Life Back West

You’re the Boss: “When It’s Nobody’s Business!”

Steve Jobs: June 2010

It’s not about having the $500,000 credit line at Tiffany’s, or having your $43 million divorce news splashed across the tabloids. And it’s certainly not about the CEO of the year being busted in a child prostitution sting.

But what do you do – as I coached a startup CEO yesterday – when something personal visibly impacts your job performance?

While the situation for my exec coaching client was medical – the prescribed experimental medicines they’re taking  have the unfortunate side effect of causing intermittent forgetfulness and high irritability  – it could have been any number of personal “private” situations. Things like sick kids, spouse, parents, etc.

While publicly traded companies have a requirement to disclose “material” information that may related to key talent – a gray zone of what should be or may not be disclosed (see related post here ) – the standards don’t apply to privately held firms or generally folks not at the top. And US health privacy laws – known as HIPAA – provides generally strong protections about what can and should be shared.

And in the case of my client, their belief was private was private. Should not be shared. Would not be shared. Does not want to be shared – with the exception of already telling a couple of key board members.

So what’s the rub?

People talk. And they talk even more in a vacuum. Steve Jobs looks gaunt, and the buzz is he’s on his deathbed. Aretha Franklin goes in for unspecificed surgery, and the public – including me – fall for the rumor that she’s dying.

When people observe behavior in the workplace that’s unusual, they pretty naturally start thinking about a possible cause. Is this the real person that’s coming out (guess that exec coaching isn’t so helpful)? Are we about to shutdown or be sold  (why else would someone act that way)? I haven’t seen him with his kids lately (maybe the spouse took them away and they’re getting divorced)?

All rumors – all untrue. And all, unfortunately fuel for water cooler or Twitter gossip, and a drag on performance.

It is nobody’s business. But it’s your business to keep your folks focused and performing.

So what can you do?

While hindsight (the stuff of Monday morning quarterbacks) is great, context setting in advance is even better. Set the framework for some of the predictable stuff that happens before it happens and you’ll both have an effective tool to deal with these types of issues, and significantly decrease gossip.

Here are three examples.

Cut to the chase?

Providing context in advance on a periodic basis tamps down rumors, decreases speculation, and increases privacy – including your own – as appropriate. But create a vacuum – no context – and all sorts of weird rumors start up and take a life of their own.

Life Back West is an occasional set of writings focused on ways people, teams and organizations can be both more effective (doing the right thing) and more efficient (doing the right thing well). More about executive, career and team / leadership coaching services can be found at the “About J. Mike Smith and Back West, Inc.” sidebar or the “Hire Me” tab above. You can also read an online interview with me at WhoHub, as well as participate in my learning community courtesy of KnowledgeCrush.

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