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Australia Wide: Includes Sydney, Brisbane and Adelaide.

Every country has its laws, and every workplace has its protocol and etiquette. This protocol and other etiquette are necessary to set the expected behavior of employees in order for things to run smoothly in the office. Everyone in the company must follow the protocols and adhere to the etiquette that they were taught when they start working. Inadequate protocol and etiquette can lead to disastrous communications and even employment instability. This course will train your team to adhere to protocol and etiquette in a way that is both reliable and understandable.

The rules are guidelines which facilitate a smooth and productive office life. Although they might not be always followed, having clear, concise and friendly rules is the best way for the company to manage its human resources and make it more efficient. These techniques will allow your team to keep the protocol clear and the etiquette concise. They also help to be more sensitive in handling situations that are not consistent with protocol or etiquette. This course will help you build a team that respects the company's protocols and etiquette and ensures good service delivery. This course is compatible with other courses on company policies, expected behavior and legal issues. Contact us if you would like to learn more about our training courses or services.

Protocol and Etiquette Training Outline

Understand Why

Oftentimes, it becomes much easier to follow the set protocol and etiquette when we understand why that particular protocol or etiquette is set that way. This applies as well to particular protocol like chain of command. The chain of command is the hierarchy that determines a worker’s function in the company, and who he or she will report to. It is important to remember the chain of command when situations arise, so that the appropriate workers will file the right paperwork and inform the correct superiors. After that, an appropriate response will be made to the situation. So why do we need a chain of command? Why doesn’t the worker who finds the situation first respond instantly so that it doesn’t have to take time going up to the managers? They don’t do that, because it is possible that lower level workers will respond incorrectly to the situation, and create a bigger problem than the one they might even have failed to solve. Going up the chain of command helps the entire company make better decisions because of a democratic hierarchical decision that will be reached through the workers reaching out to the superiors. It is key to understand the reasoning behind protocols and etiquette so that the workers are less likely to stray from it.

Be Specific

It happens sometimes that you’ll set out a certain protocol, but then your team members end up misinterpreting it. To prevent this, a certain level of clarity and specific details is required. It should be a rule to be specific when referring to anything set in your written protocols and etiquettes. A good rule to remember in writing specific protocol is to reread the rule you are about to set, and wonder how else this can be interpreted. For example, I might write a rule about requiring the wearing of “decent clothes” in the company dress code. The problem with that wording is that the term “decent” is very vague; I could easily wear something indecent to work, and say that the dress code rule said “decent clothes,” but never specified what “decent” meant. To fix that, we can give examples as to what is specifically acceptable to wear at work, and what is not. Spaghetti straps, sleeveless shirts, and miniskirts, for example, might be specific examples of what not to wear to work. Long sleeved polo shirts, blouses, and dark slacks, for example, might be specific examples of what to wear to work. Specific wording and clarity in the office’s set protocols and etiquette will prevent workers from accidentally misinterpreting the rules or finding loopholes in it.

Be Sensitive

When setting protocol and etiquette, a key thing to remember is that you are dealing with human beings, and that often, they will make mistakes despite the purpose of protocol and etiquette being to prevent that. When such a thing happens, it is important for the team member who discovered the mishap to handle it sensitively and carefully. This means to never, under any circumstance, publicly call out a failure to follow protocol and etiquette. It is simply unprofessional and tactless to do that. The second worst possible response is to do nothing, and say nothing about it to him in the hopes that he will notice later. He might not blame you for not saying anything to him about it, since anyone could have noticed, but he would still wish that someone told him so he could rectify it. The appropriate response is to tell him that, but kindly, and completely discreetly. This will help him obey company etiquette, while sensitively addressing the mistake he made. Doing so will help that team member not only follow etiquette, but also establish a feeling that he was cared for by you. Whenever you are meant to be dealing with team members and their failures to follow protocol or etiquette, it is absolutely important to remember to be tactful, and to address their mistakes discreetly, so as to avoid causing a bigger problem than the one you mean to address. We teach participants how to be more sensitive to co-workers.

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Location
Zoom Online

Organiser Information

David Smith
Paramount Training & Development
0499282203

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