On Careers

When a Coworker Gets Special Treatment

By Alison Green

Posted: July 6, 2009

A reader writes:

How do I deal with a manager who clearly gives special treatment to a coworker? She is very irresponsible, and yet my manager takes her lateness to work as almost cute behavior on her part. A couple of times, my coworker did not even show up to work but my manager never took appropriate action. They have a good relationship, and any other manager would have already fired my coworker for her behavior. How should I handle this situation? It makes me sick sometimes.

Well, you really don't know what's happening behind the scenes. Maybe your manager did take action--it's unlikely that you would know about it. Your manager wouldn't share that with you, and your coworker, if she's like most people, probably wouldn't confess to you that she's in trouble.

There could be other explanations, too, that you wouldn't have reason to know about. Maybe she's getting her work done, so your manager isn't too concerned about her lateness. Or, your coworker could have a health condition that causes absences, and she could have worked out accommodations for it with your manager.

Of course, it's also possible that what you see on the surface is all there is to it, and you have an irresponsible coworker who's getting away with her bad behavior. If that's the case, then maybe your manager is simply a bad manager and not willing to address it with her. There are certainly plenty of bad managers out there -- maybe even more than good ones -- and you'd have a lot of company if you have a boss who doesn't know how to hold people accountable.

But no matter the explanation, the answer for you is the same: Aside from being annoying, is this affecting your work? If not, you should stay out of it because it's really not your business. But if it does impact your ability to do your job (because you have to take on her work when she's not there, or you're dependent on her work in order to do your own job), then you can raise it with your boss from that perspective, keeping the focus on that aspect of it. (You should also raise things that aren't affecting you if you think you manager doesn't know and would want to, but in this case she appears to know.)

There's sometimes an exception to the rule above, and that's if it's significantly affecting your morale. Personally, as a manager, I want to know if my people are demoralized by a coworker's behavior. To be clear, I don't want to hear about it over and over, but I do appreciate a one-time heads-up, delivered in a professional way. But be aware that not every manager agrees with me and yours may not, so it's a judgment call.

Ultimately, you can only control your own work, and that's where you should keep your focus.

Alison Green is the author of Managing to Change the World: The Nonprofit Leader's Guide to Getting Results. She is chief of staff for the Marijuana Policy Project, a nonprofit lobbying organization, where she oversees day-to-day management of the staff as well as hiring, firing, and staff development. Her writings have been published in the Washington Post, the New York Times, Maxim, and dozens of other newspapers. She blogs at Ask a Manager.

Alison is giving BAD advice

Obviously, the manager's favoritism IS affecting office morale. The situation described above sounds as if it's been going on for a long time. What happened to perception is reality in the office environment? What happened to management leading by example?

Alison's comments strict a nerve with me. In our workplace previously, the chairman of the company hired a private consulting firm to determine and address the problematic issues in the workplace.

At the end of the day, the consultant broke her confidentiality agreement and gave management the names and comments what everyone said when they were interviewed. People lost their jobs, others were shuffled. However, those who comicommitted atrocities in the workplace ie. management stayed put and received bonuses or promotions.

Sam of WA @ Nov 14, 2009 21:43:27 PM

Do not worry Lolo

Do not worry Lolo. Rumors can destroy a character for a short moment, but it would not stay long. Just be strong and be fair to others.

Jianing @ Sep 09, 2009 05:29:13 AM

Rush to Judgement

Alison gives incredibly sound advice here, really every point but - "Aside from being annoying, is this affecting your work? If not, you should stay out of it because it's really not your business." What comes around, goes around, it really does.

I have an iron-clad work ethic. I have always had a great rapport with both men and women bosses and am never satisfied with status quo. Combine this with being remotely attractive and you draw out the nit picking, clock watching, jealous no-nothings strumming up drama. It is so tiring to truly work hard and have peers speculate or scrutinize because they simply lack the concentration on their own job. ( I am NOT saying this is you, I am assuming you have a valid complaint...just some thoughts)

I too have noticed co-workers who are late, even habitually and I can get mildly irritated too, it's human nature. But it's not my business if it doesn't affect my job and I'm not their boss. So I don't let it consume my day.

Certainly discuss it with your boss if it becomes "demoralizing" but remember that runs both ways. Nothing more demoralizing than working hard, doing well and staus quo peers assuming that naturally there's some favoritism going on.

rezume of WA @ Sep 09, 2009 00:27:48 AM

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