The “SEVEN Cs”: Partnership Danger Signs
An ongoing series of articles exploring the seven critical areas that can indicate a partnership is in trouble.
Dorene Lehavi
The 2nd C: Competitive, Not Complementary Action
James Carville and Mary Matlin are public relations spokespeople for the
Democratic and Republican parties, respectively. They are each articulate, sharp
and feisty. Sparks fly when they debate in favor of their parties, so much so
that they seem like arch enemies who couldn't possibly exchange a friendly word.
I remember the shock reaction I had (how many years ago was it?) hearing that
they were getting married. I pictured a contentious loud fighting household.
Recently I saw the two of them on television talking about their private lives.
One never knows for sure the truth about public figures or anyone else for that
matter, but if taken at face value, they have a solid marriage, children and
good family life. They displayed mellowness, respect and total togetherness. It
was obvious that the party competitiveness was left outside of the house and
what was brought inside was love, goal sharing, and family first.
Businesses run by partners are very much like marriages. If the partners are in
competition with each other they are creating a lot of damage. First of all,
their relationship is limited because there cannot be complete openness between
competitors. The ultimate goal of the success of the business is undermined and
lost in the morass of the need to win over each other. If the
competition is obvious to others and it usually is, it creates a situation of
two camps where employees, directors and suppliers choose sides.
If the business is comprised of family members, the situation can be even more
intense and damaging because the negative effects permeate to personal lives
and to family members who may not even be directly involved in the business.
As a coach, I help the partners focus on their goal for the business by
examining the harm caused by destructive self centered behavior. The need to
compete and win sometimes is an unresolved need to play out old family patterns
even if the partners are not members of the same family.
The goal of coaching is not to heal old patterns, but rather to contain them and
to create new patterns of satisfaction that directly relate to business success.
If the situation is so entrenched, therapy may be recommended as part of the
solution. However, usually coaching techniques which direct the parties to
clarify and satisfy needs in productive ways in order to focus on the business,
such as Carville and Matlin focus on their marriage, is the usual path that can
be implemented.
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