0

Introduction to the Sound Relationship Workplace

Over these next several weeks, I will transform Dr. Gottman’s Sound Relationship House into the Sound Relationship Workplace.

sound relationship workplace
Years ago, early in my career as an organizational consultant and executive coach, I began applying Dr. Gottman’s research on couple relationships to relationships in the world of work. It is a passionate and interesting mission. As a matchmaker of sorts, I’m proud to report there have been countless professional relationship success stories born due to this union. When I creatively apply Dr. Gottman’s principles to the workplace, a synergy emerges. It has powerful reverberating effects on individual career advancement as well as organizational development.

Workplace relationships

Many of us spend more time at work than we do with our families. Also, career advancement and promotion are often directly correlated with the quality of one’s work relationships. These realities combined mean that having the tools to build, repair, and fortify relationships is very important, regardless of the industry you are in. I’ve seen people leave their job countless times because of a difficult relationship with their manager. I’ve also seen people remain in a job, even if they could make more money elsewhere or receive a title promotion, because they feel closely connected to their colleagues. They just cannot imagine working anywhere else. Interestingly, one of the top indicators of job productivity is having a best friend at work. People with a best friend at work are more engaged, focused, enthusiastic, and loyal. They take fewer sick days and are less likely to leave the organization. How do organizations promote friendship amongst colleagues? Often it is done through HR initiatives, like team building activities or retreats. However, these kinds of events fall short because they are usually isolated experiences with no follow-up. To build the skills necessary for trusting, committed colleague relationships, people need skills to engage with each other. Dr. Gottman’s Sound Relationship House provides a framework for building these types of relationships at work.

The Sound Relationship Workplace

Let’s look at the levels of the Sound Relationship Workplace as I’ve defined them.

Level 1: Develop Colleague Maps Sound Relationship House: Build Love Maps This is how well you know your colleague’s current world, both professional (e.g., interests, technical expertise, stresses, victories) and personal (e.g., significant people in their lives, where they live, hobbies).

Level 2: Provide Positive Feedback Sound Relationship House: Share Fondness and Admiration Exchanging genuine positive feedback with your colleagues is important, as is having the presence of mind to regularly share positive impressions of performance. Level 3: Respond and Engage Sound Relationship House: Turn Towards Instead of Away Meeting bids to interact by regularly Turning Towards colleagues, both in person and by email. Level 4: Perception Becomes Reality Sound Relationship House: The Positive Perspective Maintaining self and other awareness regarding being in positive or negative perspective with colleagues; if in negative perspective, repairing relationships appropriately. Level 5: Manage Conflict Sound Relationship House: Manage Conflict Addressing both solvable and perpetual problems with colleagues in an open manner. Level 6: Facilitate Career Advancement Sound Relationship House: Make Life Dreams Come True Supporting your colleagues’ professional goals by being mindful of opportunities that consider the other person’s best interests and benefits them. Level 7: Create a Shared Culture Sound Relationship House: Create Shared Meaning Developing work processes and procedures that respect each other’s personal and professional goals, while supporting the organization’s overall purpose. Alongside the levels of the Sound Relationship House, Dr. Gottman includes the “weight-bearing walls” of commitment and trust. Similarly, as we look at work relationships through the lens of the Sound Relationship Workplace, the variables of trust and commitment are equally important. Work relationships without trust and commitment tend to be problematic. Trust is the “we have each other’s back” experience and “my colleague’s success is important to me.” And it’s also “my colleagues are competent and will perform their work effectively.” Similarly, commitment is important for work relationships. This is the “we are in this together” and “my colleague will do what it takes to get the job done.” Commitment means that you will be there for your colleagues “for better or for worse.” Editor’s Note: Dr. John Gottman has spent the past 50 years researching relationships, primarily focusing on married couples. He has also studied families, parents, and children. He has not performed research on workplace relationships. To help increase efficiency and productivity of workplace teams, Dr. Karen Bridbord will be putting his proven findings on intimate relationships in conversation with research and personal experience from the fields of industrial and organizational psychology.
Improve your Relationship Skills with our Free Newsletters

Ask Gottman

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Karen Bridbord, Ph.D. is a licensed psychologist and consultant in New York and New Jersey. She is a Certified Gottman Therapist who specializes in working with couples and organizations.

Recommended products

Original price was: $250.00.Current price is: $159.00.

The Gottman Relationship Adviser is a complete approach to relationship wellness. Measure your relationship health with the research-based Gottman Assessment, analyze five key areas of your partnership to identify your strengths and weaknesses, then start a tailored, step-by-step digital program proven to heal and strengthen your connection—all on your schedule and from anywhere.

The Adviser uses the legendary scientific Gottman Method to help you understand what’s really going on in your relationship—and gives you exactly what you need to improve it.

 

Original price was: $119.00.Current price is: $79.00.

Research-based Foundations for a Lifetime of Love.  The Gottman Relationship Coach is an inspiring and educational multimedia experience designed to enhance the well-being of relationships. Participants will be guided through research-based tools and communication skills that can transform relationships—all based on the popular Gottman Method. The first program, “How to Make Your Relationship Work”, is now available and includes:

  • The Gottman Method and How to Make Your Relationship Work
  • How do we predict the future of a relationship?
  • How to build a Sound Relationship House
  • What to do when the destructive Four Horsemen enter your relationship

“Buy Now” will take you to GOTTMAN CONNECT to purchase and view this product.

Price range: $599.00 through $799.00

Created by “the Einstein of Love” (Psychology Today), this two-day workshop is grounded on what actually works in relationships that are happy and stable. See for yourself why millions of couples worldwide have benefited from the Gottman Method.

Quote from participant in most recent Live Virtual Workshop:

The Art and Science of Love workshop- where do I begin? It was an absolute stellar workshop. We were looking forward to this for weeks, and it exceeded our expectations! It was well-structured, and well-organized, and provided a wealth of information with real-time demonstrations of how to work through specific scenarios. The outstanding support that was provided throughout the exercises with therapists on standby- WOW! Priceless!

Includes the Art & Science of Love box set.  Please allow time for shipping.  Please Note: This is a live online event. To attend, you will need a reliable internet connection. Our staff will reach out to you with your personal registration and access information.

Related posts

a present father emotion coaching his young son, building a close father-son relationship

What I Learned About Being an Emotion-Coaching Dad to My Son for Over 15 Years

Alexander Elguren

A Father's Day reflection on raising emotionally connected boys in a world where men don't talk about feelings.

Read More

What Does ‘Estranged’ Actually Mean? Estrangement in Families and Marriages, Explained

Alexander Elguren

Estrangement rarely arrives as a slammed door. More often it is a room that slowly empties while everyone is still standing in it.

Read More

How to Improve Emotional Intelligence — the Skill Behind It Is Emotional Literacy

Alexander Elguren

Emotional intelligence can sound like a trait you either have or you don't. It is closer to a vocabulary — and a vocabulary can be built.

Read More

Covert Narcissist Traits: 9 Quiet Signs Most People Miss

Alexander Elguren

The loud kind is easy to recognize. The covert kind hides behind sensitivity itself — which is why it so often goes unnamed.

Read More

How to Get Over Someone: Healing After Heartbreak

Alexander Elguren

Some loves end — that is the hard truth. Getting over one turns out to be less about waiting it out than about relearning a skill.

Read More

Signs of Low Emotional Intelligence in a Partner — and What It Means for Your Relationship

Alexander Elguren

It looks like indifference. Usually it's a skill no one was ever taught — which means it can be learned.

Read More

Improve your Relationship Skills with our Free Newsletters
0