Lots of people meet their partners at work, and yet dating someone in the office is often frowned upon. Some companies even have explicit policies against it.
So what if you and a colleague have been flirting and might want to explore a relationship? Should you steer clear? Should whatâs right from a professional perspective override whatâs best for your personal life?
What the Experts Say
There are perfectly good reasons why coworkers fall for one another, says Art Markman, a professor of psychology and marketing at the University of Texas at Austin. âYou spend a tremendous amount of time at work and, if you put people in close proximity, working together, having open, vulnerable conversations, thereâs a good chance there are going to be romantic relationships,â he says.
Research shows that we also tend to fall for people who are similar to ourselves, says Amy Nicole Baker, an associate professor of psychology at University of New Haven and author of several papers on workplace romance. And âthe more familiar you are with the person, the more likely it is that youâll become attracted to one another,â she says. If youâve become romantically interested in a colleague, proceed carefully. Here are some things to think about.
Know the risks
Before you act on your feelings, itâs important to think through the risks â and there are quite a few. Of course, thereâs the chance that the relationship wonât work out and that there will be hurt feelings on one or both sides. There are also potential conflicts of interest. Markman references the dual relationship principle, an âironclad ruleâ in psychotherapy that therapists cannot have any relationships with patients beyond their professional one.
Obviously, the same rule doesnât apply between coworkers â many people are close friends with colleagues, for example â but âhaving multiple relationships with someone creates potential conflicts of interest that can be hard to resolve,â he explains. If youâre dating your teammate, do you put the teamâs or the individualâs interests first? There are also reputational risks.
âYour professionalism may be called into question,â says Baker, âespecially if people donât see your motives for entering the relationship as positive.â Some colleagues may think youâre giving your romantic partner preferential treatment or vice versa. âHaving a relationship with someone higher up in the organization can create an alternate explanation for why youâre succeeding,â says Markman.
Have the best intentions
If youâre aware of these risks and still want to move forward, research shows that your intentions matter. Your coworkersâ reactions will reflect what they believe your motives to be, says Baker. When they perceive you as having âego motiveâ â seeking out the relationship to serve your own needs, whether itâs to get ahead in your company or for your own excitement â they will clearly think of you less favorably.
On the other hand, âstudies show that coworkers are generally positive if they perceive that youâre falling in love and genuinely care about each other,â she says. So, before you jump in, check your motives and consider how others will perceive them. Having positive intentions at the start may also help guard against hurt feelings and misunderstandings should the romance eventually end.
Know your companyâs policies
Many companies prohibit employees from dating coworkers, vendors, customers, or suppliers, or require specific disclosures, so be sure to investigate before you start a relationship. âFollow the rules and try to understand the reasons theyâre in place,â Baker says. âYou ignore them at your peril.â
If youâve already violated a policy, she suggests you âcome clean earlyâ because âthe longer you persist, the worse the consequences will be.â Markman says that heâs seen companies âlifting those regulations in recent years both because theyâre hard to enforce and they havenât changed behavior.â For him, this is a positive.
âThe rules need to recognize the reality of the world and, when it comes to workplace relationships, we want to teach people principles for making good, adult decisions, not to legislate through punishment.â
Rules are also evolving because of the #MeToo movement. For example, at Facebook and Google, you can only ask a coworker out once, and if the person says no or gives you an ambiguous response (âSorry, Iâm busyâ) youâre not allowed to ask again.
Stay away from your boss and your direct reports
No matter what your intentions are, itâs best not to date your managers or subordinates. âIt is a bad idea to get involved with anybody who is in your chain of command â up or down,â says Markman.
Baker agrees: ââWe know from research that the outcomes arenât as good; the perceptions are more negative.â Thatâs because this is where conflicts of interest are most stark. Itâs hard to be objective when giving someone youâre dating a performance review, for example. And you donât want people to think that youâre being unduly favored; it can erode your own confidence and hurt the teamâs morale.
Both experts acknowledge that boss-employee romances do happen â and sometimes those relationships work out. However, if thatâs something youâd like to consider, they suggest you âtake action immediatelyâ to transfer to a new boss or reassign your direct report to another team.
Donât hide it
Both Markman and Baker agree that itâs important to be open about the relationship with your coworkers and boss. This might be tough advice to follow, especially if youâre not sure where the relationship will go.
âYou donât have to tell them after the first date,â says Markman, âbut letting people know reduces the awkwardnessâ and increases the likelihood that theyâll be positive about the relationship. Besides, âif you donât tell anybody, people will still figure it out,â he says.
Baker adds that clandestine romances tend to have poorer outcomes and can be âcorrosiveâ to other relationships. âSecrets tend to erode our trust in one another and, when the truth comes out, people are going to feel lied to,â she explains. Keep your disclosure simple and straightforward. You might say something like, âWe went on a few dates, but Iâm sure you can understand that I donât want to get into more detail about our personal lives.â
Make sure that your manager is one of the first to be informed. If this feels unnecessary, put yourself in your managerâs shoes, Markman says. Wouldnât you want to know that two people on your team, or a team member and a colleague from another group, were dating? Then âlet your bosses make the call on how to staff you. They may prefer you not work together.
By telling them, youâre allowing them to make informed decisions.â Whether or not to tell HR will depend on the company policy and on how much you trust your colleagues in the department to handle the situation. âIf you have an HR department thatâs good, you might want to have a record, especially if the relationship goes sour,â says Markman. âIf your HR dept has a reputation for being all about checking boxes, donât tell them.â
Thereâs another important caveat: LGBTQ employees may not feel comfortable disclosing a relationship with a coworker, especially since you can still be fired in many states for being gay. âWhile many workplaces have become more diverse, they havenât necessarily become more inclusive,â Markman says. âMany people may not feel comfortable talking about their relationships.â
Set boundaries
While you want people to know whatâs going on, you donât have to subject them to your relationship.
Baker and her colleagues did research on flirting at work and found in two different studies that âPeople who frequently witness flirting⌠report feeling less satisfied in their jobs, and they feel less valued by their company. Theyâre more likely to give a negative appraisal of the work environment, and they may even consider leaving,â she says.
She points out that these are correlations, not causations, but itâs a good argument for avoiding any public displays of affection and remaining professional at all times. âIt makes life easier and less uncomfortable for the people around you,â she says. You also want to set up boundaries with your partner. âAs unromantic as it may seem, you need to have an open conversation about how to talk about your relationship and how youâll navigate the risks,â says Markman.
We like to believe that âlove takes precedent over other things â thatâs why there are fewer prenuptial agreements than there should beâ but you donât want to âlet work tensions spill into your relationship and vice versa.â Consider having rules about when and how youâll talk about work â and your relationship â with one another.
If you break up
Of course, not every romance will work out and if you or your partner decide to end things, itâs best to be prepared.
Thereâs no reason to mince words: âItâs going to be very painful,â says Baker, but âyou still need to be open about the break up.â Markman agrees: ââIf youâve been telling people about the relationship, keep them updated on the fact that youâre no longer together.â And try to remain as professional as possible. âAnyone whoâs ever been in a relationship has said something less than sympathetic about an ex,â says Markman, âbut you have to be civil as if nothing ever went wrong and hope that the other person will do the same.â
If you find it too awkward or painful to continue working alongside the person, you may need to consider leaving the job or at least transferring to another department. No matter how the relationship turns out, itâs worth following some of Bakerâs most simple advice: âThe less drama, the better.â
Principles to Remember
Do:
- Know the many risks of getting involved with someone at work
- Familiarize yourself with your companyâs policies â and the rationale behind them
- Talk through what youâll do if the relationship doesnât work out
Donât:
- Pursue a coworker if youâre not serious about a relationship
- Date someone who you have a reporting relationship with
- Try to hide the relationship from your manager or colleagues â it will only erode trust
Case Study #1: Always keep it professional
Heather Townsend and her colleague, Alex, were both working at one of the Big Four accounting firms when they became interested in one another. But they were hesitant about getting romantically involved. âWe thought dating at work was faux pas. I wouldnât even have more than one glass of wine with a coworker,â she says. Still, the attraction was there and, while they never openly flirted, they were âfriendlyâ over instant messages.
After three months of uncertainty over where things were headed, Alex âfinally said on instant message, âDo you want to go to dinner with me?â and I said, âYes.ââ On their first date, they talked about how they would handle the situation in the office. âWe were both very career-focused and agreed that we wanted to always keep it professional so that our careers wouldnât be impacted.â
Heather told one friend at work that she was dating Alex, but they waited a few months before disclosing their status to HR. âWhile it got serious very quickly, we wanted to be sure,â she explains. Eventually, though, they were upfront with HR in part because they were at different levels of the organization and wanted to do it before any conflicts of interest arose.
âWe said something like, âWeâre dedicated to the company and we donât want this to affect our careers but we fell in love. What should we do?ââ The HR managers responded positively. The couple worked with HR to make sure they wouldnât be on the same project and that Alex, who was more senior than Heather, wouldnât be responsible for her performance reviews or advocating for her promotions. âThere was no way he could write an unbiased review,â she says.
Once they had that support, Heather told her boss and a few other colleagues. âThatâs when the gossip started,â she says, âbut we didnât let it bother us. We kept working hard and rose above it.â Still, she was concerned about the potential impact on her reputation. âI didnât want it to seem like I was doing well at the company because of who I was dating, and I didnât want people to think I didnât take my career seriously.â So, she and Alex made a conscious decision to treat each other like co-workers first and foremost whenever they were in the office. âI didnât stop by his desk or kiss him on the cheek or have casual conversations. We would go out for coffee, but we always met by the elevator.â
Heather left the company about nine months into their relationship for unrelated reasons, and she and Alex wed several years later. While they no longer work together, they are still happily married.
Case Study #2: Why secrecy doesnât work
When Becca Pierson (some names and details have been changed) worked at a large tech company, she was assigned to help a new employee, Meryl, onboard. After getting to know one another over several months, the two women started dating.
âWe were on different teams, but we interacted regularly,â Becca explains. âThough I wasnât her manager, I was more senior, which made me nervous. I thought it would look really bad to my team if they knew I was dating someone who was at the same level as them.â
They chose to keep their relationship a secret. âIt was complicated because she wasnât out of the closet,â Becca explains. âSheâs from a country where being gay is essentially illegal.â Although the secrecy made âthings more exciting in a way, more romantic and special,â it also caused a lot of anxiety. Becca couldnât tell her friends â at work or outside it â what she was doing a lot of the time. âIt was weird that no one knew the relationship existed. It felt like going back in the closet. I think when youâre hiding a work relationship â whether youâre gay or straight â it can feel that way.â
They dated for close to a year and were able to keep the secret that whole time. âI donât think anyone ever knew,â she says. Becca feels like the secrecy ultimately broke them up. âI didnât feel like it was a real relationship; it was almost like living a double life.â She even felt somewhat relieved when it ended. âI didnât think I could do it for much longer. She wasnât out to her family, and we couldnât imagine how that would ever work.â
While Becca and Meryl remain friends, Becca says that the whole experience has made her want to steer clear from having another relationship at work.
Case Study #3: When it doesnât work out
Jordan Lu (names and some details have been changed) fell for his coworker, Susan, after theyâd been at the same investment bank for less than three months. âWe hadnât been working together that long. Sheâd joined the company before me.â
He felt like the romance didnât present a conflict of interest because there wasnât a reporting relationship between them. âThough I was technically senior to her in terms of hierarchy âshe was an analyst and I was an associate â she did not report to me and I wasnât involved in assigning her work, managing or evaluating her,â he explains. âWe did sometimes work together as part of a big team but were never on the same team when we were dating.â
This was the first time Jordan had ever been involved romantically with someone at work and he says he was âextremely naĂŻveâ and didnât consider the risks. âI donât think either of us thought that far ahead to be honest. We sort of stumbled into the relationship.â
Since it was casual at first, they didnât think to tell anyone. But when it got more serious they felt like it was too late. âIt just seemed odd to raise at that point, several months in,â he says. âShe was being considered for a promotion, so we didnât want [the disclosure] to potentially impact that process.â They each had a friend at work â someone Jordan had known for a while and Susanâs roommate â who knew about the relationship. âThey were both people we trusted to a high degree.â
Eventually, however, the relationship fizzled and the pair broke up. âThat was the most awkward part of it all,â Jason says. âWe ended up having to work much more closely on different projects, and, though it was always polite between us, there was definitely an incredible amount of tension and simmering resentment,â he says. âWhile it was never apparent to others, it was not pleasant.â The situation contributed to his departure from the company. âIt was so awkward, and I felt like we both needed space.â