Drama Mamas: Should guilds mandate courtesy?
Try not to get too distracted by cute young men in groovy costumes. We've got drama to take care of.
Dear Drama Mamas,
I am a guild leader of a large social guild, with a large group of officers.
At officer meetings there are a small group of people who continue to bring up the subject of guild members not saying hello when people log on or grats when an achievement is made, they feel as if they are being ignored and are not welcome, although I have had no complaints from other guild members. This subject has been discussed many times and the main conclusion that the majority of us agree upon is leading by example, as we can not force guild members to say hello or grats. But the same people continue to gripe about this one subject which sometimes leads to aggressive discussions on the officers forums. I understand that they feel strongly about it and have attempted to address the problem many times and tried various things to appease them to no avail.
How can I diffuse the situation without resorting to doing something drastic like demoting them, which may cause serious ramifications for the guild (i.e. people guild quitting, aggressive discussions overflowing into guild chat and accusations of abuse of power).
Sincerely
Perplexed
- You have a clique problem. There's an us-versus-them mentality gnawing through the foundations of your guild. Your unhappy officers are complaining about the apparent social malaise, while other members seem completely uninterested or unwilling to engage this group in conversation. Yes, you most definitely have a clique at work; get the clique prescription from Officers Quarters' Scott Andrews.
- Your guild members are avoiding guild chat on purpose. This may be strictly due to the clique situation, or there might be individual contributors to the general unease. People avoid making themselves known in chat in order to dodge that needy lowbie who's always asking for help ... or that crass dude whose jokes always seem to teeter on the line of being offensive ... or the pitiful player who just can't wait to spill out the latest tale of hardship and personal despair. Make sure you identify those situations and get them on a tight leash, too.
You're going to have to take a deep breath and confront the clique situation head-on. Don't be confrontational, though; instead, make your grouchy officers your allies. Help them see how their united front sets up a barrier between them and other players, and gently remind them that if they're going to make friends with other guildmates, they're going to have to put their existing group patterns on hold in order to group and chat with new combinations of players.
Yes, it feels artificial. It is! The results are what you're after, and breaking free of existing patterns is the way you'll get there.
Beyond that, we're back at the same square where we were last week when we talked about calling players by their names instead of their classes or group functions. That's right -- we're back to manners. A few quick reminders that apply to everyone:
- Greetings and, yes, saying "grats!" are common social niceties. They're like saying "bless you" when someone sneezes or "thank you" when someone holds the door. Let's get over this whole notion of being so put upon by the burden of typing out these minimal messages. It's certainly not necessary to go on at length or make mention of every insignificant achievement -- come on, no reasonable person expects that. But it's always worth the time to show you notice and recognize the activities of your fellow guildmates. If you're so averse to social interaction that this is difficult for you to swallow, you should probably rethink your decision to belong to a guild or even to play a social game.
- In many guilds (like mine), members routinely hang out in voice chat, whether or not they're grouped or raiding. In our group, nobody feels awkward about choosing not to chat on any given evening -- but there's also the understanding that if you start talking in guild text chat, it's fairly likely your message will go sight unseen. Most of us routinely ignore our chat windows unless we're in a raid monitoring raid messages, and we know to use whispers for anything we want to get noticed ("Hey, would you ask if anyone in TeamSpeak wants to run dailies together?"). If your guild has any groups that hang out in voice chat, make sure others know not to take unresponsiveness in guild chat personally.
- Unless you're all chatting away in voice chat, though, a silent guild is a dead guild. Never doubt that if you're skulking about in the social shadows, you are part of the problem. As I noted last week, "... you've put yourself out in public with other players, and it behooves you to wipe the pizza sauce off your chin, pull up your big boy pants, and act like a civilized person. Social niceties are, indeed, nice! Represent yourself with class!"
- Are they being snippy in guild chat? "Oh, finally someone says grats!", or "At least one person knows how to say hello."
- Have they taken this request to more public forums? Members forum post title: "If you think people should be more polite in guild chat, post here!"
- Do they keep a mental tally of who gratses/greets them and only do the same to those people?
I think Lisa's solutions are excellent, but I don't think they'll mollify your Courtesy Fascists. And if they're the ones causing their own problems, I think there may be only one way to deal with it -- professionally.
- State that the decision is final. You and the other officers have clearly stated the decision as well as the extremely rational reasons behind it. It won't hurt to state all this again, however, for the last time. (And really, what is the point of making decisions as officers, if they are not going to be followed?)
- Explain the ramifications. Any officers unable to accept the decision of the majority will be demoted. Any drama made public about this (or any ruling) will result in dismissal from the guild.
- Communicate to the rest of the guild. In a general post to your members, state the request and decision -- without naming anyone. Then if the Courtesy Fascists choose to leave to make their own Be Social or Else guild, everyone will understand why. This should severely reduce the drama of a group /gquit.
I think that's the main thing we should all take away from this is that lovely Golden Rule. Treat people in guild, PUGs, Battlegrounds, and the physical world the way you want to be treated. But please, don't try to make it a law.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Guilds, Drama Mamas
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Reader Comments (Page 6 of 6)
michael.garbellini Aug 30th 2011 8:36AM
You want to complain about having to type it, make a macro and click a button, saves me a heap of time and makes me look like I care even if I don't.
This is after all a mulitplayer game, might as well have some manners.
Shryndael Aug 30th 2011 12:24PM
We actually had this issue in my guild for a long period of time. One of my officers would go out of her way to say hello to people and sometimes they wouldn't reply back. In my guild, we have people who have tunnel vision (they're focused on what they're doing and don't read or reply to guild chat during whatever they're doing), instancers and pvpers who don't converse while doing those activities, and ninja afk'rs.
One day, she yelled out "THE ENTIRE GUILD THINKS I'M A WH*RE!" gquit and left the server.
Everyone was confused.
I spoke to her via Skype after the dust settled a bit and she took it that since no one replied to her, they must think she was skanking around and she gquit.
We say good riddance, because no one in the guild thought that and for her to blindly assume that was a big insult to all of us. Both me, another officer (her husband!) had repeatedly tried to reassure her that it was just tunnel-vision'd people or afk'rs and people weren't ignoring her but I guess she had some issues.
I DO encourage my guildmates to chat with each other and be nice and reply when someone says something, but there are even a few multiboxers in my guild who aren't reading chat on the toon that's in the guild. It happens.
When it comes to congratulating people, I sorta do that based on the value of the achievement to the person. Pain in the arse ones always get a gratz. Someone who's taken 10 months to get from 80 to 85 gets a gratz for finally getting there. That kid who's playing WoW for the first time gets a gratz whenever he makes a milestone because it's ALL new to him.
That's how we roll. :)
wren Aug 30th 2011 1:09PM
I have a "grats" macro and a "welcome" macro. I'm getting to be like pavlov's dog with that "grats" button. I even had a guildie ask if I had a mod to automatically generate a grats. I backed off a little because it started to get silly. I'd hit grats and then everyone would follow and next thing you know we had 5 "grats" in a row for a simple achievement like the tabard or 25 fish ones.