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Social Sci LibreTexts

7.5: Relationships at Work

  • Page ID
    269389
    • Anonymous
    • LibreTexts

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    Learning Objectives
    • List the different types of workplace relationships.
    • Describe the communication patterns in the supervisor-subordinate relationship.
    • Describe the different types of peer coworker relationships.
    • Evaluate the positives and negatives of workplace romances.

    Although some careers require less interaction than others, all jobs require interpersonal communication skills. Shows like The Office and Halt and Catch Fire offer glimpses into the world of workplace relationships. These examples often highlight the dysfunction that can occur within a workplace. Since many people spend as much time at work as they do with their family and friends, the workplace becomes a key site for relational development. The workplace relationships we’ll discuss in this section include supervisor-subordinate relationships, workplace friendships, and workplace romances (Sias, 2009).

    Supervisor-Subordinate Relationships

    Workplace relationships between supervisors and subordinates are common due to hierarchy. These relationships can be based on mentoring, friendship, or romance, but they come with unique communication challenges.

    Supervisors provide important information, especially to new employees, which creates an imbalance since supervisors have more power. They also give feedback, but often avoid negative feedback, which can harm the relationship and job performance.

    Employees tend to view supervisors more positively when they share gender or race, and prefer older supervisors for their experience. Trust in a supervisor’s ability can improve job satisfaction and reduce turnover. Good supervisor relationships can also lead to mentoring, where supervisors guide employees’ career growth. Mentoring can be formal or informal and often lasts beyond daily job duties, sometimes continuing even if the mentee moves to a new job or location.

    Workplace Friendships

    Workplace relationships vary from casual greetings to close friendships. Proximity helps form these relationships, but not all coworkers become friends. Similar interests and self-disclosure help deepen workplace bonds. Most coworker relationships are between peers—people with equal authority—and come in three types:

    • Information peers: Talk mainly about work, with little personal sharing.
    • Collegial peers: Share some personal info and offer emotional support.
    • Special peers: Close friendships with deep trust and support, like family.

    Work friendships help reduce stress, increase job satisfaction, and lower turnover, but can also lead to gossip or keeping unhappy employees in place for the sake of friendship.

    Romantic relationships at work are common but controversial. They can boost satisfaction and productivity but also cause problems like favoritism or blurred boundaries between attraction and harassment. People enter workplace romances for different reasons: career benefits, ego boosts, or genuine love.

    Companies handle workplace romances differently—some ban them, others require disclosure via “love contracts,” and some even encourage dating, like Southwest Airlines. The debate over workplace romances continues, balancing personal freedom with professional concerns.

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    Figure 7.5.1 Fist Bump

    This page titled 7.5: Relationships at Work is shared under a mixed 1.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Anonymous.