Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

MSU Extension’s Community Engagement and Leadership Development team provides education and information on dealing with conflict in your own back yard.

Conflict is variously defined as having differences, being in opposition or struggling with others — and usually thought of as something negative. But conflict is also a way to consciously pursue options to improve relationships, situations or processes. According to studies conducted by Kenneth Thomas and Ralph Kilmann, there are five general approaches to conflict, depending on one’s assertiveness and cooperativeness:

  • Avoiding (low assertiveness and low cooperativeness)
  • Accommodating (low assertiveness and high cooperativeness)
  • Competing (high assertiveness and low cooperativeness)
  • Compromising (medium assertiveness and cooperativeness)
  • Collaborating (high assertiveness and high cooperativeness)

Generally speaking, everyone has a “default” or usual way of dealing with conflict through one of these approaches. For example, one person may tend to avoid all conflict by not bringing up particular topics or dodge potential interaction with certain people entirely. Another may enjoy being competitive by engaging in arguments freely or may perceive the world as made up of winners and losers.

Although everyone may have a most comfortable way of dealing with conflict, all individuals can and do use all five conflict modes at one point or another in their everyday lives. After all, response to a conflict often depends on the context. For example, if someone takes an item from a co-worker’s office without permission, the co-worker will likely feel the need to confront the sticky-fingered office mate (using the compete mode). On the other hand, a person may want to deal with two arguing co-workers by staying out of the way of the situation entirely (using the avoid mode).

There are other times when a particular approach may be most appropriate for a conflict situation. For example:

  • Avoiding may be best when the issue is trivial or if someone else is in a better position to resolve it.
  • Accommodating may be the right approach when establishing good will or maintaining harmony is more important.
  • Competing may be appropriate when snap decisions need to be made in an emergency or when someone is behaving in a discriminatory or otherwise immoral way.
  • Compromising works when all parties can be satisfied with less than total agreement or when a temporary settlement needs to be reached quickly.
  • Collaboration is the best approach when all parties are willing to work toward a creative solution that meets everyone’s needs and when building and strengthening relationships is critical.  

Some other conflict situations may not clearly fit a particular approach, however. As a simple example, consider one cupcake left after a party in the office break room. A coworker could just grab it as quickly as possible (compete), or he/she could try to ignore it due to a strict diet (avoid), or give it to the boss to impress him/her (accommodate), or divide it in half with another coworker (compromise), or everyone could agree to pitch in to go to the store for more cupcakes (collaborate).

Although collaboration often delivers the most satisfying, respectful solution to specifically address people’s interests, this approach is the one we as a culture are less likely to learn about and practice. When taking a collaborative approach to conflict, all parties must begin by trying to understand the issue from others’ perspectives. Instead of defending a position, all must clarify the specific interests of everyone involved. After sharing these interests, all parties need to commit to creatively finding common ground and solutions that addresses those interests.

The careful communication and sharing involved in a collaborative approach requires more time, patience and openness to other perspectives than any other approach to conflict. Stronger relationships and longer-term solutions are usually the rewards for the extra effort.

This article was published by Michigan State University Extension. For more information, visit https://extension.msu.edu. To have a digest of information delivered straight to your email inbox, visit https://extension.msu.edu/newsletters. To contact an expert in your area, visit https://extension.msu.edu/experts, or call 888-MSUE4MI (888-678-3464).

Take this assessment tool and discover which of the five conflict modes you might be using too much or too little… or just right

Posted at 21:14h in Articles by kilmann

Take the Thomas-Kilmann Instrument (TKI) directly from the person who co-created it:

All his many articles, books, blogs, videos, courses, and are available on this website. 

TAKE THE THOMAS-KILMANN INSTRUMENT:TWO OPTIONS

Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

One TKI Assessment
Per Person

Taking the TKI allows you to discover whether you might be overusing or underusing one or more of five conflict-handling modes (collaborating, competing, compromising, accommodating, and avoiding), so you can improve how you manage conflict!

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Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

Two TKI Assessments
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By taking one TKI specifically for INSIDE your group and another TKI for OUTSIDE your group, you’ll discover how your leader, the culture, and the reward system might be having undue influence on how conflict is being managed in your group or team.

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MEET THE TWO AUTHORS OF THETHOMAS-KILMANN INSTRUMENT

Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

Dr. Kenneth W. Thomas and Dr. Ralph H. Kilmann (August 2015):
“The Joy of Having Created the TKI Assessment!”

 

 

AN OVERVIEW OF THETKI ASSESSMENT TOOL

Because no two individuals have exactly the same expectations and desires, conflict is a natural part of our interactions with others. The TKI is an online assessment that takes about fifteen minutes to complete. Interpretation and feedback materials help you learn about the most appropriate uses for each conflict-handling mode.

PLEASE NOTE: Although Dr. Ralph Kilmann has always referred to his TKI as an “instrument” or as an “assessment tool” (to emphasize its neutral, non-judgmental intentions, since there are no right or wrong answers as such), the TKI assessment is, nevertheless, also referred to as the “TKI test” or the “TKI questionnaire” or, more generally, the “TKI Conflict Model.”

The Thomas-Kilmann Instrument has been the leader in conflict resolution assessment for more than forty years. This instrument requires no special qualifications for administration. It is used by Human Resources (HR) and Organizational Development (OD) consultants as a catalyst to open discussions on difficult issues and facilitate learning about how conflict-handling modes affect personal, group, and organizational dynamics. The TKI is also extensively used by mediators, negotiators, and many practitioners in the coaching profession (executive coaches, career coaches, business coaches, life coaches, etc.).

More than 8,000,000 copies of the TKI have been published since 1974. Besides its native English language, the TKI is also available in several other languges: Spanish (European and Latin American), French, Portuguese (Brazilian), Danish, Dutch, Swedish, Japanese, Russian, German, Italian, and Chinese (traditional and simplified).

The Thomas-Kilmann Instrument is designed to measure a person’s behavior in conflict situations. “Conflict situations” are those in which the concerns of two people appear to be incompatible.

In such conflict situations, we can describe an individual’s behavior along two dimensions: (1) assertiveness, the extent to which the person attempts to satisfy his own concerns, and (2) cooperativeness, the extent to which the person attempts to satisfy the other person’s concerns.

These two underlying dimensions of human behavior (assertiveness and cooperativeness) can then be used to define five different modes for responding to conflict situations:

Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

  1. Competing is assertive and uncooperative—an individual pursues his own concerns at the other person’s expense. This is a power-oriented mode in which you use whatever power seems appropriate to win your own position—your ability to argue, your rank, or economic sanctions. Competing means “standing up for your rights,” defending a position which you believe is correct, or simply trying to win.
  2. Accommodating is unassertive and cooperative—the complete opposite of competing. When accommodating, the individual neglects his own concerns to satisfy the concerns of the other person; there is an element of self-sacrifice in this mode. Accommodating might take the form of selfless generosity or charity, obeying another person’s order when you would prefer not to, or yielding to another’s point of view.
  3. Avoiding is unassertive and uncooperative—the person neither pursues his own concerns nor those of the other individual. Thus he does not deal with the conflict. Avoiding might take the form of diplomatically sidestepping an issue, postponing an issue until a better time, or simply withdrawing from a threatening situation.
  4. Collaborating is both assertive and cooperative—the complete opposite of avoiding. Collaborating involves an attempt to work with others to find some solution that fully satisfies their concerns. It means digging into an issue to pinpoint the underlying needs and wants of the two individuals. Collaborating between two persons might take the form of exploring a disagreement to learn from each other’s insights or trying to find a creative solution to an interpersonal problem.
  5. Compromising is moderate in both assertiveness and cooperativeness. The objective is to find some expedient, mutually acceptable solution that partially satisfies both parties. It falls intermediate between competing and accommodating. Compromising gives up more than competing but less than accommodating. Likewise, it addresses an issue more directly than avoiding, but does not explore it in as much depth as collaborating. In some situations, compromising might mean splitting the difference between the two positions, exchanging concessions, or seeking a quick middle-ground solution.

Each of us is capable of using all five conflict-handling modes. None of us can be characterized as having a single style of dealing with conflict. But certain people use some modes better than others and, therefore, tend to rely on those modes more heavily than others—whether because of temperament or practice.

Your conflict behavior in the workplace is therefore a result of both your personal predispositions and the requirements of the situation in which you find yourself. The Thomas-Kilmann Instrument is designed to measure your use of conflict-handling modes across a wide variety of group and organizational settings.

 

See A Sample TKI Report:

Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

TAKE THESE RECORDEDONLINE COURSES TOLEARN MORE ABOUT THETHOMAS-KILMANN INSTRUMENT (TKI)SO YOU CAN IMPROVE YOUR CONFLICTRESOLUTION SKILLS AND STRATEGIES

Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

BASIC TRAINING:
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POTENTIAL OF TAKING
1 TKI ASSESSMENT

During our 2-hour BASIC Training in Conflict Management, not only will Dr. Kilmann help you interpret your TKI results, but you’ll also learn how to interpret other people’s results. You’ll gain the most value-added knowledge from your TKI assessment by deeply understanding the five modes, their two underlying dimensions (assertiveness and cooperativeness), and the three diagonal dimensions on the TKI Conflict Model.

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Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

GROUP TRAINING:
DISCOVER THE FULL
POTENTIAL OF TAKING
2 TKI ASSESSMENTS

During our 3-hour GROUP Training in Conflict Management, Dr. Kilmann will explain how to develop Group TKI Profiles, which are based on each member’s response to two TKIs, each with modified instructions, regarding their conflict-handling behavior: (1) INSIDE their group and (2) OUTSIDE their group (in all other settings in their life). Dr. Kilmann then interprets several very different Group TKI Profiles, which reveals the depth of this group analysis.

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Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

ADVANCED TRAINING:
HOW TO USE THE TKI
FOR ORGANIZATIONAL
PROBLEMS & CONFLICTS

Our 8-hour ADVANCED Training provides an even deeper understanding of the TKI. For example, you will learn how certain enduring psychological types predispose people to use different modes for resolving conflict. In this advanced course, you’ll also learn the ten key principles of group process and then you’ll learn the five steps and errors of problem management. In a nutshell, this more advanced material is precisely what will allow you to use the TKI to help resolve the most complex conflicts and problems in our communities, organizations, institutions, and nations.

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Which conflict approach is high in both assertiveness and cooperativeness?

THE TKI PACKAGE:
TAKE ALL THREE
TKI-BASED COURSES
AT A NICE DISCOUNT

If you would like to take our 3 TKI-based courses, you can purchase The TKI Package at a discount. Then, for 6 months, you’ll have access to all 12 hours of course videos, 3 course manuals (222 pages), and 2 TKI assessments. This package is a great choice for trainers, consultants, coaches, mediators, therapists, and peacebuilders who wish to gain mastery of the TKI assessment for applications with individuals, groups, and organizations. To earn our “Certification for the Thomas-Kilmann Instrument,” you must pass 2 Final Exams: (1) GROUP Training and (2) ADVANCED Training.

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THE KILMANNORGANIZATIONALCONFLICT INSTRUMENT

Directly below, see Dr. Kilmann’s 12-minute video presentation that summarizes his latest assessment tool: The Kilmann Organizational Conflict Instrument. This diagnostic instrument has been designed to identify an organization’s systems and processes that are significantly undermining—hence, misdirecting—members’ use of those five conflict modes inside their organization or work unit, so the most troublesome “systems conflicts” can then be transformed to actively support the effective use of all five conflict modes in the workplace. In essence, the Kilmann Organizational Conflict Instrument fully appreciates that an organization’s systems and processes affect at least 80% of how conflict is addressed and resolved in the workplace, while individual preferences for using certain conflict modes affect, at most, about 20% of the observable conflict-handling behavior and results.

See this information-packed Dedicated TKI Page, which provides many free resources about this renowned assessment tool. And be sure to watch our free, very insightful, Videos for the Thomas-Kilmann Instrument. You can also read Dr. Ralph Kilmann’s and TKI Blogs.

Which conflict style is high on assertiveness and high on cooperativeness?

Collaborating – This style is high in assertiveness and high in cooperation. It emphasizes a win-win solution that gets the greatest satisfaction for both parties. It involves understanding conflict as healthy and normal.

What conflict style is cooperative and assertive?

Collaborating is both assertive and cooperative. When collaborating, an individual attempts to work with the other person to find a solution that fully satisfies the concerns of both.

Which is the most assertive and most cooperative style?

The collaborating style is both assertive and cooperative, meaning that there is an equal effort made to satisfy the needs of both parties. Its utility is at the highest level when the problem is complex and requires both sides to contribute a portion of the solution.

Which conflict style is high in cooperativeness and low in assertiveness?

The Accommodating Style is foregoing your concerns in order to satisfy the concerns of others. This style is low assertiveness and high cooperativeness; the goal is to yield.