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Thread: Temper Tantrums: What Your Client/Customer is Trying to Tell You (and How You Can Help)

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    Temper Tantrums: What Your Client/Customer is Trying to Tell You (and How You Can Help)


    When your client (customer) is melting down, it's easy to chalk the tantrum up to anger or frustration (and to get angry and frustrated yourself). But a new study that analyzed the sounds that customers make when their pitching a fit shows that there may be more to a tantrum than just a lot of screaming -- and may offer private investigators a way to cope.

    In the study, which was published in the journal "Emotion," scientists recorded the sounds customers make during tantrums and discovered that not only does each type of sound (screaming, yelling, crying, whining, and fussing) have its own "distinct acoustic features," there's a definite pattern to the vocalizations as well.

    "Screaming and yelling and kicking often go together," study co-author Michael Potegal, an associate professor of pediatric clinical neuroscience at the University of Minnesota, told NPR. "Throwing things and pulling and pushing things tend to go together. Combinations of crying, whining, falling . . . and seeking comfort -- and these also hang together."

    So, what's really going on when a customer is having a meltdown? "Frustration certainly is a trigger," James A. Green, head of the department of psychology at the University of Connecticut and a co-author of the study, says: "Blocked goals can results in frustration, which leads to anger." Same is true of children and adults, actually.

    But the scientists also discovered that, contrary to popular belief, customers aren't just melting down out of anger, they're also feeling sadness at the same time.

    "The impression that tantrums have two stages is incorrect," Potegal said. "In fact, the anger and the sadness are more or less simultaneous."

    Certain conditions can make it more likely that a customer will melt down, Green points out. "Fatigue or illness can lower the tolerance for frustration," he points out. "Some customers, or so the conventional wisdom goes, simply do not have as many cognitive 'tricks' up their sleeves to deal with these situations." (Some older adults, however, should be better able to deal with such situations, which is why their angry outbursts are called rages, not tantrums.)

    1. Wait it out. If your customer is having a tantrum, there's little you can do other than wait it out, experts say. "My colleague and collaborator, Mike Potegal, talks about 'standing back' during the periods of most intense anger, and I think he means both physically and emotionally," Green says. "Trying to give more information to a customer who has already lost control may not be very helpful."

    "If in person, best to lead your customer to a place where they can calm down without being disruptive to others," suggests author Michelle Nicholasen. Is it a drag for the private investigator? Oh, yes, and tiring, too. But wait out the storm and it will pass.

    2. Don't threaten, cajole, or bribe. You might not be able to control the tantrum itself, but you can control how you react to it, Nicholasen points out. Private Investigators can make tantrums much worse by yelling at their customer to stop, or by threatening them.

    Instead of asking questions or trying to reason with someone who is acting like a 2- or 3-year-old, simply acknowledge that they're upset. "Customers who are in the middle of a meltdown are incapable of hearing our message (reasons, reassurance or warnings) until they're sure we understand and respect their message," says author Dr. Harvey Karp.

    3. Offer comfort. Once customers have gotten past what Potegal calls "the peaks of anger," they're more willing to be comforted.

    4. Find the humor in the situation. Many private investigators end up just as frustrated and angry as the customer during a tantrum, but as Green points out, tantrums are completely normal -- up to a point. "This too shall pass," he says. "Tantrums are normative events in development and usually decline with more maturity and self-esteem."

    While you're waiting for your customer to get over his or her anger, having a sense of humor can help. "Imagine a grown-up acting like your child, and you will soon have to stifle a smile," Nicholasen says.

    5. Don't take it as a personal failure. "As private investigators, we are much more self-conscious about being judged when our customer is misbehaving in a public setting. The things that go through our minds are: Am I encouraging my customer to be a wild animal? Is my example teaching my customer horrible manners? My customer is acting like an immature brat; what am I doing wrong? But even when you do your best, sometimes a collapse will still happen."

    Patricia Monroe

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    John Magilke's Avatar
    John Magilke is offline Private Investigator Forum Member

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    Re: Temper Tantrums: What Your Client/Customer is Trying to Tell You (and How You Can Help)

    Patricia,
    Thanks for that, This is an insightful article.

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