Conflict isn’t the enemy: Why great leaders embrace disagreement

We’re taught to see conflict as bad, threatening harmony, productivity, and morale. But the truth is, not all conflicts are created equal. Some disagreements can light a fire of creativity and innovation. Others can smother your team in negativity and resentment. The most important thing is knowing the difference.

Think about the last time a heated argument broke out at work. Maybe voices were raised, emails got snippy, or someone left the meeting room with a slam of the door. 

In those moments, conflict can feel like a ticking time bomb. 

But what if that tension wasn’t a disaster waiting to happen? What if it was the very thing your team needed to grow?

We’re taught to see conflict as bad, threatening harmony, productivity, and morale. But the truth is, not all conflicts are created equal. Some disagreements can light a fire of creativity and innovation. Others can smother your team in negativity and resentment. 

The most important thing is knowing the difference.

Positive vs. Negative Conflict: Spotting the Difference

Not all clashes are created equal. Positive conflict pushes your team forward. Negative conflict pulls it apart. So, how do you tell them apart?

Positive conflict feels energising. It’s like a spirited debate where everyone leaves the table with fresh ideas and mutual respect. It’s driven by curiosity, not ego. Team members feel free to speak up because they trust their voices will be heard.

Negative conflict, on the other hand, feels draining. It’s rooted in blame, defensiveness, and a need to win. These kinds of battles breed resentment and erode trust. They make people shut down or disengage completely. And when that happens, your team’s shared sense of purpose takes a hit.

As a leader, your job is to steer conflict into positive territory. That means setting clear expectations for handling disagreements and stepping in when things go off the rails.

Turning Disagreement into Progress As a Leader

When conflict is managed well, it can drive innovation, improve communication, and strengthen relationships within a team. But when it goes unchecked, it can spiral into something worse, such as personal attacks.

It’s easy to get defensive when someone challenges or disagrees with your perspective. The more personal the attack, the harder it is to keep your cool. And when conflict turns personal, it can escalate quickly.

Ryan Dunlap, Chief Conflict Officer at Conflictish, describes this all-too-common dynamic in responding to people who baselessly attack your character. 

He says, “You know, the nature of conflict is such that it almost always becomes personal at some point. One reason this happens is that when people can’t attack the merits of an argument, they will instead attack the credibility of the person making the argument.”

This is exactly what makes conflict so tricky. 

When someone feels threatened by your ideas or your success, they won’t necessarily argue with your reasoning. Instead, they’ll try to undermine you personally. They might attack your credibility, question your intentions, or even spread rumours about your character.

Dunlap continues: “If you’re doing or saying something that makes someone else feel inferior, and what you’re saying or doing is right, that person won’t be able to attack the merits of your actions. Instead, they’ll attack you.” 

This is the crux of negative conflict: when the argument is too strong, the focus shifts from the issue to the person, trying to discredit them instead.

So, how should you respond when things get personal? 

Dunlap advises: “You have to maintain your character and your composure at all times. Stand up for yourself, but be the beacon of self-control and decency. The moment you lean into bad behaviour, every lie that’s ever been said about you becomes plausible in someone else’s mind.”

As a leader, this is crucial. You need to be the calm in the storm. When conflict gets personal, your first instinct might be to defend yourself. 

But in doing so, you risk turning the conflict into a sideshow,  one where the focus shifts away from the issue at hand and onto your character. And when that happens, the credibility of your ideas can get lost in the noise.

This is why emotional control and grace under pressure are essential in managing conflict effectively. Maintaining your composure ensures that the conversation stays on track and that the issue, not the person, remains the focal point.

Building the Foundations: Empathy, Confidence, and Trust

If you want your team to embrace conflict in a healthy way, you’ll need three things: empathy, confidence, and trust.

Empathy means understanding where someone’s coming from. It’s recognising that everyone’s perspective is shaped by their unique experiences. Maybe your colleague’s blunt communication style isn’t rudeness; it’s just how they’ve learned to be direct. When you lead with empathy, you can defuse tension before it escalates.

Confidence is about creating a culture where people feel safe to disagree. No one should have to tiptoe around tough topics or bite their tongue to keep the peace. Real conversations happen when your team knows they can voice their opinions without fear of judgment or retaliation.

Trust is the glue that holds it all together. It’s built over time through consistent actions and open communication. Even the most constructive feedback can feel like a personal attack without trust.

But it’s not just about understanding individuals; you need to understand their cultural conditioning. 

As Tashira Halyard, a Diversity and Inclusion consultant, highlights, we often come into conflict with very different expectations based on our backgrounds. 

For instance, she talks about how people from different cultural environments,  particularly Black people from poor backgrounds,  may approach conflict differently and how these differences can be misinterpreted. “I didn’t know I was supposed to hide my emotions on my face,” she explains. “I didn’t know I wasn’t supposed to be direct with my supervisor… my conditioning tells me to stand up for myself at all times.”

This kind of cultural awareness is crucial when managing conflict. 

You need to understand that what may come across as aggression or defiance in one culture may simply be a person standing up for their beliefs or holding others accountable in another.

The Hybrid Work Dilemma: New Dynamics, New Challenges

Managing conflict was tough enough in the office. Now, throw in hybrid and remote work, and you’ve got a new set of challenges.

In a physical workspace, you can pick up on subtle cues,  a sharp tone, a tense posture, an unusually quiet colleague. But in virtual meetings, those cues are harder to catch. Misunderstandings multiply when all you’ve got is a pixelated face and a choppy audio connection.

That’s why emotional intelligence is more important than ever. Leaders need to pay attention not just to what’s being said but how it’s being said. Is someone hesitating before they speak? Are they avoiding eye contact with the camera? 

These small signs can reveal bigger issues bubbling beneath the surface.

Conflict Transformation: Turning Tension into Growth

Here’s where things get interesting. Managing conflict isn’t just about putting out fires. It’s about transforming those sparks into something constructive.

Conflict transformation goes beyond resolving disagreements. It involves changing the way your team approaches conflict altogether. It’s shifting the focus from “Who’s right?” to “What can we learn from this?” It’s not just patching things up but creating lasting change in your team’s culture.

Start by identifying behaviours and attitudes that escalate tension. Maybe there’s a team member who tends to interrupt or someone who avoids tough conversations altogether. Addressing these patterns early can prevent minor issues from spiralling out of control.

The Legal Side of Things: What You Need to Know

Here’s something many leaders overlook: there’s no one-size-fits-all playbook for conflict management. While there are laws and regulations to consider, most don’t account for the complexities of remote work.

It’s up to you to create your processes for handling disputes. That might mean establishing ground rules for virtual meetings, offering training on mediation skills, or simply making it clear that your door,  virtual or otherwise,  is always open.

Embrace the Mess

Conflict isn’t the enemy. Avoiding it is. When you embrace disagreements, you allow your team to grow stronger, smarter, and more resilient.

The next time you sense tension brewing, don’t shy away from it. Lean in. Ask questions. Listen. Look for the lessons hidden in the chaos. Because when you manage conflict with empathy, confidence, and trust, it stops being a problem and becomes a possibility.

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