person I'm speaking to. Not to mention there are other interesting things to look at than your chin. So I look around.
– Fadecomic
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
I've been in similar situations where people were unable to look me in the eye whilst in a 1-1 meeting. It was pretty clear that they weren't feeling inferior but rather socially awkward/anxious and slightly introvert.
I tried different things and what seemed to work well was sitting next to the person instead of across from them during 1-1s and use a laptop or notes between us to focus on. Most of the time I was focused on the screen while talking and that gave the opportunity to the other person to talk while looking at the screen or notes.
If you're happy with the meetings' outcome and you're able to communicate fine with your subordinates, then I'd simply try to find a layout for these meetings that makes them more comfortable.
14
Was going to suggest this if no one else had. Most men are socialized to interact side by side or around an activity and not face-to-face, since face-to-face means head-to-head which is combative.
– Dedwards
yesterday
5
Don't assume all men are combative.
– stannius
yesterday
10
Nobody discussing the "spectrum" yet? They are engineers after all. Eye contact is pretty intrusive. Insisting upon it can open up a world of problems. Some people just don't.
– mckenzm
20 hours ago
Looking at notes or doing sth else while talking is a sign of lack of interest. Thats not really a wanted impression on others
– Jannis
12 hours ago
add a comment |
Something that hasn't been mentioned is that they may be thinking.
When you ask me a technical question, I mentally fire up the equipment and software I'd use to work on the problem for real and then run through possible solutions or approaches.
I'm mentally looking at things that are somewhere else. My eyes just rove and have very little to do with what I'm looking at.
I might "park" my peepers staring at blank section of wall or out a window. If I'm really far away, they just stop wherever they were pointed - which may be at you or someone else, causing creepy feelings of "why's he staring at me?"
So, if you are having a one on one discussion and your coworker is staring off into space, he may be really busy trying to find a solution. Anything you do to prevent them from "spacing out" might cause you to lose out on a better solution to your problems.
New contributor
2
I do this too, looking off into space while I think about my answer, but when I'm done thinking I cycle back to eye contact, at least momentarily. The OP didn't mention if the cycling back ever happens or not.
– Karl Bielefeldt
20 hours ago
add a comment |
The individuals in question could be on the autism spectrum such Asperger's Syndrome which is high functioning autism . Such individuals have difficulty with eye contact and are uncomfortable in social situations. This is offset by intense focus on a field of study that they become extremely good at what they do. As for body language I have noticed that they have a hard time correctly interpreting it. You mentioned that one is male and one is female. Asperger's manifests itself differently in men and women.
This answer should be the right one. Being diagnosed with Aspergers myself, I found myself in the OP's description right from the start. And my best advice to the OP is (assuming they really are on the autism spectrum): Don't change your behaviour, just leave it be. If they ignore the social pressure to keep eye contact, it means they are already as comfortable with you as they can be. Changing your behaviour just reduces their comfort because they will notice that and need to interpret your new behaviour.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
Also, yes, many of us autists do have a hard time interpreting the body language of non-autists. In addition, we have a very hard time when trying to "read between the lines". It gets way easier when dealing with other autists, though.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
I find a pint or two usually fixes it :)
– Lightness Races in Orbit
6 hours ago
add a comment |
I myself find that I can listen better if I'm not making an effort to maintain eye contact. After all, you listen with your ears, not your eyes. Because of this, my own eyes tend to wander during conversation, whether I'm any kind of nervous or not.
It may be the same for these individuals. You don't know, so don't make assumptions. If they are performing well and can remember what was discussed, it doesn't really matter that they don't maintain eye contact with you, and no additional action is needed.
New contributor
2
“You listen with your ears, not your eyes.” This is just straight up wrong. There have been studies that have shown that something like 90% of communication is nonverbal. If you want to do a good job as a listener, you need to use both.
– nick012000
18 hours ago
2
@nick012000 that's a very oft misquoted study, and the real amount is much lower, and much of it is tone of voice, which you pick up with your ears as well.
– Erik
14 hours ago
1
@nick012000 And we're not talking about conversations with emotional subtexts, necessarily. These are very likely pretty technical conversations, so body language plays much less of a role.
– bvoyelr
11 hours ago
1
@nick012000 To be fair, I don't have to maintain eye contact to read body language, and I have become very good at reading slight nuances in the other's voice. And I promise that if I could see my conversation partner but not hear them, I definitely would not pick up 90% of their meaning.
– MrSpudtastic
9 hours ago
add a comment |
You mention:
In these meetings we sit across from each other and talk.
Why do you sit across each other? Just write down the things you want to talk about, and say to that person that you want to discuss the points you have written down. The best way to do this is to sit next to each other. While sitting like that, both of you look at the paper and there's no need anymore for having eye-contact.
5
The downvote is not mine, but you don't need the paper. In terms of body language, sitting across is really not optimal, since it is confrontational. However, sitting next to each other is not optimal either and the paper is defenitely distracting from the conversation. A good option would be to do without the paper and sit perpendicular, which is a good seating order in a cooperative setup. If you change your answer in that direction, you have my upvote.
– Sefe
15 hours ago
that's right. Sitting accros eachother is confrontational....sitting NEXT to each other is the easiest solution here!
– user1841243
11 hours ago
I agree with you, opposite each other may be uncomfortable. I usually sit in a 90 degree angle, when sitting next to each other may be too familiar. That way you're close without crossing eyes all the time.
– reinierpost
5 hours ago
add a comment |
Others have contributed some good thoughts. Some personal perspective:
- What sort of training has your employer provided for those new to management? Do they provide skill building materials?
- Social skills are a bit less relevant if the job isn't customer facing.
- Try not to judge employee on looking in eye, but more on whatever their positive qualities are, and your assessment of their contributions.
- Do not make assumptions on character, rush to judgement, or over-simplify based on a few observations.
- Don't discuss with other managers at your level. Not necessarily their business...
- You do have a mentor responsibility, so think about what that entails and whether social skills are relevant.
6.a. I've done customer facing work, and not always handled it the best. In that case I was fortunate to have a manager that could skillfully address it, and identify areas to improve, and highlight good parts (so I'm not demoralized). Keep in mind I was hired partially due to better social skills.
6.b. The other side, purely internally focused work. Just keep in mind everyone is not created equal and some people will not be able to "improve" their social skills. That's OK. Then focus more on whether tasks are getting done, quality of work, etc.
New contributor
I would agree with everything but #5. You can discuss with other managers as they are now your peer group, and would likely have valuable feedback/suggestions. You can avoid talking about specific people, but overall, it's fine to speak with people at your level. I do think that it is better to speak with colleagues outside of the company, or if you have a mentor, speak with them.
– Malisbad
17 hours ago
Thanks, Sounds like a better take on what I wrote. I would worry a new manager might share too much with peers.
– learning2learn
13 hours ago
add a comment |
If you have been working with them for a long time and have now become their "superior" this is common to happen. They may have the problem of trying to separate the relationship they used to have with the one they have now.
There are a few things you can try.
Just give them the room they need, if their performance is not lacking and motivation seems to be the same, leave it as it is. Continue looking at them while they speak and remain professional.
If you have worked with them for that long and feel the relationship exists there, ask them. While you are on the 1-on-1 tell them you have noticed that they don't seem to be fully comfortable and ask them if they prefer a different approach to the 1-on-1.
Use an anonymous survey to the entire team regarding current processes, including 1-on-1, PDP and PDR.
As you said, they are not going to be customer facing, but it is also good to give them the opportunity to develop their interpersonal skills.
I don't understand the downvote on this one. This seems pretty valid.
– GustavoMP
yesterday
8
@GustavoMP I'm not the downvoter but the general trend in low score answers to this question is that they assume there's something wrong, the employees are nervous, etc. The truth is some people simply are uncomfortable looking other people in the eyes in any kind of situation or don't know where they are supposed to look or think looking at other person too long would be considered rude. There is nothing wrong with the workplace nor the supervisor.
– user31389
yesterday
@user31389 with that I can agree
– GustavoMP
yesterday
add a comment |
Does me keeping looking at them make it worse?
Not directly (see below).
Should I try to look away more? Should I try to ditch the sitting across from each other and try sitting on the same side of a table?
No need. It's not you looking at them that's the problem, it's their discomfort looking at you.
There is potentially an added discomfort imbued by the expectation that when someone looks at you, you look back (so the coworker may feel an element of "obligation" that they cannot fulfil, causing further discomfort).
But, in my personal experience, I wouldn't worry too much about your approach here, as long as you're not actively rebuking them for not giving eye contact back (which would suck because, for some people, it's genuinely really, really hard).
That being said, there are some excellent suggestions in other answers (e.g. having a "walking meeting") that nix the entire problem at source; that way you can eliminate any issue at all, provided these ideas fit in well with your workflow and daily structure.
add a comment |
In America, it's common for companies to do "team-building" exercises. They usually consist of the team going to lunch, or having a gathering off site with families, even. It's to allow people get to know each other in casual situations, and this can help with a person viewing their boss/manager as a person, not just an authority to be scared of.
Perhaps this isn't an option, but for whatever reason they seem to fear you. Might just be a cultural thing...but you need to try to find a way to break through that.
2
Doesn't seem like they fear him from what he said.
– kiradotee
yesterday
add a comment |
Although there are some good examples of things you can do to get around this uncomfortable feeling mentioned by others.
The main thing here should be to build your coworkers confidence (restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence) rather than find more ways they can avoid eye contact. Eye contact is a very important skill and should not be overlooked as it's the main way to connect during conversation. It's not something that should be avoided no matter who you are.
That being said
(all great, no hard conversations)
They might not be uncomfortable but just nervous during these 121's. You get what you need and conversation is still flowing. If colleagues were uncomfortable there would likely be rushed speech or stutters along with lack of eye contact
7
There are many cultures that do not view "Eye Contact" as an important business or professional skill. For example, I work with Japanese partners where the business culture in meetings is to look down and "listen" with perhaps the exception of the person being directly addressed, even closing eyes is considered normal, and it took me a while to get used to speaking at meetings and to trust that they are listening intently even if they look like they are sleeping (although, sometimes they are).
– crasic
yesterday
1
"Restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence" that is not true for me. I have a hard time looking people in the eye, but I would definitely not be categorized as someone lacking confidence or having nerves. I simply don't like to. It's never caused me any problems in business, in fact, i think it has helped, because too much eye contact can be seen as rude and aggressive where I am (pnw in the US)
– user87779
yesterday
add a comment |
Although this question has been answered already but trying to include my 2 cents. By reading your question, you said:
I don’t know they are uncomfortable necessarily, more like, I, a social person, have not encountered this situation and myself am uncomfortable. Based on input, they don’t care what I do really, which is a relief!
Don't judge people if they are uncomfortable,specially during meeting some people don't make eye contact because they stare in space to digest/understand the important points and trying to match if it relates to their questions, usually people are uncomfortable if they don't know the answer or afraid of being asked what they have not fulfilled or done before.
So, I'd say try to make more friendly conversation with individuals by 1:1 coffee or walk, you can ask their issues which is bothering them or something they can't talk during the meeting, try to grill down to the level where they are confident to disclose if anything in their mind and assure them that will be taken care. I believe this will help maintain good healthy relations with them if you convince them. At the end of the day you're on higher position, there's always respect and little one step back bonding always there in them.
New contributor
What do you mean by "little one step back bonding always there in them" (seemingly incomprehensible)?
– Peter Mortensen
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Most likely they are nervous. Many employees will feel nervous talking to their manager 1 on 1. Add the fact that you are their new manager, talking about their tasks and performance and this nervous factor can increase. Add the fact that they are engineers, who in many cases are introverts, and you can understand how elevated their nerves must be.
There isn't anything to change on your part as far as smiling and looking at them. What you can do, before the meeting, is try to calm them down and make it clear that the meeting isn't an official review or that they aren't being punished for anything.
4
I am not the person OP is talking about but I am like them, I do not do well with eye to eye contact. Nothing to do with nerves. I just do not like it. (I might be Autistic, but high functional and have not other problems.)
– Willeke
yesterday
add a comment |
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14 Answers
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Go take a walk around the block while you two talk. That's what we do here and it works pretty well.
18
Have to upvote this - takes out the "pressure" of a room etc etc
– Solar Mike
yesterday
9
Signed up to upvote. Gets people out of their chairs as well, which has its own benefits.
– miken32
yesterday
9
This is a great answer. When people are uncomfortable in a situation and you don't want to change them, don't try to 'fix' the problem, just change the situation so the problem disappears.
– davnicwil
yesterday
5
No, you were talking about "pressure" of a room which is an entirely different thing. The room is not at fault but the fact that some people feel awkward facing other people. You could have people seated side by side in a room and it would likely work just as well as a walk. And most likely there's no "pressure" at fault. It's not the perception of high expectations or seriousness that causes people to avoid eye contact. They are just a bit socially awkward, that's all.
– user31389
yesterday
4
I've seen this a couple times now, and it really is a neat way to get quick 1-on-1 meetings without the tension inherent in sitting down in a little room together.
– Steve-O
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
Go take a walk around the block while you two talk. That's what we do here and it works pretty well.
18
Have to upvote this - takes out the "pressure" of a room etc etc
– Solar Mike
yesterday
9
Signed up to upvote. Gets people out of their chairs as well, which has its own benefits.
– miken32
yesterday
9
This is a great answer. When people are uncomfortable in a situation and you don't want to change them, don't try to 'fix' the problem, just change the situation so the problem disappears.
– davnicwil
yesterday
5
No, you were talking about "pressure" of a room which is an entirely different thing. The room is not at fault but the fact that some people feel awkward facing other people. You could have people seated side by side in a room and it would likely work just as well as a walk. And most likely there's no "pressure" at fault. It's not the perception of high expectations or seriousness that causes people to avoid eye contact. They are just a bit socially awkward, that's all.
– user31389
yesterday
4
I've seen this a couple times now, and it really is a neat way to get quick 1-on-1 meetings without the tension inherent in sitting down in a little room together.
– Steve-O
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
Go take a walk around the block while you two talk. That's what we do here and it works pretty well.
Go take a walk around the block while you two talk. That's what we do here and it works pretty well.
answered yesterday
GustavoMPGustavoMP
2,13531017
2,13531017
18
Have to upvote this - takes out the "pressure" of a room etc etc
– Solar Mike
yesterday
9
Signed up to upvote. Gets people out of their chairs as well, which has its own benefits.
– miken32
yesterday
9
This is a great answer. When people are uncomfortable in a situation and you don't want to change them, don't try to 'fix' the problem, just change the situation so the problem disappears.
– davnicwil
yesterday
5
No, you were talking about "pressure" of a room which is an entirely different thing. The room is not at fault but the fact that some people feel awkward facing other people. You could have people seated side by side in a room and it would likely work just as well as a walk. And most likely there's no "pressure" at fault. It's not the perception of high expectations or seriousness that causes people to avoid eye contact. They are just a bit socially awkward, that's all.
– user31389
yesterday
4
I've seen this a couple times now, and it really is a neat way to get quick 1-on-1 meetings without the tension inherent in sitting down in a little room together.
– Steve-O
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
18
Have to upvote this - takes out the "pressure" of a room etc etc
– Solar Mike
yesterday
9
Signed up to upvote. Gets people out of their chairs as well, which has its own benefits.
– miken32
yesterday
9
This is a great answer. When people are uncomfortable in a situation and you don't want to change them, don't try to 'fix' the problem, just change the situation so the problem disappears.
– davnicwil
yesterday
5
No, you were talking about "pressure" of a room which is an entirely different thing. The room is not at fault but the fact that some people feel awkward facing other people. You could have people seated side by side in a room and it would likely work just as well as a walk. And most likely there's no "pressure" at fault. It's not the perception of high expectations or seriousness that causes people to avoid eye contact. They are just a bit socially awkward, that's all.
– user31389
yesterday
4
I've seen this a couple times now, and it really is a neat way to get quick 1-on-1 meetings without the tension inherent in sitting down in a little room together.
– Steve-O
yesterday
18
18
Have to upvote this - takes out the "pressure" of a room etc etc
– Solar Mike
yesterday
Have to upvote this - takes out the "pressure" of a room etc etc
– Solar Mike
yesterday
9
9
Signed up to upvote. Gets people out of their chairs as well, which has its own benefits.
– miken32
yesterday
Signed up to upvote. Gets people out of their chairs as well, which has its own benefits.
– miken32
yesterday
9
9
This is a great answer. When people are uncomfortable in a situation and you don't want to change them, don't try to 'fix' the problem, just change the situation so the problem disappears.
– davnicwil
yesterday
This is a great answer. When people are uncomfortable in a situation and you don't want to change them, don't try to 'fix' the problem, just change the situation so the problem disappears.
– davnicwil
yesterday
5
5
No, you were talking about "pressure" of a room which is an entirely different thing. The room is not at fault but the fact that some people feel awkward facing other people. You could have people seated side by side in a room and it would likely work just as well as a walk. And most likely there's no "pressure" at fault. It's not the perception of high expectations or seriousness that causes people to avoid eye contact. They are just a bit socially awkward, that's all.
– user31389
yesterday
No, you were talking about "pressure" of a room which is an entirely different thing. The room is not at fault but the fact that some people feel awkward facing other people. You could have people seated side by side in a room and it would likely work just as well as a walk. And most likely there's no "pressure" at fault. It's not the perception of high expectations or seriousness that causes people to avoid eye contact. They are just a bit socially awkward, that's all.
– user31389
yesterday
4
4
I've seen this a couple times now, and it really is a neat way to get quick 1-on-1 meetings without the tension inherent in sitting down in a little room together.
– Steve-O
yesterday
I've seen this a couple times now, and it really is a neat way to get quick 1-on-1 meetings without the tension inherent in sitting down in a little room together.
– Steve-O
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
I'm one of those people
I believe you are reading too much into this!
Don't start with team-building exercises, surveys, etc. Leave it be.
If you are getting the results you need from these sessions, that's what matters.
Some people just naturally don't like eye contact in one-on-one conversations. Me included! That includes me being in positions of power or otherwise.
Look wherever you want. The important thing is you listen and respond.
34
I was about to answer exactly the same. People are just introverts or don't like eye contact. People going overboard methinks.
– Xander
yesterday
37
If we aren't looking at you, we don't know where you're looking :) Do whatever you want. Dance if you want.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
13
@user35316 as someone else who also feels uncomfortable with eye contact, please understand that "taking the social pressure off" won't solve the problem, because it is not necessarily a problem! Don't take a lack of eye contact as meaning they feel uncomfortable. It's entirely possible that encouraging them to make eye contact will just make them more uncomfortable -- if they even are.
– Captain Man
yesterday
12
@user35316, I know I do this too, and it has nothing to do with social pressure or discomfort. I just simply have a hard time maintaining eye contact while thinking about the answer to whatever question you just asked me. If I'm thinking about looking at your eyes, I'm not thinking about the conversation we're having. It's just not how my brain works.
– Seth R
yesterday
7
I also avoid constant eye contact with people. I don't think OP should assume any social pressure. I'm not shy, anxious, or particularly introverted. I just find it weird to stare down the person I'm speaking to. Not to mention there are other interesting things to look at than your chin. So I look around.
– Fadecomic
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
I'm one of those people
I believe you are reading too much into this!
Don't start with team-building exercises, surveys, etc. Leave it be.
If you are getting the results you need from these sessions, that's what matters.
Some people just naturally don't like eye contact in one-on-one conversations. Me included! That includes me being in positions of power or otherwise.
Look wherever you want. The important thing is you listen and respond.
34
I was about to answer exactly the same. People are just introverts or don't like eye contact. People going overboard methinks.
– Xander
yesterday
37
If we aren't looking at you, we don't know where you're looking :) Do whatever you want. Dance if you want.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
13
@user35316 as someone else who also feels uncomfortable with eye contact, please understand that "taking the social pressure off" won't solve the problem, because it is not necessarily a problem! Don't take a lack of eye contact as meaning they feel uncomfortable. It's entirely possible that encouraging them to make eye contact will just make them more uncomfortable -- if they even are.
– Captain Man
yesterday
12
@user35316, I know I do this too, and it has nothing to do with social pressure or discomfort. I just simply have a hard time maintaining eye contact while thinking about the answer to whatever question you just asked me. If I'm thinking about looking at your eyes, I'm not thinking about the conversation we're having. It's just not how my brain works.
– Seth R
yesterday
7
I also avoid constant eye contact with people. I don't think OP should assume any social pressure. I'm not shy, anxious, or particularly introverted. I just find it weird to stare down the person I'm speaking to. Not to mention there are other interesting things to look at than your chin. So I look around.
– Fadecomic
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
I'm one of those people
I believe you are reading too much into this!
Don't start with team-building exercises, surveys, etc. Leave it be.
If you are getting the results you need from these sessions, that's what matters.
Some people just naturally don't like eye contact in one-on-one conversations. Me included! That includes me being in positions of power or otherwise.
Look wherever you want. The important thing is you listen and respond.
I'm one of those people
I believe you are reading too much into this!
Don't start with team-building exercises, surveys, etc. Leave it be.
If you are getting the results you need from these sessions, that's what matters.
Some people just naturally don't like eye contact in one-on-one conversations. Me included! That includes me being in positions of power or otherwise.
Look wherever you want. The important thing is you listen and respond.
edited 6 hours ago
donjuedo
449410
449410
answered yesterday
Gregory CurrieGregory Currie
3,08851931
3,08851931
34
I was about to answer exactly the same. People are just introverts or don't like eye contact. People going overboard methinks.
– Xander
yesterday
37
If we aren't looking at you, we don't know where you're looking :) Do whatever you want. Dance if you want.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
13
@user35316 as someone else who also feels uncomfortable with eye contact, please understand that "taking the social pressure off" won't solve the problem, because it is not necessarily a problem! Don't take a lack of eye contact as meaning they feel uncomfortable. It's entirely possible that encouraging them to make eye contact will just make them more uncomfortable -- if they even are.
– Captain Man
yesterday
12
@user35316, I know I do this too, and it has nothing to do with social pressure or discomfort. I just simply have a hard time maintaining eye contact while thinking about the answer to whatever question you just asked me. If I'm thinking about looking at your eyes, I'm not thinking about the conversation we're having. It's just not how my brain works.
– Seth R
yesterday
7
I also avoid constant eye contact with people. I don't think OP should assume any social pressure. I'm not shy, anxious, or particularly introverted. I just find it weird to stare down the person I'm speaking to. Not to mention there are other interesting things to look at than your chin. So I look around.
– Fadecomic
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
34
I was about to answer exactly the same. People are just introverts or don't like eye contact. People going overboard methinks.
– Xander
yesterday
37
If we aren't looking at you, we don't know where you're looking :) Do whatever you want. Dance if you want.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
13
@user35316 as someone else who also feels uncomfortable with eye contact, please understand that "taking the social pressure off" won't solve the problem, because it is not necessarily a problem! Don't take a lack of eye contact as meaning they feel uncomfortable. It's entirely possible that encouraging them to make eye contact will just make them more uncomfortable -- if they even are.
– Captain Man
yesterday
12
@user35316, I know I do this too, and it has nothing to do with social pressure or discomfort. I just simply have a hard time maintaining eye contact while thinking about the answer to whatever question you just asked me. If I'm thinking about looking at your eyes, I'm not thinking about the conversation we're having. It's just not how my brain works.
– Seth R
yesterday
7
I also avoid constant eye contact with people. I don't think OP should assume any social pressure. I'm not shy, anxious, or particularly introverted. I just find it weird to stare down the person I'm speaking to. Not to mention there are other interesting things to look at than your chin. So I look around.
– Fadecomic
yesterday
34
34
I was about to answer exactly the same. People are just introverts or don't like eye contact. People going overboard methinks.
– Xander
yesterday
I was about to answer exactly the same. People are just introverts or don't like eye contact. People going overboard methinks.
– Xander
yesterday
37
37
If we aren't looking at you, we don't know where you're looking :) Do whatever you want. Dance if you want.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
If we aren't looking at you, we don't know where you're looking :) Do whatever you want. Dance if you want.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
13
13
@user35316 as someone else who also feels uncomfortable with eye contact, please understand that "taking the social pressure off" won't solve the problem, because it is not necessarily a problem! Don't take a lack of eye contact as meaning they feel uncomfortable. It's entirely possible that encouraging them to make eye contact will just make them more uncomfortable -- if they even are.
– Captain Man
yesterday
@user35316 as someone else who also feels uncomfortable with eye contact, please understand that "taking the social pressure off" won't solve the problem, because it is not necessarily a problem! Don't take a lack of eye contact as meaning they feel uncomfortable. It's entirely possible that encouraging them to make eye contact will just make them more uncomfortable -- if they even are.
– Captain Man
yesterday
12
12
@user35316, I know I do this too, and it has nothing to do with social pressure or discomfort. I just simply have a hard time maintaining eye contact while thinking about the answer to whatever question you just asked me. If I'm thinking about looking at your eyes, I'm not thinking about the conversation we're having. It's just not how my brain works.
– Seth R
yesterday
@user35316, I know I do this too, and it has nothing to do with social pressure or discomfort. I just simply have a hard time maintaining eye contact while thinking about the answer to whatever question you just asked me. If I'm thinking about looking at your eyes, I'm not thinking about the conversation we're having. It's just not how my brain works.
– Seth R
yesterday
7
7
I also avoid constant eye contact with people. I don't think OP should assume any social pressure. I'm not shy, anxious, or particularly introverted. I just find it weird to stare down the person I'm speaking to. Not to mention there are other interesting things to look at than your chin. So I look around.
– Fadecomic
yesterday
I also avoid constant eye contact with people. I don't think OP should assume any social pressure. I'm not shy, anxious, or particularly introverted. I just find it weird to stare down the person I'm speaking to. Not to mention there are other interesting things to look at than your chin. So I look around.
– Fadecomic
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
I've been in similar situations where people were unable to look me in the eye whilst in a 1-1 meeting. It was pretty clear that they weren't feeling inferior but rather socially awkward/anxious and slightly introvert.
I tried different things and what seemed to work well was sitting next to the person instead of across from them during 1-1s and use a laptop or notes between us to focus on. Most of the time I was focused on the screen while talking and that gave the opportunity to the other person to talk while looking at the screen or notes.
If you're happy with the meetings' outcome and you're able to communicate fine with your subordinates, then I'd simply try to find a layout for these meetings that makes them more comfortable.
14
Was going to suggest this if no one else had. Most men are socialized to interact side by side or around an activity and not face-to-face, since face-to-face means head-to-head which is combative.
– Dedwards
yesterday
5
Don't assume all men are combative.
– stannius
yesterday
10
Nobody discussing the "spectrum" yet? They are engineers after all. Eye contact is pretty intrusive. Insisting upon it can open up a world of problems. Some people just don't.
– mckenzm
20 hours ago
Looking at notes or doing sth else while talking is a sign of lack of interest. Thats not really a wanted impression on others
– Jannis
12 hours ago
add a comment |
I've been in similar situations where people were unable to look me in the eye whilst in a 1-1 meeting. It was pretty clear that they weren't feeling inferior but rather socially awkward/anxious and slightly introvert.
I tried different things and what seemed to work well was sitting next to the person instead of across from them during 1-1s and use a laptop or notes between us to focus on. Most of the time I was focused on the screen while talking and that gave the opportunity to the other person to talk while looking at the screen or notes.
If you're happy with the meetings' outcome and you're able to communicate fine with your subordinates, then I'd simply try to find a layout for these meetings that makes them more comfortable.
14
Was going to suggest this if no one else had. Most men are socialized to interact side by side or around an activity and not face-to-face, since face-to-face means head-to-head which is combative.
– Dedwards
yesterday
5
Don't assume all men are combative.
– stannius
yesterday
10
Nobody discussing the "spectrum" yet? They are engineers after all. Eye contact is pretty intrusive. Insisting upon it can open up a world of problems. Some people just don't.
– mckenzm
20 hours ago
Looking at notes or doing sth else while talking is a sign of lack of interest. Thats not really a wanted impression on others
– Jannis
12 hours ago
add a comment |
I've been in similar situations where people were unable to look me in the eye whilst in a 1-1 meeting. It was pretty clear that they weren't feeling inferior but rather socially awkward/anxious and slightly introvert.
I tried different things and what seemed to work well was sitting next to the person instead of across from them during 1-1s and use a laptop or notes between us to focus on. Most of the time I was focused on the screen while talking and that gave the opportunity to the other person to talk while looking at the screen or notes.
If you're happy with the meetings' outcome and you're able to communicate fine with your subordinates, then I'd simply try to find a layout for these meetings that makes them more comfortable.
I've been in similar situations where people were unable to look me in the eye whilst in a 1-1 meeting. It was pretty clear that they weren't feeling inferior but rather socially awkward/anxious and slightly introvert.
I tried different things and what seemed to work well was sitting next to the person instead of across from them during 1-1s and use a laptop or notes between us to focus on. Most of the time I was focused on the screen while talking and that gave the opportunity to the other person to talk while looking at the screen or notes.
If you're happy with the meetings' outcome and you're able to communicate fine with your subordinates, then I'd simply try to find a layout for these meetings that makes them more comfortable.
answered yesterday
XanderXander
708215
708215
14
Was going to suggest this if no one else had. Most men are socialized to interact side by side or around an activity and not face-to-face, since face-to-face means head-to-head which is combative.
– Dedwards
yesterday
5
Don't assume all men are combative.
– stannius
yesterday
10
Nobody discussing the "spectrum" yet? They are engineers after all. Eye contact is pretty intrusive. Insisting upon it can open up a world of problems. Some people just don't.
– mckenzm
20 hours ago
Looking at notes or doing sth else while talking is a sign of lack of interest. Thats not really a wanted impression on others
– Jannis
12 hours ago
add a comment |
14
Was going to suggest this if no one else had. Most men are socialized to interact side by side or around an activity and not face-to-face, since face-to-face means head-to-head which is combative.
– Dedwards
yesterday
5
Don't assume all men are combative.
– stannius
yesterday
10
Nobody discussing the "spectrum" yet? They are engineers after all. Eye contact is pretty intrusive. Insisting upon it can open up a world of problems. Some people just don't.
– mckenzm
20 hours ago
Looking at notes or doing sth else while talking is a sign of lack of interest. Thats not really a wanted impression on others
– Jannis
12 hours ago
14
14
Was going to suggest this if no one else had. Most men are socialized to interact side by side or around an activity and not face-to-face, since face-to-face means head-to-head which is combative.
– Dedwards
yesterday
Was going to suggest this if no one else had. Most men are socialized to interact side by side or around an activity and not face-to-face, since face-to-face means head-to-head which is combative.
– Dedwards
yesterday
5
5
Don't assume all men are combative.
– stannius
yesterday
Don't assume all men are combative.
– stannius
yesterday
10
10
Nobody discussing the "spectrum" yet? They are engineers after all. Eye contact is pretty intrusive. Insisting upon it can open up a world of problems. Some people just don't.
– mckenzm
20 hours ago
Nobody discussing the "spectrum" yet? They are engineers after all. Eye contact is pretty intrusive. Insisting upon it can open up a world of problems. Some people just don't.
– mckenzm
20 hours ago
Looking at notes or doing sth else while talking is a sign of lack of interest. Thats not really a wanted impression on others
– Jannis
12 hours ago
Looking at notes or doing sth else while talking is a sign of lack of interest. Thats not really a wanted impression on others
– Jannis
12 hours ago
add a comment |
Something that hasn't been mentioned is that they may be thinking.
When you ask me a technical question, I mentally fire up the equipment and software I'd use to work on the problem for real and then run through possible solutions or approaches.
I'm mentally looking at things that are somewhere else. My eyes just rove and have very little to do with what I'm looking at.
I might "park" my peepers staring at blank section of wall or out a window. If I'm really far away, they just stop wherever they were pointed - which may be at you or someone else, causing creepy feelings of "why's he staring at me?"
So, if you are having a one on one discussion and your coworker is staring off into space, he may be really busy trying to find a solution. Anything you do to prevent them from "spacing out" might cause you to lose out on a better solution to your problems.
New contributor
2
I do this too, looking off into space while I think about my answer, but when I'm done thinking I cycle back to eye contact, at least momentarily. The OP didn't mention if the cycling back ever happens or not.
– Karl Bielefeldt
20 hours ago
add a comment |
Something that hasn't been mentioned is that they may be thinking.
When you ask me a technical question, I mentally fire up the equipment and software I'd use to work on the problem for real and then run through possible solutions or approaches.
I'm mentally looking at things that are somewhere else. My eyes just rove and have very little to do with what I'm looking at.
I might "park" my peepers staring at blank section of wall or out a window. If I'm really far away, they just stop wherever they were pointed - which may be at you or someone else, causing creepy feelings of "why's he staring at me?"
So, if you are having a one on one discussion and your coworker is staring off into space, he may be really busy trying to find a solution. Anything you do to prevent them from "spacing out" might cause you to lose out on a better solution to your problems.
New contributor
2
I do this too, looking off into space while I think about my answer, but when I'm done thinking I cycle back to eye contact, at least momentarily. The OP didn't mention if the cycling back ever happens or not.
– Karl Bielefeldt
20 hours ago
add a comment |
Something that hasn't been mentioned is that they may be thinking.
When you ask me a technical question, I mentally fire up the equipment and software I'd use to work on the problem for real and then run through possible solutions or approaches.
I'm mentally looking at things that are somewhere else. My eyes just rove and have very little to do with what I'm looking at.
I might "park" my peepers staring at blank section of wall or out a window. If I'm really far away, they just stop wherever they were pointed - which may be at you or someone else, causing creepy feelings of "why's he staring at me?"
So, if you are having a one on one discussion and your coworker is staring off into space, he may be really busy trying to find a solution. Anything you do to prevent them from "spacing out" might cause you to lose out on a better solution to your problems.
New contributor
Something that hasn't been mentioned is that they may be thinking.
When you ask me a technical question, I mentally fire up the equipment and software I'd use to work on the problem for real and then run through possible solutions or approaches.
I'm mentally looking at things that are somewhere else. My eyes just rove and have very little to do with what I'm looking at.
I might "park" my peepers staring at blank section of wall or out a window. If I'm really far away, they just stop wherever they were pointed - which may be at you or someone else, causing creepy feelings of "why's he staring at me?"
So, if you are having a one on one discussion and your coworker is staring off into space, he may be really busy trying to find a solution. Anything you do to prevent them from "spacing out" might cause you to lose out on a better solution to your problems.
New contributor
New contributor
answered yesterday
JREJRE
34123
34123
New contributor
New contributor
2
I do this too, looking off into space while I think about my answer, but when I'm done thinking I cycle back to eye contact, at least momentarily. The OP didn't mention if the cycling back ever happens or not.
– Karl Bielefeldt
20 hours ago
add a comment |
2
I do this too, looking off into space while I think about my answer, but when I'm done thinking I cycle back to eye contact, at least momentarily. The OP didn't mention if the cycling back ever happens or not.
– Karl Bielefeldt
20 hours ago
2
2
I do this too, looking off into space while I think about my answer, but when I'm done thinking I cycle back to eye contact, at least momentarily. The OP didn't mention if the cycling back ever happens or not.
– Karl Bielefeldt
20 hours ago
I do this too, looking off into space while I think about my answer, but when I'm done thinking I cycle back to eye contact, at least momentarily. The OP didn't mention if the cycling back ever happens or not.
– Karl Bielefeldt
20 hours ago
add a comment |
The individuals in question could be on the autism spectrum such Asperger's Syndrome which is high functioning autism . Such individuals have difficulty with eye contact and are uncomfortable in social situations. This is offset by intense focus on a field of study that they become extremely good at what they do. As for body language I have noticed that they have a hard time correctly interpreting it. You mentioned that one is male and one is female. Asperger's manifests itself differently in men and women.
This answer should be the right one. Being diagnosed with Aspergers myself, I found myself in the OP's description right from the start. And my best advice to the OP is (assuming they really are on the autism spectrum): Don't change your behaviour, just leave it be. If they ignore the social pressure to keep eye contact, it means they are already as comfortable with you as they can be. Changing your behaviour just reduces their comfort because they will notice that and need to interpret your new behaviour.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
Also, yes, many of us autists do have a hard time interpreting the body language of non-autists. In addition, we have a very hard time when trying to "read between the lines". It gets way easier when dealing with other autists, though.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
I find a pint or two usually fixes it :)
– Lightness Races in Orbit
6 hours ago
add a comment |
The individuals in question could be on the autism spectrum such Asperger's Syndrome which is high functioning autism . Such individuals have difficulty with eye contact and are uncomfortable in social situations. This is offset by intense focus on a field of study that they become extremely good at what they do. As for body language I have noticed that they have a hard time correctly interpreting it. You mentioned that one is male and one is female. Asperger's manifests itself differently in men and women.
This answer should be the right one. Being diagnosed with Aspergers myself, I found myself in the OP's description right from the start. And my best advice to the OP is (assuming they really are on the autism spectrum): Don't change your behaviour, just leave it be. If they ignore the social pressure to keep eye contact, it means they are already as comfortable with you as they can be. Changing your behaviour just reduces their comfort because they will notice that and need to interpret your new behaviour.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
Also, yes, many of us autists do have a hard time interpreting the body language of non-autists. In addition, we have a very hard time when trying to "read between the lines". It gets way easier when dealing with other autists, though.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
I find a pint or two usually fixes it :)
– Lightness Races in Orbit
6 hours ago
add a comment |
The individuals in question could be on the autism spectrum such Asperger's Syndrome which is high functioning autism . Such individuals have difficulty with eye contact and are uncomfortable in social situations. This is offset by intense focus on a field of study that they become extremely good at what they do. As for body language I have noticed that they have a hard time correctly interpreting it. You mentioned that one is male and one is female. Asperger's manifests itself differently in men and women.
The individuals in question could be on the autism spectrum such Asperger's Syndrome which is high functioning autism . Such individuals have difficulty with eye contact and are uncomfortable in social situations. This is offset by intense focus on a field of study that they become extremely good at what they do. As for body language I have noticed that they have a hard time correctly interpreting it. You mentioned that one is male and one is female. Asperger's manifests itself differently in men and women.
answered 16 hours ago
Old_FossilOld_Fossil
22914
22914
This answer should be the right one. Being diagnosed with Aspergers myself, I found myself in the OP's description right from the start. And my best advice to the OP is (assuming they really are on the autism spectrum): Don't change your behaviour, just leave it be. If they ignore the social pressure to keep eye contact, it means they are already as comfortable with you as they can be. Changing your behaviour just reduces their comfort because they will notice that and need to interpret your new behaviour.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
Also, yes, many of us autists do have a hard time interpreting the body language of non-autists. In addition, we have a very hard time when trying to "read between the lines". It gets way easier when dealing with other autists, though.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
I find a pint or two usually fixes it :)
– Lightness Races in Orbit
6 hours ago
add a comment |
This answer should be the right one. Being diagnosed with Aspergers myself, I found myself in the OP's description right from the start. And my best advice to the OP is (assuming they really are on the autism spectrum): Don't change your behaviour, just leave it be. If they ignore the social pressure to keep eye contact, it means they are already as comfortable with you as they can be. Changing your behaviour just reduces their comfort because they will notice that and need to interpret your new behaviour.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
Also, yes, many of us autists do have a hard time interpreting the body language of non-autists. In addition, we have a very hard time when trying to "read between the lines". It gets way easier when dealing with other autists, though.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
I find a pint or two usually fixes it :)
– Lightness Races in Orbit
6 hours ago
This answer should be the right one. Being diagnosed with Aspergers myself, I found myself in the OP's description right from the start. And my best advice to the OP is (assuming they really are on the autism spectrum): Don't change your behaviour, just leave it be. If they ignore the social pressure to keep eye contact, it means they are already as comfortable with you as they can be. Changing your behaviour just reduces their comfort because they will notice that and need to interpret your new behaviour.
– orithena
9 hours ago
This answer should be the right one. Being diagnosed with Aspergers myself, I found myself in the OP's description right from the start. And my best advice to the OP is (assuming they really are on the autism spectrum): Don't change your behaviour, just leave it be. If they ignore the social pressure to keep eye contact, it means they are already as comfortable with you as they can be. Changing your behaviour just reduces their comfort because they will notice that and need to interpret your new behaviour.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
1
Also, yes, many of us autists do have a hard time interpreting the body language of non-autists. In addition, we have a very hard time when trying to "read between the lines". It gets way easier when dealing with other autists, though.
– orithena
9 hours ago
Also, yes, many of us autists do have a hard time interpreting the body language of non-autists. In addition, we have a very hard time when trying to "read between the lines". It gets way easier when dealing with other autists, though.
– orithena
9 hours ago
1
1
I find a pint or two usually fixes it :)
– Lightness Races in Orbit
6 hours ago
I find a pint or two usually fixes it :)
– Lightness Races in Orbit
6 hours ago
add a comment |
I myself find that I can listen better if I'm not making an effort to maintain eye contact. After all, you listen with your ears, not your eyes. Because of this, my own eyes tend to wander during conversation, whether I'm any kind of nervous or not.
It may be the same for these individuals. You don't know, so don't make assumptions. If they are performing well and can remember what was discussed, it doesn't really matter that they don't maintain eye contact with you, and no additional action is needed.
New contributor
2
“You listen with your ears, not your eyes.” This is just straight up wrong. There have been studies that have shown that something like 90% of communication is nonverbal. If you want to do a good job as a listener, you need to use both.
– nick012000
18 hours ago
2
@nick012000 that's a very oft misquoted study, and the real amount is much lower, and much of it is tone of voice, which you pick up with your ears as well.
– Erik
14 hours ago
1
@nick012000 And we're not talking about conversations with emotional subtexts, necessarily. These are very likely pretty technical conversations, so body language plays much less of a role.
– bvoyelr
11 hours ago
1
@nick012000 To be fair, I don't have to maintain eye contact to read body language, and I have become very good at reading slight nuances in the other's voice. And I promise that if I could see my conversation partner but not hear them, I definitely would not pick up 90% of their meaning.
– MrSpudtastic
9 hours ago
add a comment |
I myself find that I can listen better if I'm not making an effort to maintain eye contact. After all, you listen with your ears, not your eyes. Because of this, my own eyes tend to wander during conversation, whether I'm any kind of nervous or not.
It may be the same for these individuals. You don't know, so don't make assumptions. If they are performing well and can remember what was discussed, it doesn't really matter that they don't maintain eye contact with you, and no additional action is needed.
New contributor
2
“You listen with your ears, not your eyes.” This is just straight up wrong. There have been studies that have shown that something like 90% of communication is nonverbal. If you want to do a good job as a listener, you need to use both.
– nick012000
18 hours ago
2
@nick012000 that's a very oft misquoted study, and the real amount is much lower, and much of it is tone of voice, which you pick up with your ears as well.
– Erik
14 hours ago
1
@nick012000 And we're not talking about conversations with emotional subtexts, necessarily. These are very likely pretty technical conversations, so body language plays much less of a role.
– bvoyelr
11 hours ago
1
@nick012000 To be fair, I don't have to maintain eye contact to read body language, and I have become very good at reading slight nuances in the other's voice. And I promise that if I could see my conversation partner but not hear them, I definitely would not pick up 90% of their meaning.
– MrSpudtastic
9 hours ago
add a comment |
I myself find that I can listen better if I'm not making an effort to maintain eye contact. After all, you listen with your ears, not your eyes. Because of this, my own eyes tend to wander during conversation, whether I'm any kind of nervous or not.
It may be the same for these individuals. You don't know, so don't make assumptions. If they are performing well and can remember what was discussed, it doesn't really matter that they don't maintain eye contact with you, and no additional action is needed.
New contributor
I myself find that I can listen better if I'm not making an effort to maintain eye contact. After all, you listen with your ears, not your eyes. Because of this, my own eyes tend to wander during conversation, whether I'm any kind of nervous or not.
It may be the same for these individuals. You don't know, so don't make assumptions. If they are performing well and can remember what was discussed, it doesn't really matter that they don't maintain eye contact with you, and no additional action is needed.
New contributor
New contributor
answered yesterday
MrSpudtasticMrSpudtastic
1812
1812
New contributor
New contributor
2
“You listen with your ears, not your eyes.” This is just straight up wrong. There have been studies that have shown that something like 90% of communication is nonverbal. If you want to do a good job as a listener, you need to use both.
– nick012000
18 hours ago
2
@nick012000 that's a very oft misquoted study, and the real amount is much lower, and much of it is tone of voice, which you pick up with your ears as well.
– Erik
14 hours ago
1
@nick012000 And we're not talking about conversations with emotional subtexts, necessarily. These are very likely pretty technical conversations, so body language plays much less of a role.
– bvoyelr
11 hours ago
1
@nick012000 To be fair, I don't have to maintain eye contact to read body language, and I have become very good at reading slight nuances in the other's voice. And I promise that if I could see my conversation partner but not hear them, I definitely would not pick up 90% of their meaning.
– MrSpudtastic
9 hours ago
add a comment |
2
“You listen with your ears, not your eyes.” This is just straight up wrong. There have been studies that have shown that something like 90% of communication is nonverbal. If you want to do a good job as a listener, you need to use both.
– nick012000
18 hours ago
2
@nick012000 that's a very oft misquoted study, and the real amount is much lower, and much of it is tone of voice, which you pick up with your ears as well.
– Erik
14 hours ago
1
@nick012000 And we're not talking about conversations with emotional subtexts, necessarily. These are very likely pretty technical conversations, so body language plays much less of a role.
– bvoyelr
11 hours ago
1
@nick012000 To be fair, I don't have to maintain eye contact to read body language, and I have become very good at reading slight nuances in the other's voice. And I promise that if I could see my conversation partner but not hear them, I definitely would not pick up 90% of their meaning.
– MrSpudtastic
9 hours ago
2
2
“You listen with your ears, not your eyes.” This is just straight up wrong. There have been studies that have shown that something like 90% of communication is nonverbal. If you want to do a good job as a listener, you need to use both.
– nick012000
18 hours ago
“You listen with your ears, not your eyes.” This is just straight up wrong. There have been studies that have shown that something like 90% of communication is nonverbal. If you want to do a good job as a listener, you need to use both.
– nick012000
18 hours ago
2
2
@nick012000 that's a very oft misquoted study, and the real amount is much lower, and much of it is tone of voice, which you pick up with your ears as well.
– Erik
14 hours ago
@nick012000 that's a very oft misquoted study, and the real amount is much lower, and much of it is tone of voice, which you pick up with your ears as well.
– Erik
14 hours ago
1
1
@nick012000 And we're not talking about conversations with emotional subtexts, necessarily. These are very likely pretty technical conversations, so body language plays much less of a role.
– bvoyelr
11 hours ago
@nick012000 And we're not talking about conversations with emotional subtexts, necessarily. These are very likely pretty technical conversations, so body language plays much less of a role.
– bvoyelr
11 hours ago
1
1
@nick012000 To be fair, I don't have to maintain eye contact to read body language, and I have become very good at reading slight nuances in the other's voice. And I promise that if I could see my conversation partner but not hear them, I definitely would not pick up 90% of their meaning.
– MrSpudtastic
9 hours ago
@nick012000 To be fair, I don't have to maintain eye contact to read body language, and I have become very good at reading slight nuances in the other's voice. And I promise that if I could see my conversation partner but not hear them, I definitely would not pick up 90% of their meaning.
– MrSpudtastic
9 hours ago
add a comment |
You mention:
In these meetings we sit across from each other and talk.
Why do you sit across each other? Just write down the things you want to talk about, and say to that person that you want to discuss the points you have written down. The best way to do this is to sit next to each other. While sitting like that, both of you look at the paper and there's no need anymore for having eye-contact.
5
The downvote is not mine, but you don't need the paper. In terms of body language, sitting across is really not optimal, since it is confrontational. However, sitting next to each other is not optimal either and the paper is defenitely distracting from the conversation. A good option would be to do without the paper and sit perpendicular, which is a good seating order in a cooperative setup. If you change your answer in that direction, you have my upvote.
– Sefe
15 hours ago
that's right. Sitting accros eachother is confrontational....sitting NEXT to each other is the easiest solution here!
– user1841243
11 hours ago
I agree with you, opposite each other may be uncomfortable. I usually sit in a 90 degree angle, when sitting next to each other may be too familiar. That way you're close without crossing eyes all the time.
– reinierpost
5 hours ago
add a comment |
You mention:
In these meetings we sit across from each other and talk.
Why do you sit across each other? Just write down the things you want to talk about, and say to that person that you want to discuss the points you have written down. The best way to do this is to sit next to each other. While sitting like that, both of you look at the paper and there's no need anymore for having eye-contact.
5
The downvote is not mine, but you don't need the paper. In terms of body language, sitting across is really not optimal, since it is confrontational. However, sitting next to each other is not optimal either and the paper is defenitely distracting from the conversation. A good option would be to do without the paper and sit perpendicular, which is a good seating order in a cooperative setup. If you change your answer in that direction, you have my upvote.
– Sefe
15 hours ago
that's right. Sitting accros eachother is confrontational....sitting NEXT to each other is the easiest solution here!
– user1841243
11 hours ago
I agree with you, opposite each other may be uncomfortable. I usually sit in a 90 degree angle, when sitting next to each other may be too familiar. That way you're close without crossing eyes all the time.
– reinierpost
5 hours ago
add a comment |
You mention:
In these meetings we sit across from each other and talk.
Why do you sit across each other? Just write down the things you want to talk about, and say to that person that you want to discuss the points you have written down. The best way to do this is to sit next to each other. While sitting like that, both of you look at the paper and there's no need anymore for having eye-contact.
You mention:
In these meetings we sit across from each other and talk.
Why do you sit across each other? Just write down the things you want to talk about, and say to that person that you want to discuss the points you have written down. The best way to do this is to sit next to each other. While sitting like that, both of you look at the paper and there's no need anymore for having eye-contact.
answered 15 hours ago
DominiqueDominique
1,310315
1,310315
5
The downvote is not mine, but you don't need the paper. In terms of body language, sitting across is really not optimal, since it is confrontational. However, sitting next to each other is not optimal either and the paper is defenitely distracting from the conversation. A good option would be to do without the paper and sit perpendicular, which is a good seating order in a cooperative setup. If you change your answer in that direction, you have my upvote.
– Sefe
15 hours ago
that's right. Sitting accros eachother is confrontational....sitting NEXT to each other is the easiest solution here!
– user1841243
11 hours ago
I agree with you, opposite each other may be uncomfortable. I usually sit in a 90 degree angle, when sitting next to each other may be too familiar. That way you're close without crossing eyes all the time.
– reinierpost
5 hours ago
add a comment |
5
The downvote is not mine, but you don't need the paper. In terms of body language, sitting across is really not optimal, since it is confrontational. However, sitting next to each other is not optimal either and the paper is defenitely distracting from the conversation. A good option would be to do without the paper and sit perpendicular, which is a good seating order in a cooperative setup. If you change your answer in that direction, you have my upvote.
– Sefe
15 hours ago
that's right. Sitting accros eachother is confrontational....sitting NEXT to each other is the easiest solution here!
– user1841243
11 hours ago
I agree with you, opposite each other may be uncomfortable. I usually sit in a 90 degree angle, when sitting next to each other may be too familiar. That way you're close without crossing eyes all the time.
– reinierpost
5 hours ago
5
5
The downvote is not mine, but you don't need the paper. In terms of body language, sitting across is really not optimal, since it is confrontational. However, sitting next to each other is not optimal either and the paper is defenitely distracting from the conversation. A good option would be to do without the paper and sit perpendicular, which is a good seating order in a cooperative setup. If you change your answer in that direction, you have my upvote.
– Sefe
15 hours ago
The downvote is not mine, but you don't need the paper. In terms of body language, sitting across is really not optimal, since it is confrontational. However, sitting next to each other is not optimal either and the paper is defenitely distracting from the conversation. A good option would be to do without the paper and sit perpendicular, which is a good seating order in a cooperative setup. If you change your answer in that direction, you have my upvote.
– Sefe
15 hours ago
that's right. Sitting accros eachother is confrontational....sitting NEXT to each other is the easiest solution here!
– user1841243
11 hours ago
that's right. Sitting accros eachother is confrontational....sitting NEXT to each other is the easiest solution here!
– user1841243
11 hours ago
I agree with you, opposite each other may be uncomfortable. I usually sit in a 90 degree angle, when sitting next to each other may be too familiar. That way you're close without crossing eyes all the time.
– reinierpost
5 hours ago
I agree with you, opposite each other may be uncomfortable. I usually sit in a 90 degree angle, when sitting next to each other may be too familiar. That way you're close without crossing eyes all the time.
– reinierpost
5 hours ago
add a comment |
Others have contributed some good thoughts. Some personal perspective:
- What sort of training has your employer provided for those new to management? Do they provide skill building materials?
- Social skills are a bit less relevant if the job isn't customer facing.
- Try not to judge employee on looking in eye, but more on whatever their positive qualities are, and your assessment of their contributions.
- Do not make assumptions on character, rush to judgement, or over-simplify based on a few observations.
- Don't discuss with other managers at your level. Not necessarily their business...
- You do have a mentor responsibility, so think about what that entails and whether social skills are relevant.
6.a. I've done customer facing work, and not always handled it the best. In that case I was fortunate to have a manager that could skillfully address it, and identify areas to improve, and highlight good parts (so I'm not demoralized). Keep in mind I was hired partially due to better social skills.
6.b. The other side, purely internally focused work. Just keep in mind everyone is not created equal and some people will not be able to "improve" their social skills. That's OK. Then focus more on whether tasks are getting done, quality of work, etc.
New contributor
I would agree with everything but #5. You can discuss with other managers as they are now your peer group, and would likely have valuable feedback/suggestions. You can avoid talking about specific people, but overall, it's fine to speak with people at your level. I do think that it is better to speak with colleagues outside of the company, or if you have a mentor, speak with them.
– Malisbad
17 hours ago
Thanks, Sounds like a better take on what I wrote. I would worry a new manager might share too much with peers.
– learning2learn
13 hours ago
add a comment |
Others have contributed some good thoughts. Some personal perspective:
- What sort of training has your employer provided for those new to management? Do they provide skill building materials?
- Social skills are a bit less relevant if the job isn't customer facing.
- Try not to judge employee on looking in eye, but more on whatever their positive qualities are, and your assessment of their contributions.
- Do not make assumptions on character, rush to judgement, or over-simplify based on a few observations.
- Don't discuss with other managers at your level. Not necessarily their business...
- You do have a mentor responsibility, so think about what that entails and whether social skills are relevant.
6.a. I've done customer facing work, and not always handled it the best. In that case I was fortunate to have a manager that could skillfully address it, and identify areas to improve, and highlight good parts (so I'm not demoralized). Keep in mind I was hired partially due to better social skills.
6.b. The other side, purely internally focused work. Just keep in mind everyone is not created equal and some people will not be able to "improve" their social skills. That's OK. Then focus more on whether tasks are getting done, quality of work, etc.
New contributor
I would agree with everything but #5. You can discuss with other managers as they are now your peer group, and would likely have valuable feedback/suggestions. You can avoid talking about specific people, but overall, it's fine to speak with people at your level. I do think that it is better to speak with colleagues outside of the company, or if you have a mentor, speak with them.
– Malisbad
17 hours ago
Thanks, Sounds like a better take on what I wrote. I would worry a new manager might share too much with peers.
– learning2learn
13 hours ago
add a comment |
Others have contributed some good thoughts. Some personal perspective:
- What sort of training has your employer provided for those new to management? Do they provide skill building materials?
- Social skills are a bit less relevant if the job isn't customer facing.
- Try not to judge employee on looking in eye, but more on whatever their positive qualities are, and your assessment of their contributions.
- Do not make assumptions on character, rush to judgement, or over-simplify based on a few observations.
- Don't discuss with other managers at your level. Not necessarily their business...
- You do have a mentor responsibility, so think about what that entails and whether social skills are relevant.
6.a. I've done customer facing work, and not always handled it the best. In that case I was fortunate to have a manager that could skillfully address it, and identify areas to improve, and highlight good parts (so I'm not demoralized). Keep in mind I was hired partially due to better social skills.
6.b. The other side, purely internally focused work. Just keep in mind everyone is not created equal and some people will not be able to "improve" their social skills. That's OK. Then focus more on whether tasks are getting done, quality of work, etc.
New contributor
Others have contributed some good thoughts. Some personal perspective:
- What sort of training has your employer provided for those new to management? Do they provide skill building materials?
- Social skills are a bit less relevant if the job isn't customer facing.
- Try not to judge employee on looking in eye, but more on whatever their positive qualities are, and your assessment of their contributions.
- Do not make assumptions on character, rush to judgement, or over-simplify based on a few observations.
- Don't discuss with other managers at your level. Not necessarily their business...
- You do have a mentor responsibility, so think about what that entails and whether social skills are relevant.
6.a. I've done customer facing work, and not always handled it the best. In that case I was fortunate to have a manager that could skillfully address it, and identify areas to improve, and highlight good parts (so I'm not demoralized). Keep in mind I was hired partially due to better social skills.
6.b. The other side, purely internally focused work. Just keep in mind everyone is not created equal and some people will not be able to "improve" their social skills. That's OK. Then focus more on whether tasks are getting done, quality of work, etc.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 18 hours ago
learning2learnlearning2learn
952
952
New contributor
New contributor
I would agree with everything but #5. You can discuss with other managers as they are now your peer group, and would likely have valuable feedback/suggestions. You can avoid talking about specific people, but overall, it's fine to speak with people at your level. I do think that it is better to speak with colleagues outside of the company, or if you have a mentor, speak with them.
– Malisbad
17 hours ago
Thanks, Sounds like a better take on what I wrote. I would worry a new manager might share too much with peers.
– learning2learn
13 hours ago
add a comment |
I would agree with everything but #5. You can discuss with other managers as they are now your peer group, and would likely have valuable feedback/suggestions. You can avoid talking about specific people, but overall, it's fine to speak with people at your level. I do think that it is better to speak with colleagues outside of the company, or if you have a mentor, speak with them.
– Malisbad
17 hours ago
Thanks, Sounds like a better take on what I wrote. I would worry a new manager might share too much with peers.
– learning2learn
13 hours ago
I would agree with everything but #5. You can discuss with other managers as they are now your peer group, and would likely have valuable feedback/suggestions. You can avoid talking about specific people, but overall, it's fine to speak with people at your level. I do think that it is better to speak with colleagues outside of the company, or if you have a mentor, speak with them.
– Malisbad
17 hours ago
I would agree with everything but #5. You can discuss with other managers as they are now your peer group, and would likely have valuable feedback/suggestions. You can avoid talking about specific people, but overall, it's fine to speak with people at your level. I do think that it is better to speak with colleagues outside of the company, or if you have a mentor, speak with them.
– Malisbad
17 hours ago
Thanks, Sounds like a better take on what I wrote. I would worry a new manager might share too much with peers.
– learning2learn
13 hours ago
Thanks, Sounds like a better take on what I wrote. I would worry a new manager might share too much with peers.
– learning2learn
13 hours ago
add a comment |
If you have been working with them for a long time and have now become their "superior" this is common to happen. They may have the problem of trying to separate the relationship they used to have with the one they have now.
There are a few things you can try.
Just give them the room they need, if their performance is not lacking and motivation seems to be the same, leave it as it is. Continue looking at them while they speak and remain professional.
If you have worked with them for that long and feel the relationship exists there, ask them. While you are on the 1-on-1 tell them you have noticed that they don't seem to be fully comfortable and ask them if they prefer a different approach to the 1-on-1.
Use an anonymous survey to the entire team regarding current processes, including 1-on-1, PDP and PDR.
As you said, they are not going to be customer facing, but it is also good to give them the opportunity to develop their interpersonal skills.
I don't understand the downvote on this one. This seems pretty valid.
– GustavoMP
yesterday
8
@GustavoMP I'm not the downvoter but the general trend in low score answers to this question is that they assume there's something wrong, the employees are nervous, etc. The truth is some people simply are uncomfortable looking other people in the eyes in any kind of situation or don't know where they are supposed to look or think looking at other person too long would be considered rude. There is nothing wrong with the workplace nor the supervisor.
– user31389
yesterday
@user31389 with that I can agree
– GustavoMP
yesterday
add a comment |
If you have been working with them for a long time and have now become their "superior" this is common to happen. They may have the problem of trying to separate the relationship they used to have with the one they have now.
There are a few things you can try.
Just give them the room they need, if their performance is not lacking and motivation seems to be the same, leave it as it is. Continue looking at them while they speak and remain professional.
If you have worked with them for that long and feel the relationship exists there, ask them. While you are on the 1-on-1 tell them you have noticed that they don't seem to be fully comfortable and ask them if they prefer a different approach to the 1-on-1.
Use an anonymous survey to the entire team regarding current processes, including 1-on-1, PDP and PDR.
As you said, they are not going to be customer facing, but it is also good to give them the opportunity to develop their interpersonal skills.
I don't understand the downvote on this one. This seems pretty valid.
– GustavoMP
yesterday
8
@GustavoMP I'm not the downvoter but the general trend in low score answers to this question is that they assume there's something wrong, the employees are nervous, etc. The truth is some people simply are uncomfortable looking other people in the eyes in any kind of situation or don't know where they are supposed to look or think looking at other person too long would be considered rude. There is nothing wrong with the workplace nor the supervisor.
– user31389
yesterday
@user31389 with that I can agree
– GustavoMP
yesterday
add a comment |
If you have been working with them for a long time and have now become their "superior" this is common to happen. They may have the problem of trying to separate the relationship they used to have with the one they have now.
There are a few things you can try.
Just give them the room they need, if their performance is not lacking and motivation seems to be the same, leave it as it is. Continue looking at them while they speak and remain professional.
If you have worked with them for that long and feel the relationship exists there, ask them. While you are on the 1-on-1 tell them you have noticed that they don't seem to be fully comfortable and ask them if they prefer a different approach to the 1-on-1.
Use an anonymous survey to the entire team regarding current processes, including 1-on-1, PDP and PDR.
As you said, they are not going to be customer facing, but it is also good to give them the opportunity to develop their interpersonal skills.
If you have been working with them for a long time and have now become their "superior" this is common to happen. They may have the problem of trying to separate the relationship they used to have with the one they have now.
There are a few things you can try.
Just give them the room they need, if their performance is not lacking and motivation seems to be the same, leave it as it is. Continue looking at them while they speak and remain professional.
If you have worked with them for that long and feel the relationship exists there, ask them. While you are on the 1-on-1 tell them you have noticed that they don't seem to be fully comfortable and ask them if they prefer a different approach to the 1-on-1.
Use an anonymous survey to the entire team regarding current processes, including 1-on-1, PDP and PDR.
As you said, they are not going to be customer facing, but it is also good to give them the opportunity to develop their interpersonal skills.
edited 11 hours ago
David K
24.5k1684124
24.5k1684124
answered yesterday
fireshark519fireshark519
1,445115
1,445115
I don't understand the downvote on this one. This seems pretty valid.
– GustavoMP
yesterday
8
@GustavoMP I'm not the downvoter but the general trend in low score answers to this question is that they assume there's something wrong, the employees are nervous, etc. The truth is some people simply are uncomfortable looking other people in the eyes in any kind of situation or don't know where they are supposed to look or think looking at other person too long would be considered rude. There is nothing wrong with the workplace nor the supervisor.
– user31389
yesterday
@user31389 with that I can agree
– GustavoMP
yesterday
add a comment |
I don't understand the downvote on this one. This seems pretty valid.
– GustavoMP
yesterday
8
@GustavoMP I'm not the downvoter but the general trend in low score answers to this question is that they assume there's something wrong, the employees are nervous, etc. The truth is some people simply are uncomfortable looking other people in the eyes in any kind of situation or don't know where they are supposed to look or think looking at other person too long would be considered rude. There is nothing wrong with the workplace nor the supervisor.
– user31389
yesterday
@user31389 with that I can agree
– GustavoMP
yesterday
I don't understand the downvote on this one. This seems pretty valid.
– GustavoMP
yesterday
I don't understand the downvote on this one. This seems pretty valid.
– GustavoMP
yesterday
8
8
@GustavoMP I'm not the downvoter but the general trend in low score answers to this question is that they assume there's something wrong, the employees are nervous, etc. The truth is some people simply are uncomfortable looking other people in the eyes in any kind of situation or don't know where they are supposed to look or think looking at other person too long would be considered rude. There is nothing wrong with the workplace nor the supervisor.
– user31389
yesterday
@GustavoMP I'm not the downvoter but the general trend in low score answers to this question is that they assume there's something wrong, the employees are nervous, etc. The truth is some people simply are uncomfortable looking other people in the eyes in any kind of situation or don't know where they are supposed to look or think looking at other person too long would be considered rude. There is nothing wrong with the workplace nor the supervisor.
– user31389
yesterday
@user31389 with that I can agree
– GustavoMP
yesterday
@user31389 with that I can agree
– GustavoMP
yesterday
add a comment |
Does me keeping looking at them make it worse?
Not directly (see below).
Should I try to look away more? Should I try to ditch the sitting across from each other and try sitting on the same side of a table?
No need. It's not you looking at them that's the problem, it's their discomfort looking at you.
There is potentially an added discomfort imbued by the expectation that when someone looks at you, you look back (so the coworker may feel an element of "obligation" that they cannot fulfil, causing further discomfort).
But, in my personal experience, I wouldn't worry too much about your approach here, as long as you're not actively rebuking them for not giving eye contact back (which would suck because, for some people, it's genuinely really, really hard).
That being said, there are some excellent suggestions in other answers (e.g. having a "walking meeting") that nix the entire problem at source; that way you can eliminate any issue at all, provided these ideas fit in well with your workflow and daily structure.
add a comment |
Does me keeping looking at them make it worse?
Not directly (see below).
Should I try to look away more? Should I try to ditch the sitting across from each other and try sitting on the same side of a table?
No need. It's not you looking at them that's the problem, it's their discomfort looking at you.
There is potentially an added discomfort imbued by the expectation that when someone looks at you, you look back (so the coworker may feel an element of "obligation" that they cannot fulfil, causing further discomfort).
But, in my personal experience, I wouldn't worry too much about your approach here, as long as you're not actively rebuking them for not giving eye contact back (which would suck because, for some people, it's genuinely really, really hard).
That being said, there are some excellent suggestions in other answers (e.g. having a "walking meeting") that nix the entire problem at source; that way you can eliminate any issue at all, provided these ideas fit in well with your workflow and daily structure.
add a comment |
Does me keeping looking at them make it worse?
Not directly (see below).
Should I try to look away more? Should I try to ditch the sitting across from each other and try sitting on the same side of a table?
No need. It's not you looking at them that's the problem, it's their discomfort looking at you.
There is potentially an added discomfort imbued by the expectation that when someone looks at you, you look back (so the coworker may feel an element of "obligation" that they cannot fulfil, causing further discomfort).
But, in my personal experience, I wouldn't worry too much about your approach here, as long as you're not actively rebuking them for not giving eye contact back (which would suck because, for some people, it's genuinely really, really hard).
That being said, there are some excellent suggestions in other answers (e.g. having a "walking meeting") that nix the entire problem at source; that way you can eliminate any issue at all, provided these ideas fit in well with your workflow and daily structure.
Does me keeping looking at them make it worse?
Not directly (see below).
Should I try to look away more? Should I try to ditch the sitting across from each other and try sitting on the same side of a table?
No need. It's not you looking at them that's the problem, it's their discomfort looking at you.
There is potentially an added discomfort imbued by the expectation that when someone looks at you, you look back (so the coworker may feel an element of "obligation" that they cannot fulfil, causing further discomfort).
But, in my personal experience, I wouldn't worry too much about your approach here, as long as you're not actively rebuking them for not giving eye contact back (which would suck because, for some people, it's genuinely really, really hard).
That being said, there are some excellent suggestions in other answers (e.g. having a "walking meeting") that nix the entire problem at source; that way you can eliminate any issue at all, provided these ideas fit in well with your workflow and daily structure.
answered 6 hours ago
Lightness Races in OrbitLightness Races in Orbit
9,70841938
9,70841938
add a comment |
add a comment |
In America, it's common for companies to do "team-building" exercises. They usually consist of the team going to lunch, or having a gathering off site with families, even. It's to allow people get to know each other in casual situations, and this can help with a person viewing their boss/manager as a person, not just an authority to be scared of.
Perhaps this isn't an option, but for whatever reason they seem to fear you. Might just be a cultural thing...but you need to try to find a way to break through that.
2
Doesn't seem like they fear him from what he said.
– kiradotee
yesterday
add a comment |
In America, it's common for companies to do "team-building" exercises. They usually consist of the team going to lunch, or having a gathering off site with families, even. It's to allow people get to know each other in casual situations, and this can help with a person viewing their boss/manager as a person, not just an authority to be scared of.
Perhaps this isn't an option, but for whatever reason they seem to fear you. Might just be a cultural thing...but you need to try to find a way to break through that.
2
Doesn't seem like they fear him from what he said.
– kiradotee
yesterday
add a comment |
In America, it's common for companies to do "team-building" exercises. They usually consist of the team going to lunch, or having a gathering off site with families, even. It's to allow people get to know each other in casual situations, and this can help with a person viewing their boss/manager as a person, not just an authority to be scared of.
Perhaps this isn't an option, but for whatever reason they seem to fear you. Might just be a cultural thing...but you need to try to find a way to break through that.
In America, it's common for companies to do "team-building" exercises. They usually consist of the team going to lunch, or having a gathering off site with families, even. It's to allow people get to know each other in casual situations, and this can help with a person viewing their boss/manager as a person, not just an authority to be scared of.
Perhaps this isn't an option, but for whatever reason they seem to fear you. Might just be a cultural thing...but you need to try to find a way to break through that.
answered yesterday
KeithKeith
1,138311
1,138311
2
Doesn't seem like they fear him from what he said.
– kiradotee
yesterday
add a comment |
2
Doesn't seem like they fear him from what he said.
– kiradotee
yesterday
2
2
Doesn't seem like they fear him from what he said.
– kiradotee
yesterday
Doesn't seem like they fear him from what he said.
– kiradotee
yesterday
add a comment |
Although there are some good examples of things you can do to get around this uncomfortable feeling mentioned by others.
The main thing here should be to build your coworkers confidence (restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence) rather than find more ways they can avoid eye contact. Eye contact is a very important skill and should not be overlooked as it's the main way to connect during conversation. It's not something that should be avoided no matter who you are.
That being said
(all great, no hard conversations)
They might not be uncomfortable but just nervous during these 121's. You get what you need and conversation is still flowing. If colleagues were uncomfortable there would likely be rushed speech or stutters along with lack of eye contact
7
There are many cultures that do not view "Eye Contact" as an important business or professional skill. For example, I work with Japanese partners where the business culture in meetings is to look down and "listen" with perhaps the exception of the person being directly addressed, even closing eyes is considered normal, and it took me a while to get used to speaking at meetings and to trust that they are listening intently even if they look like they are sleeping (although, sometimes they are).
– crasic
yesterday
1
"Restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence" that is not true for me. I have a hard time looking people in the eye, but I would definitely not be categorized as someone lacking confidence or having nerves. I simply don't like to. It's never caused me any problems in business, in fact, i think it has helped, because too much eye contact can be seen as rude and aggressive where I am (pnw in the US)
– user87779
yesterday
add a comment |
Although there are some good examples of things you can do to get around this uncomfortable feeling mentioned by others.
The main thing here should be to build your coworkers confidence (restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence) rather than find more ways they can avoid eye contact. Eye contact is a very important skill and should not be overlooked as it's the main way to connect during conversation. It's not something that should be avoided no matter who you are.
That being said
(all great, no hard conversations)
They might not be uncomfortable but just nervous during these 121's. You get what you need and conversation is still flowing. If colleagues were uncomfortable there would likely be rushed speech or stutters along with lack of eye contact
7
There are many cultures that do not view "Eye Contact" as an important business or professional skill. For example, I work with Japanese partners where the business culture in meetings is to look down and "listen" with perhaps the exception of the person being directly addressed, even closing eyes is considered normal, and it took me a while to get used to speaking at meetings and to trust that they are listening intently even if they look like they are sleeping (although, sometimes they are).
– crasic
yesterday
1
"Restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence" that is not true for me. I have a hard time looking people in the eye, but I would definitely not be categorized as someone lacking confidence or having nerves. I simply don't like to. It's never caused me any problems in business, in fact, i think it has helped, because too much eye contact can be seen as rude and aggressive where I am (pnw in the US)
– user87779
yesterday
add a comment |
Although there are some good examples of things you can do to get around this uncomfortable feeling mentioned by others.
The main thing here should be to build your coworkers confidence (restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence) rather than find more ways they can avoid eye contact. Eye contact is a very important skill and should not be overlooked as it's the main way to connect during conversation. It's not something that should be avoided no matter who you are.
That being said
(all great, no hard conversations)
They might not be uncomfortable but just nervous during these 121's. You get what you need and conversation is still flowing. If colleagues were uncomfortable there would likely be rushed speech or stutters along with lack of eye contact
Although there are some good examples of things you can do to get around this uncomfortable feeling mentioned by others.
The main thing here should be to build your coworkers confidence (restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence) rather than find more ways they can avoid eye contact. Eye contact is a very important skill and should not be overlooked as it's the main way to connect during conversation. It's not something that should be avoided no matter who you are.
That being said
(all great, no hard conversations)
They might not be uncomfortable but just nervous during these 121's. You get what you need and conversation is still flowing. If colleagues were uncomfortable there would likely be rushed speech or stutters along with lack of eye contact
edited yesterday
answered yesterday
TwyxzTwyxz
13.5k104182
13.5k104182
7
There are many cultures that do not view "Eye Contact" as an important business or professional skill. For example, I work with Japanese partners where the business culture in meetings is to look down and "listen" with perhaps the exception of the person being directly addressed, even closing eyes is considered normal, and it took me a while to get used to speaking at meetings and to trust that they are listening intently even if they look like they are sleeping (although, sometimes they are).
– crasic
yesterday
1
"Restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence" that is not true for me. I have a hard time looking people in the eye, but I would definitely not be categorized as someone lacking confidence or having nerves. I simply don't like to. It's never caused me any problems in business, in fact, i think it has helped, because too much eye contact can be seen as rude and aggressive where I am (pnw in the US)
– user87779
yesterday
add a comment |
7
There are many cultures that do not view "Eye Contact" as an important business or professional skill. For example, I work with Japanese partners where the business culture in meetings is to look down and "listen" with perhaps the exception of the person being directly addressed, even closing eyes is considered normal, and it took me a while to get used to speaking at meetings and to trust that they are listening intently even if they look like they are sleeping (although, sometimes they are).
– crasic
yesterday
1
"Restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence" that is not true for me. I have a hard time looking people in the eye, but I would definitely not be categorized as someone lacking confidence or having nerves. I simply don't like to. It's never caused me any problems in business, in fact, i think it has helped, because too much eye contact can be seen as rude and aggressive where I am (pnw in the US)
– user87779
yesterday
7
7
There are many cultures that do not view "Eye Contact" as an important business or professional skill. For example, I work with Japanese partners where the business culture in meetings is to look down and "listen" with perhaps the exception of the person being directly addressed, even closing eyes is considered normal, and it took me a while to get used to speaking at meetings and to trust that they are listening intently even if they look like they are sleeping (although, sometimes they are).
– crasic
yesterday
There are many cultures that do not view "Eye Contact" as an important business or professional skill. For example, I work with Japanese partners where the business culture in meetings is to look down and "listen" with perhaps the exception of the person being directly addressed, even closing eyes is considered normal, and it took me a while to get used to speaking at meetings and to trust that they are listening intently even if they look like they are sleeping (although, sometimes they are).
– crasic
yesterday
1
1
"Restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence" that is not true for me. I have a hard time looking people in the eye, but I would definitely not be categorized as someone lacking confidence or having nerves. I simply don't like to. It's never caused me any problems in business, in fact, i think it has helped, because too much eye contact can be seen as rude and aggressive where I am (pnw in the US)
– user87779
yesterday
"Restless eyes are caused by nerves and lack of confidence" that is not true for me. I have a hard time looking people in the eye, but I would definitely not be categorized as someone lacking confidence or having nerves. I simply don't like to. It's never caused me any problems in business, in fact, i think it has helped, because too much eye contact can be seen as rude and aggressive where I am (pnw in the US)
– user87779
yesterday
add a comment |
Although this question has been answered already but trying to include my 2 cents. By reading your question, you said:
I don’t know they are uncomfortable necessarily, more like, I, a social person, have not encountered this situation and myself am uncomfortable. Based on input, they don’t care what I do really, which is a relief!
Don't judge people if they are uncomfortable,specially during meeting some people don't make eye contact because they stare in space to digest/understand the important points and trying to match if it relates to their questions, usually people are uncomfortable if they don't know the answer or afraid of being asked what they have not fulfilled or done before.
So, I'd say try to make more friendly conversation with individuals by 1:1 coffee or walk, you can ask their issues which is bothering them or something they can't talk during the meeting, try to grill down to the level where they are confident to disclose if anything in their mind and assure them that will be taken care. I believe this will help maintain good healthy relations with them if you convince them. At the end of the day you're on higher position, there's always respect and little one step back bonding always there in them.
New contributor
What do you mean by "little one step back bonding always there in them" (seemingly incomprehensible)?
– Peter Mortensen
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Although this question has been answered already but trying to include my 2 cents. By reading your question, you said:
I don’t know they are uncomfortable necessarily, more like, I, a social person, have not encountered this situation and myself am uncomfortable. Based on input, they don’t care what I do really, which is a relief!
Don't judge people if they are uncomfortable,specially during meeting some people don't make eye contact because they stare in space to digest/understand the important points and trying to match if it relates to their questions, usually people are uncomfortable if they don't know the answer or afraid of being asked what they have not fulfilled or done before.
So, I'd say try to make more friendly conversation with individuals by 1:1 coffee or walk, you can ask their issues which is bothering them or something they can't talk during the meeting, try to grill down to the level where they are confident to disclose if anything in their mind and assure them that will be taken care. I believe this will help maintain good healthy relations with them if you convince them. At the end of the day you're on higher position, there's always respect and little one step back bonding always there in them.
New contributor
What do you mean by "little one step back bonding always there in them" (seemingly incomprehensible)?
– Peter Mortensen
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Although this question has been answered already but trying to include my 2 cents. By reading your question, you said:
I don’t know they are uncomfortable necessarily, more like, I, a social person, have not encountered this situation and myself am uncomfortable. Based on input, they don’t care what I do really, which is a relief!
Don't judge people if they are uncomfortable,specially during meeting some people don't make eye contact because they stare in space to digest/understand the important points and trying to match if it relates to their questions, usually people are uncomfortable if they don't know the answer or afraid of being asked what they have not fulfilled or done before.
So, I'd say try to make more friendly conversation with individuals by 1:1 coffee or walk, you can ask their issues which is bothering them or something they can't talk during the meeting, try to grill down to the level where they are confident to disclose if anything in their mind and assure them that will be taken care. I believe this will help maintain good healthy relations with them if you convince them. At the end of the day you're on higher position, there's always respect and little one step back bonding always there in them.
New contributor
Although this question has been answered already but trying to include my 2 cents. By reading your question, you said:
I don’t know they are uncomfortable necessarily, more like, I, a social person, have not encountered this situation and myself am uncomfortable. Based on input, they don’t care what I do really, which is a relief!
Don't judge people if they are uncomfortable,specially during meeting some people don't make eye contact because they stare in space to digest/understand the important points and trying to match if it relates to their questions, usually people are uncomfortable if they don't know the answer or afraid of being asked what they have not fulfilled or done before.
So, I'd say try to make more friendly conversation with individuals by 1:1 coffee or walk, you can ask their issues which is bothering them or something they can't talk during the meeting, try to grill down to the level where they are confident to disclose if anything in their mind and assure them that will be taken care. I believe this will help maintain good healthy relations with them if you convince them. At the end of the day you're on higher position, there's always respect and little one step back bonding always there in them.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 8 hours ago
NadeemNadeem
1011
1011
New contributor
New contributor
What do you mean by "little one step back bonding always there in them" (seemingly incomprehensible)?
– Peter Mortensen
2 hours ago
add a comment |
What do you mean by "little one step back bonding always there in them" (seemingly incomprehensible)?
– Peter Mortensen
2 hours ago
What do you mean by "little one step back bonding always there in them" (seemingly incomprehensible)?
– Peter Mortensen
2 hours ago
What do you mean by "little one step back bonding always there in them" (seemingly incomprehensible)?
– Peter Mortensen
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Most likely they are nervous. Many employees will feel nervous talking to their manager 1 on 1. Add the fact that you are their new manager, talking about their tasks and performance and this nervous factor can increase. Add the fact that they are engineers, who in many cases are introverts, and you can understand how elevated their nerves must be.
There isn't anything to change on your part as far as smiling and looking at them. What you can do, before the meeting, is try to calm them down and make it clear that the meeting isn't an official review or that they aren't being punished for anything.
4
I am not the person OP is talking about but I am like them, I do not do well with eye to eye contact. Nothing to do with nerves. I just do not like it. (I might be Autistic, but high functional and have not other problems.)
– Willeke
yesterday
add a comment |
Most likely they are nervous. Many employees will feel nervous talking to their manager 1 on 1. Add the fact that you are their new manager, talking about their tasks and performance and this nervous factor can increase. Add the fact that they are engineers, who in many cases are introverts, and you can understand how elevated their nerves must be.
There isn't anything to change on your part as far as smiling and looking at them. What you can do, before the meeting, is try to calm them down and make it clear that the meeting isn't an official review or that they aren't being punished for anything.
4
I am not the person OP is talking about but I am like them, I do not do well with eye to eye contact. Nothing to do with nerves. I just do not like it. (I might be Autistic, but high functional and have not other problems.)
– Willeke
yesterday
add a comment |
Most likely they are nervous. Many employees will feel nervous talking to their manager 1 on 1. Add the fact that you are their new manager, talking about their tasks and performance and this nervous factor can increase. Add the fact that they are engineers, who in many cases are introverts, and you can understand how elevated their nerves must be.
There isn't anything to change on your part as far as smiling and looking at them. What you can do, before the meeting, is try to calm them down and make it clear that the meeting isn't an official review or that they aren't being punished for anything.
Most likely they are nervous. Many employees will feel nervous talking to their manager 1 on 1. Add the fact that you are their new manager, talking about their tasks and performance and this nervous factor can increase. Add the fact that they are engineers, who in many cases are introverts, and you can understand how elevated their nerves must be.
There isn't anything to change on your part as far as smiling and looking at them. What you can do, before the meeting, is try to calm them down and make it clear that the meeting isn't an official review or that they aren't being punished for anything.
answered yesterday
sf02sf02
9,37351539
9,37351539
4
I am not the person OP is talking about but I am like them, I do not do well with eye to eye contact. Nothing to do with nerves. I just do not like it. (I might be Autistic, but high functional and have not other problems.)
– Willeke
yesterday
add a comment |
4
I am not the person OP is talking about but I am like them, I do not do well with eye to eye contact. Nothing to do with nerves. I just do not like it. (I might be Autistic, but high functional and have not other problems.)
– Willeke
yesterday
4
4
I am not the person OP is talking about but I am like them, I do not do well with eye to eye contact. Nothing to do with nerves. I just do not like it. (I might be Autistic, but high functional and have not other problems.)
– Willeke
yesterday
I am not the person OP is talking about but I am like them, I do not do well with eye to eye contact. Nothing to do with nerves. I just do not like it. (I might be Autistic, but high functional and have not other problems.)
– Willeke
yesterday
add a comment |
protected by mcknz 1 hour ago
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13
Do you bring anything with you to meetings, things you might have to glance at every so often? Like a notepad for example.
– Kozaky
yesterday
Do you think they have developed an inferiority-complex? Because, not long ago you were working with them as a colleague (same level, I assume), and now you have been promoted as a Supervisor?
– Dashamlav
yesterday
4
Did you notice this behavior also before becoming their superior? Were they avoiding eye contact when you were also peers, when discussing tasks at your desks or when you meet them for lunch?
– Xander
yesterday
6
Did you try sitting on the same side of the table?
– BЈовић
13 hours ago
2
"Two of my engineers are clearly uncomfortable in this set up, unable to maintain eye contact and so look around the room as they talk most of the time." Are they actually uncomfortable? I don't always maintain a lot of eye contact, and as long as the person I'm talking with doesn't mind that, the fact that I'm not maintaining eye contact lets me remain comfortable. What would be uncomfortable is if I had to try to maintain eye contact. Are you asking them to do that?
– Joshua Taylor
6 hours ago