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3 TYPES OF CONFLICT AND HOW TO ADDRESS THEM
Different types of conflict — including task conflict, relationship conflict, and value conflict—
can benefit from different approaches to conflict resolution.
In the workplace, it sometimes seems as if conflict is always with us. Miss a deadline, and you are
likely to face conflict with your boss. Lash out at a colleague who you feel continually undermines
you, and you’ll end up in conflict. And if you disagree with a fellow manager about whether to
represent a client whose values you disdain, conflict is also likely.
In particular, three types of conflict are common in organizations: task conflict, relationship conflict,
and value conflict. Although open communication, collaboration, and respect will go a long way
toward conflict management, the three types of conflict can also benefit from targeted conflict-
resolution tactics.
Task Conflict
The first of the three types of conflict in the workplace, task conflict, often involves concrete issues
related to employees’ work assignments, and can include disputes about how to divide up resources,
differences of opinion on procedures and policies, managing expectations at work, and judgments
and interpretation of facts.
Of the three types of conflict discussed here, task conflict may appear be the simplest to resolve. But
task conflict often turns out to have deeper roots and more complexity that it appears to have at first
glance. For example, coworkers who are arguing about which one of them should go to an out-of-
town conference may have a deeper conflict based on a sense of rivalry.
Task conflict often benefits from the intervention of an organization’s leaders. Serving as de facto
mediators, managers can focus on identifying the deeper interests underlying parties’ positions. This
can be done through active listening, which involves asking questions, repeating back what you hear
to confirm your understanding, and asking even deeper questions aimed at probing for deeper
concerns. Try to engage the parties in a collaborative problem-solving process in which they
brainstorm possible solutions. When parties develop solutions together, rather than having an
outcome imposed on them, they are more likely to abide by the agreement and get along better in the
future.
Relationship Conflict
The second of our three types of conflict, relationship conflict, arises from differences in personality,
style, matters of taste, and even conflict styles. In organizations, people who would not ordinarily
meet in real life are often thrown together and must try to get along. It’s no surprise, then, that
relationship conflict can be common in organizations.
Suppose you’ve felt a long-simmering tension with a colleague, whether over work assignments,
personality differences, or some other issue. Before turning to a manager, you might invite the
colleague out to lunch and try to get to know him or her better. Discovering things you have in
common—whether a tie to the same city, children the same age, or shared concerns about problems
in your organization—may help bring you together.
If you feel comfortable, bring up the source of the tension and focus on listening to the other person’s
point of view. Resist the urge to argue or defend your position. When you demonstrate empathy and
interest, he or she is likely to reciprocate. If conflict persists or worsens, enlist the help of a manager
in resolving your differences.
Value Conflict
The last of our three types of conflict, value conflict, can arise from fundamental differences in
identities and values, which can include differences in politics, religion, ethics, norms, and other
deeply held beliefs. Although discussion of politics and religion is often taboo in organizations,
disputes about values can arise in the context of work decisions and policies, such as whether to
implement an affirmative action program or whether to take on a client with ties to a corrupt
government.
According to MIT professor Lawrence Susskind, disputes involving values tend to heighten
defensiveness, distrust, and alienation. Parties can feel so strongly about standing by their values
that they reject trades that would satisfy other interests they might have.
Susskind recommends that instead of seeking to resolve a values-based dispute, we aim to move
beyond demonization toward mutual understanding and respect through dialogue. Aim for a cognitive
understanding in which you and your coworker reach an accurate conceptualization of one another’s
point of view. This type of understanding doesn’t require sympathy or emotional connection, only a
“values-neutral” ability to describe accurately what someone else believes about the situation, write
Robert Mnookin, Scott R. Peppet, and Andrew S. Tulumello in Beyond Winning: Negotiating to Create
Value in Deals and Disputes(Harvard University Press, 2004).
In addition, you may be able to reframe a values-based dispute “by appealing to other values that you
and your counterpart share,” writes Susskind in an article in the Negotiation Briefings newsletter,
“including universal beliefs such as equal rights or nonviolence, rather than focusing on the
differences in beliefs that precipitated the dispute.”
What types of conflict seem to be most prevalent in your organization?
BY KATIE SHONK — ON JULY 3RD, 2017 / CONFLICT RESOLUTION