• Published November 9, 2021
  • 7 Minute Read

Building Relationship Skills at Work

Published November 9, 2021
4 Relationship Skills You Need in the Office - Building Relationship Skills at Work

Do you need to improve your effectiveness as a leader? Start with how you build and sustain relationships.

Whether you’re the CEO of a Fortune 500 company or a schoolteacher, relationship skills matter a lot. In fact, research has shown that relationship-building skills are among the top leadership competencies that leaders need.

Individuals who are skilled at building and maintaining relationships share several traits. Here’s what many effective leaders have in common in terms of relationship skills.

Effective Leaders Have These Relationship Skills in Common

5 Ways The Best Leaders Are Always Building Relationship Skills

1. They’re self-aware.

Boosting your self-awareness includes knowing your strengths and weaknesses, but also the impact that your behavior has on others. For example, say a small business owner or sales team leader takes pride in personally managing client relationships. She also realizes that her hands-on style can frustrate her staff by creating the appearance that she doesn’t trust or appreciate them. By taking into account the impact of her behavior, she can adjust how she relates to her clients and employees.

2. They’re willing to delegate important tasks and decision-making.

Besides being an efficient way to lead, delegating helps to build trust on your team and experience and confidence in others. It also forces leaders to give honest, consistent feedback and to motivate and reward people for their hard work. Think about the parent who teaches their children to pick up after themselves. While it may be slow going at first, eventually a child develops skills and is able to help out more around the house.

3. They have strong interpersonal skills.

They should be able to negotiate and handle work problems without alienating others. This requires leadership empathy and understanding others’ perspectives and needs. Leaders with honed relationship skills show kindness in the workplace and are able to develop a rapport with all kinds of people. Have you ever known a school principal who is equally comfortable with students, parents, teachers, and the school board? If so, you’ve seen people skills at their best.

4. They have a participative management style.

Strong leaders use effective listening skills and communication to involve others, build consensus, and influence decisions. Compare the styles of 2 city mayors, for example. One mayor is participative; the other autocratic. Initially, the mayor who values relationships, collaboration, and broad communication may appear to be less effective than the more independent-minded mayor. But, as time passes, the mayor with a more participative management style and strong relationship skills is better able to influence others to build support for key initiatives and is considered a good leader and skilled administrator. In contrast, the authoritarian mayor faces many political roadblocks and becomes highly controversial.

5. They give constructive, effective feedback.

Giving effective feedback and avoiding common mistakes in giving feedback is one of the best ways leaders can improve their relationship skills. Feedback lets people know how they’re doing, reinforces goals, and encourages strong effort. When giving feedback, make sure to focus on delivering a single message, being specific, and being sensitive. And remember to judge the behavior, not the person.

Being good at relationships isn’t just a personality trait, it’s a key leadership skill. And the good news for everyday leaders is that we can all improve.

Why Building Relationship Skills at Work Matters

Relationship and people skills, and not merely job performance, are what separate a successful executive from the rest. In corporate terms, good relationships are gold. And there’s a demand for people who can build them.

In describing or evaluating unsuccessful managers, experts find that their inability to develop and maintain relationships is listed as their biggest weakness and the biggest hindrance to a company. Research has consistently found that leaders who lack strong relationship skills and who have weak interpersonal skills are at high risk of derailing in their careers.

Sure, some people will have an intrinsic ability to build, develop, and maintain relationships. However, a successful executive — no matter how smart — can no longer hope their knowledge and experience will offset lukewarm people skills. Relationship skills are critical in the workplace.

Without solid relationships, a leader can have a hard time bringing a team together and getting a project accomplished. Collaboration is only an effective workplace tool if the people who are collaborating can get along.

Collaboration — and the relationships it builds — will help executives who are trying to adapt their management style to a changing global marketplace.

And relationships will become only more complex in the future. The leadership skills needed in the future include what was once referred to as the “soft skills” of the workplace because they’re what lead to actual influence in the office. More than an executive title that simply implies influence, those relationship strengths are what inspire employees to follow an executive and do whatever it takes to get the job done. Having that background is the only way a leader can be effectively decisive and resourceful.

In terms of success at the corporate ranks, those soft skills are actually pretty hard.

How to Build Your Relationship Skills

Surveys of executives from around the world show that relationship skills are in great demand, and so is the need to improve those skills and put them to use in a changing corporate culture. Fortunately, relationship skills are something that can be learned.

infographic on building relationship skills at work

3 Tips for Improving Your Relationship Skills at Work

1. Strengthen Your Self-Awareness.

The first step to building more effective relationships starts with being practical and assessing your own abilities. Increase your self-awareness by starting to pay attention to how you interact with coworkers. Gauge your reactions to them, and take note of how they physically and verbally respond to you.

You can’t do that if you’re sequestered in your office, so be present. Make eye contact. If you’ve got people dispersed at other sites, make a visit; don’t just rely on the phone and email to build that relationship. Don’t wait for them to come to you. And if you’re limited to only on-screen communication, make sure your virtual communication is as effective as possible.

This first assessment will help you grasp your standing with your employees or coworkers. Once you’ve become more aware, start taking consistent steps to eliminate weak points and strengthen skills you already have.

2. Connect With Others at All Levels.

Relationships don’t take place in a vacuum. Learn to relate to all kinds and levels of people within the organization. That helps a good, effective manager expand their view of the people who work for the company. Successful executives involve others, and it’s impossible to involve other people if there isn’t a connection with which to start.

Relationships come from actively listening and sharing information. That happens in good times and in bad. Only by truly seeking information directly from team members can an executive involve those affected in any decisions or changes.

By listening, sharing, and expanding their corporate view, executives can be proactive in finding solutions. Good relationships are based on handling problems in a positive way. Even tough decisions can be made more palatable if delivered in a positive manner that doesn’t alienate others. The best managers learn to find common ground, and they know how to be diplomatic.

3. Acknowledge Conflict.

Finally, the most practical relationship skill-building tool involves being realistic. Recognize that almost every decision or move comes with conflicting sets of circumstances. Good relationship skills can keep conflict and disagreement to a minimum.

And, simply because parties may conflict, that doesn’t mean an effective leader can’t work through the challenge, help calm the situation and resolve the conflict, and build a spirit of cooperation — thanks to their great relationship skills.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

Upskill employees across your organization to help them excel at building relationship skills at work. Partner with us to craft a customized learning journey for your team using our research-backed modules. Available leadership topics include Collaboration and Teamwork Skills, Conflict Management Skills, Emotional Intelligence & Empathy, Self-Awareness, and more.

  • Published November 9, 2021
  • 7 Minute Read
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Leading Effectively Staff
Leading Effectively Staff

This article was written by our Leading Effectively staff, who analyze our decades of pioneering, expert research and experiences in the field to share content that will help leaders at every level. Subscribe to our emails to get the latest research-based leadership articles and insights sent straight to your inbox.

This article was written by our Leading Effectively staff, who analyze our decades of pioneering, expert research and experiences in the field to share content that will help leaders at every level. Subscribe to our emails to get the latest research-based leadership articles and insights sent straight to your inbox.

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At the Center for Creative Leadership, our drive to create a ripple effect of positive change underpins everything we do. For 50+ years, we've pioneered leadership development solutions for leaders at every level, from community leaders to CEOs. Consistently ranked among the top global providers of executive education, our research-based programs and solutions inspire individuals at every level in organizations across the world — including 2/3 of the Fortune 1000 — to ignite remarkable transformations.

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