How to address colleagues in the workplace? I'll walk with you on the way to work. You should learn to understand hints in the workplace. To improve your working ability, you need to learn from the experience of your colleagues in the workplace. You should actively maintain interpersonal relationships in the workplace. How to address colleagues in the workplace teaches you to stand firm in the workplace.
How to address colleagues in the workplace 1 Newcomers are confused about the workplace address.
Seeing that she will report to the internship unit next week, Xiao Qin, a senior, is uneasy. The new company is a foreign company, and everyone has an English name. Theoretically, it should be called by English names. But as a newcomer, isn't it too casual to call you by your first name? Do you want to add a suffix? For example, he said: for example, a female colleague named Anna, did she call her Anna directly, or Anna's sister, or Anna's predecessor?
He thinks it's a bit casual to call Anna directly, but calling Anna Sister is taboo for most women. Is this taboo? Would it be too "creative" to call senior Anna? Maybe others will think that you have watched too many Korean dramas. To this end, Xiao Qin struggled for a while.
Called intimacy but was left out by the leader.
What's the right name? It's not only for newcomers who have just stepped into society, but also for veterans who jump from one company to another, so be careful, or you may stumble.
Miss Chen used to work in a private enterprise, and the direct supervisor was a young man. Everyone likes to call him "handsome boy", and he accepted it with a smile, which was very useful.
After some efforts, Miss Chen jumped ship to a big company. She found that her supervisor was also a young man, so she called him "handsome boy" directly. What she doesn't know is that the system of this company has always been strict. Seeing that she called the leader so boldly and intimately, many people wondered if she had any background. And the leader she called "handsome boy" is also quite embarrassed, so it's hard to say.
Miss Chen didn't know at first. It took her some time to realize that the supervisor often talked and laughed with others, but when he talked to himself, he was serious and rarely talked about other topics except work. "What have I done to offend people?" She couldn't help talking to her friends, who helped her analyze that the supervisor might have been scared by her "handsome guy" and deliberately let her go.
Learn to observe and adapt to local conditions.
Many newcomers have to ask, "Is there a name that can be used universally in the whole workplace?" Miss Liu, who has been in the workplace for many years, has a lot of experience in this regard. "There used to be, but now people pay more attention to different people." For most companies, addressing "brother" and "sister" is completely acceptable. She addresses her boss as "elder sister". "This is actually a very flexible name, which not only confirms the age identity, but also shows respect; It also implies the taste of coquetry, which can quickly draw closer feelings. "
But the specific situation still varies from person to person. She mentioned a female supervisor in the department next door, who seems to be in her thirties and still single, never revealing her age. "She is very particular about dressing up and is keen on studying all kinds of skin care products. If you care so much about your age, don't shout' Sister' or anything. If you don't know, it will make the other party unhappy. "
Reminder:
It's always right to call the teacher.
If you don't know what to call it, call it "teacher" first. Newcomers entering the unit really don't know what to call them. It's always right to call the teacher. In a threesome, there must be a teacher.
Shout high and don't shout low.
When you first enter the company, if you don't know your colleague's position, properly calling him "Gao" can imply his position in your heart. At the same time, people with long-term experience or leadership should never be called "low".
It is best to "get what you want"
If you want an appropriate address, you'd better consider the other person's personality and preferences, especially the leader. If the other person is "rigid", just call him "manager" or "a manager". If you are a comrade-in-arms, it is quite appropriate to call you "boss" and "boss"; If you are a returnee, you can call him by his English name.
How to address colleagues in the workplace? 2 1, say "brother" and distance yourself.
At the beginning of this year, 24-year-old Qin Feng graduated from chongqing technology and business university and entered an enterprise to do administrative work. After taking office, Qin Feng found that his immediate superior was a senior older than himself.
Last week, Qin Feng said in an interview with reporters that he was very excited when he recognized his immediate boss as his senior at the orientation meeting. Qin Feng told reporters that when the seniors invited him to dinner at night and pushed a cup for a change, they called each other brothers and sisters.
The next day, in the office, Qin Feng met the supervisor. He stepped forward and shouted "Senior Brother" in front of many colleagues. To Qin Feng's surprise, the supervisor's face suddenly changed.
Qin Feng said that since then, the boss has gradually alienated him. "I didn't expect a title to alienate me from my boss." Qin Feng regrets it.
Comments: Never call each other brothers in the workplace.
There are rules in the workplace. Whether your boss is a close friend, relative or fellow villager, you should be commensurate with your partner's position in the company. She said, "the position is a symbol of the other person's identity. Calling each other's position is a respect for each other. "
Qin Feng called his boss a "senior brother" in front of his colleagues, which is disrespectful to his boss and will make him feel that this person can't distinguish between occasions and does things without thinking. And colleagues will think that you and your boss are relatives.
2. Calling the boss "the boss" was criticized by colleagues.
Zhu Wenting, who lives in Toyota Road, Cao Fang, graduated from Chongqing University of Arts and Sciences last year. After searching for many jobs without results, Tingting finally found a satisfactory civil service job recently. However, after only one week's work, Zhu Wenting felt that all her colleagues in the office were talking about whether she was big or small, which filled her with fear every day.
Zhu Wenting wants to know why her colleagues think she is neither big nor small, because she never talks nonsense in the company and works hard. Later, when Zhu Wenting learned from his colleague Li Zhou that he had just entered the company, he followed his colleagues and called the department manager "the boss", which aroused the discussion of his colleagues.
Comments: Newcomers should know the situation before calling.
After entering a new environment, newcomers in the workplace must carefully understand their working environment. Because in the enterprise, colleagues in a department will privately have a more intimate nickname for the head of the department. At this time, it is best not to call nicknames after colleagues in the department. After all, the relationship between newcomers and bosses is different from that between old employees and bosses. It's a bit inappropriate to use the name of an old employee as a nickname.
Among the titles of supervisors, newcomers choose the title of position better and feel more polite.
Call "boss" and all colleagues will laugh.
Yang Xiaoyu, 25, told reporters that she just entered the company and didn't know the positions of people around her at all. Colleagues use English names. But people in the department call a colleague "Boss", and Yang Xiaoyu regards this person as the head of the department.
Once, when Yang Xiaoyu handed the document to this man, he respectfully said, "Boss, here is the document you want. I've arranged it. Please have a look. " As soon as the voice fell, the whole office burst into laughter: "People regard you as the boss, hahaha." "Sister, he is not the head of the department, but we like to call him the boss." Yang Xiaoyu said it embarrassed her.
Comments: make clear the title, don't take the liberty to shout.
Newcomers who have just entered the workplace must find out the position of everyone around them at the first time. If you don't even know the supervisor of your own department, the supervisor will think that you don't respect him. To this end, newcomers should find out the position of everyone around them on the first day of employment, and then address them correctly according to different positions to avoid embarrassment.
Tips: The workplace is called Baodian, which teaches you to avoid "thunder"
Different enterprises and companies have different requirements. For example, in some European and American enterprises, the names of bosses and colleagues are relatively broad. In order not to shorten the distance between the boss and colleagues, they will directly address each other by English names in the company. But many domestic enterprises and companies are very particular about addressing.
Eight notes for newcomers in the workplace:
1. After the newcomers report for duty, they must first have a general understanding of all colleagues in their own departments and make clear their positions.
2. For your superiors, you can directly address their positions, such as Manager Zhang and Director Wang.
3. When addressing multiple people, they must be addressed from high to low, such as General Manager Li and Manager Zhang.
4. When there are many CEOs in the company, when addressing them, each CEO's position must be addressed separately, such as: General Manager Liu, General Manager Xiao,.
5. When addressing, be sure to smile, look directly at the other person (but don't stare) and be polite.
6, newcomers must be natural and generous, not too artificial.
7. Newcomers had better ask their colleagues around them to find out their position so as to address each other correctly.
8. If you don't know the address, you can ask the other person politely: "Sir (madam), I'm new here. I don't know what to call you? "