The most expensive thing you can do with a disagreement is nothing.
Most of us are trained, somewhere along the way, to treat conflict like a fire to run from. Smooth it over. Wait for it to pass. Keep the peace. That instinct feels responsible, and it is exactly the problem — because the conflict you avoid doesn’t disappear. It smolders. The relationship strains, the discomfort compounds, and the cost shows up later with interest.
Here’s the reframe everything else depends on: conflict isn’t the enemy — avoiding it is. Two people with different concerns isn’t a crisis. It’s a Tuesday. The only real question is whether you work through the gap or pretend it isn’t there.
And the work starts with you. Not with the other person’s attitude or behavior — with how you process the disagreement, regulate yourself, and choose to engage. Reframe it in your own head first, from a fight to be won into a conversation to be had, and you’ve already changed the odds.
Run toward the friction
One of our veterans said it better than I could. In the military, he explained, they talk about the point of friction — the spot in the machine where the wear and tear happens, where things grind and slow down. As a leader, that’s not the place you avoid. It’s the place you go, because it’s where you deliver the most value. The Marines run toward the sound of gunfire. You run toward the friction, resolve it, and move on.
The alternative is the leaky-roof strategy. You see the stain on the ceiling and decide to deal with it later. We all know how that ends — rot, mold, and a far bigger bill than the one you’d have paid if you’d climbed up there when you first noticed. Conflict behaves the same way. It does not dry out on its own.
But isn’t some conflict just bad?
Fair question, and the research has a sharp answer. In a widely cited meta-analysis, De Dreu and Weingart found that relationship conflict — the personal, interpersonal kind — is strongly and negatively related to how teams perform and how satisfied their people are. Task conflict, the disagreement about the work itself, was also negatively related to performance, and more so on complex work.
So this isn’t a pitch for more conflict. It’s a pitch for handling it well — keeping it on the work and out of the personal, and resolving it before task disagreement curdles into the relationship kind that does lasting damage. Avoidance doesn’t prevent that slide. It guarantees it, because nothing gets named and nothing gets fixed.
You are never going to have a team, a customer, or a life without conflict. Ever. The skill isn’t dodging it — it’s building the muscle to work through it and drive forward. So start with the conflict you’ve been avoiding. It’s usually the one with the most to give back.
Source De Dreu, C. K. W., & Weingart, L. R. (2003). Task versus relationship conflict, team performance, and team member satisfaction: A meta-analysis. Journal of Applied Psychology, 88(4), 741–749.