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Internal Conflict Resolution Guidebook

Resolve Conflict Without Damaging Relationships
Understand your style, choose the right strategy, and create win‑win outcomes.

What this guide helps you do

 

  • Interpret your reactions to conflict so you can manage emotions and needs more effectively.

  • Analyze different types of conflict—process, role, interpersonal, direction, external—and match them with practical resolution steps.

  • Build conflict resolution strategies that benefit all team members and strengthen unity.

Step 1: Know your conflict style

 

Use the 15‑item Conflict Reaction Profile (rate 1–3: seldom/sometimes/most of the time), then:

  • Add scores for: 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15

  • Subtract scores for: 3, 5, 7, 11

Result:

  • 1–4: Passive – tend to hold back, get walked over; need to stand up diplomatically.

  • 5–10: Assertive – balanced, open listener who expresses ideas appropriately.

  • 11+: Aggressive – come across combative; need to listen more and soften approach.

Step 2: Apply targeted strategies by conflict type

 

  • Process conflicts: Clarify your control, find root cause, talk to process owner, agree on problem, propose solution + action plan, then follow through and recognize them.

  • Role conflicts: Re‑examine how you see your role, clarify expectations with others, stay flexible, and look at changes as opportunities.

  • Interpersonal conflicts: Challenge your own biases, identify three behaviors you can change, ask the other person how to defuse tension, see things from their viewpoint, and list their strengths + benefits of improving the relationship.

  • Direction conflicts: Clarify vision and discrepancies in neutral terms, ask to address them calmly, use “I/we” instead of “you,” choose higher values when they clash, and make authentic commitments.

  • External conflicts: Focus on what you can control, pick battles that are worth the price, act instead of complaining, do good for others, keep perspective, and talk to someone you trust.

Step 3: Build a simple conflict action plan

 

For any specific conflict, write:

  1. Specific Conflict

  2. People Involved

  3. Plan of Action

  4. Results Expected

  5. Accountability Partner

Use this to track progress and keep yourself honest about following through.

Internal Conflict Resolution Guidebook
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