Why I No Longer Tell Anyone to "Be Professional.
Anna Kallschmidt, Ph.D.
Thought Leader in the Unwritten Rules of Work | Author-to-be| Speaker
When I started my Ph.D. in Industrial-Organizational (I-O) psychology, I learned about?task performance and contextual performance. Task performance is what is written in your job description. On the other hand, contextual performance is the often voluntary nontechnical behaviors that are not directly related to job tasks (mainly interpersonal behaviors, see here) but significantly impact the organization.
As someone who playfully identifies as a little bit redneck...I was concerned. I was not from a place with many white-collar work environments. I did not know what the expectations would be for behaviors that weren't written in job descriptions.
I kept asking questions in class and pawing through our textbooks looking for what these contextual performance behaviors specifically were. The descriptions I found of "interpersonal relationships" and "citizenship performance" felt so broad to me.
I remember thinking, “if part of my job performance is not written down, how am I supposed to know to do it?”
But I also noticed other things. I didn't seem to say things quite right. My colorful southern sayings and twangy voice seemed to alarm people. I was frequently told it was surprising how direct I was or how firmly I shook someone's hand. Nobody else in my classes or at conferences seemed to have this question. How did they already know what to do? Why didn't this bother them? Or did it bother them, and one of the rules was that we weren't supposed to ask to begin with?
I took myself to our university's career center, and I was the only Ph.D.?student at most, if not all, of the workshops I attended.?How did everyone already know this career stuff? Between the workshops and my own growing knowledge organizations, jobs, and hiring systems blossomed, and I started to piece together how to get into these white-collar environments. These understandings informed my first LinkedIn article, which snowballed into the professional development workshop?I've delivered many times at Stanford, FIU, and my research lab. What did I learn from the demand for these materials?
It wasn't just me.?
My first post?discussed how culture is water, not an iceberg. For my trainees and I, we were in bodies of water we did not recognize. When you’re in an environment that wasn’t built by people like you, you don’t know the rules of the environment. And the authors of the environment likely do not know how to articulate these rules because they assumed they were just "normal" and nobody needed an explanation. When people enter new water, they are often only given two options - get out of the water or learn how to swim.
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These observations and questions led to what eventually became my dissertation, investigating what are the unwritten rules of work for people who come from low-income backgrounds, and how do these rules and their consequences differ between and within Black and White women and men?
I trained up a team of research assistants (RAs) and we interviewed 64 Black and White women and men from low-income backgrounds who had worked in the southern U.S. Every single one of them agreed there were unwritten rules in the workplace. As we predicted, which rules they experienced, and if/how there were negative consequences, were different between groups.
We identified seven groups of cultural norms that served as unwritten rules for our respondents, and many said these rules changed as they moved up further in their organizational status.
As they moved up into higher-class environments, our participants noticed:
To some of you, these might seem like "no brainers," and in that case...simply recognize that you are working somewhere that shares your cultural water. That's okay! I only ask that you realize that is not the case for everyone. The issue is that when you onboard to places like this, nobody says "Okay, when you work here we expect you to be complicit, schmooze, speak indirectly, and play political games." That's not a sexy onboarding process. Instead, when we're onboarded we are told that we "expect everyone to behave professionally" and that's where the water gets murky.
Check out my blog post for tips on how to define professionalism with your team.
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10 个月One kicker is that each stage of life and career has different unwritten rules, or maybe they are always there you're just learning them one at time and have to get past some of them to see the others. I have this silly story - One day as a mom of two young boys I just got home from work when my youngest got sick in the kitchen. While helping him and trying to keep the dogs away from the spoils (dogs are gross), my older son managed to find a jar of peanut butter and draw me a picture, in peanut butter on the door. Sigh. So get everything settled, and I go over and clean the peanut butter off the door. As I do I realize that there are dog nose smudges all over the other side of the door glass. So, I go outside and clean off the smudges. Then I can see all of the dust and debris on the glass. I feel like the unspoken rules are like this, as we identify and navigate some, maybe move up in our career, we can then see the next area of navigation, but hopefully we can also help those who are where we have been?
Absolutely, navigating unwritten rules can feel like walking through a maze. ?? Plato once said, "The beginning is the most important part of the work." Engaging openly with your team about these challenges can pave the way forward. For those inspired by leadership in action, you might be interested in supporting a record-breaking effort in tree planting: https://bit.ly/TreeGuinnessWorldRecord ???? Keep leading the way!
Absolutely, navigating unwritten rules can be quite the challenge for middle managers! ?? As Socrates famously said, "The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing." Embrace this journey of discovery and continuous learning with your team. Your insight could turn those barriers into stepping stones! ?? #Wisdom #TeamGrowth #Leadership
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1 年#7 is especially tricky
Excellent article. Enjoyed how you put this all together. Hope many read it so they feel less alone and see how natural all this unknowing is. Thanks Anna.