Is there anyway you could talk to everyone on the side and tell them that when you one asks for someone to go for lunch that they have a list of excuses not to go to lunch with her. Stuff like " ya sure you can join me and becky" or "no I have an appointment".
Would advise against this as it could be construed as bullying on your behalf.
I can’t agree with some of the suggestions made previously and believe that ultimately the responsibility for resolving this situation rests with the team-leader and the HR department.Does anyone have practical tips for preventing the development/ acceptance of cliques in an office environment?
It was never an issue until one individual joined our company. A strong character who doesn't join the team for lunch etc but prefers to have one 'minion' under her wing (which person changes on a regular basis when they fall out). As a team they often make life uncomfortable for others sharing their work/ office...
It's not something we've encountered here before, and we would like to stamp it out before it becomes 'acceptable'. The latest dynamic duo has just fallen apart so if we could prevent another one forming that would be great.
It's an odd question maybe, but if anyone has any practical advice other than bringing it to the attention of HR, which might be necessary but I'm not sure what they could do unless things get so bad that they are reported for bullying. A lot of the things that have been observed could be described as bullying, albeit immature and playground type behaviour like ignoring colleagues, etc.
I think this goes beyond her being “shy” as has been previously suggested....immature and playground type behaviour like ignoring colleagues, etc.
The OP should forget about who goes to lunch with who, and who goes is friendly with who. You can't legislate for friendships or what people do on their spare time. You can legislate for behaviours.
I'm curious as to how you can be so certain about her reasons for taking lunch at a different time. Have you spoken to her about her reasons for this?The difference here is someone who takes break at a different time than everyone else specifically to avoid other people, all the time.
I'm still not really clear on the business impacts of their behaviour. Would you be able to spell this out a bit more, without breaching any confidences of course.Which again isn't the core problem, it's the fact that the person is leading weaker individuals, and the way they make the people around them feel when they operate as a duo.
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