NOTE: Today is my penultimate working day of 2017 (Yay!) and I wanted to share some learnings that I've found useful in this last quarter of the year. "Conversational Intelligence" by Judith Glazer is a must read, and the following is merely my own takeaway from her stellar work. This was meant to be a LinkedIn post, but all truth is parallel, they say, and the same principles that we can apply in a professional context to improve relationships are applicable in our personal life. So I'm sharing here. Feel free to take and apply whatever you need. Happy New Year!
Dysfunctional organisational culture. Toxic relationships. Self- doubt.
Mistrust. Misaligned objectives. Perverse metrics. Silo-ed-approach to business.
Misunderstandings. Wasted time. Defensivenes.
All of the above are directly related to the quality of the
conversations we have. The culture of an organisation and the ease (or not) of
interpersonal relationships do not exist in vacuum. Think about it. The
intangible “this is how it is around here” results from how we relate to each
other.
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Courtesy Jane Genova |
How Dysfunction Looks
Ever sat in a meeting, listened to the usual suspects
pontificate on and on, listen to silence when feedback is solicited, leave the
room and see the mini meetings taking place in huddles across the department?
Ever wondered why your partner just can’t seem to understand why this is so
important to you yet does nothing to change the way they operate? Ever yearned
to get into your teenager’s head to understand just how the heck they came to
make that decision to carry out that act? Ever stepped back aghast that your
friend or colleague took offence to that off-hand remark you made the other
day?
Meaning resides in the Listener
The person speaking assumes that what he means to convey is
what the person on the other end understands. After all, words have meanings,
and when put together in a sentence can only have one meaning, the meaning the speaker
ascribes to the sentence. Right? Not so fast.
There is a difference between Intention and Impact. You see,
both the speaker and the listener don’t exist in a sterile environment where the
only variable are the words being bandied about. There is a context that
absolutely determines how something is said and how it is interpreted. What is
this context? It comprises a number of factors: past experiences, how the
person was raised, personal values, expectations, …and biology. Biology? Yes.
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Courtesy The American Negotiation Institute |
Why don’t they get it?
Uncertainty and fear are the two biggest hindrances to
effective communication. They are the filters which have the biggest potential
to distort meaning leading to the attributes that kicked off this essay. Where
there is ambiguity, our brain naturally and instinctively fills in the gaps.
Simply put, our brains operate at two levels: a more primal,
instinctive level where we react to unfamiliar, potentially hostile situations
in a particular way, with the sole aim being self-preservation, the old fight
or flight response, if you will. Then there’s our higher order brain which is
more capable of interrogation, judgement, linking facts, and rational
responses. This part of our brain does not operate instinctively, but we can
learn how to train it such that we are more mindful and deliberate and
intentional in how we converse with those around us.
Judith Glazer in her book “Conversational Intelligence”
quite appropriately described what our brain does in the face of this
uncertainty as “creating a script and playing a movie” that fills in the blanks
in the World According to Us. In the face of ambiguity, our more primitive
lower brain kicks in and creates a scenario where we go into protective mode.
The result is a chain reaction of distrust which blocks effective communication.
But we can fix it!
Here is how we can, by understanding the biology at work,
move beyond an instinctive posture to a more deliberate one aimed at creating
constructive conversations:
1.
Listen
without judgement. Listen. Make the effort to hear what the other person is
saying without running them through your personal filters.
2.
Ask
Discovery type questions. These are not yes or no answer questions. These
are more how and why ones. Asking questions aimed at uncovering the real
message being conveyed allows you the listener to suspend the judgement
mentioned in 1. above and clears the path so that all that remains is What Is
Meant to Be Conveyed.
3.
If you are the one conveying a message, then you
have to be aware that the listener
will most likely interpret what you are saying based on his own filters. This
will force you to address fears and concerns that you think they have up-front
in your messaging, again clearing the way for What Is Meant to Be Conveyed. You
should also feel free to ask the listener to tell you what they got from what
you were saying. This creates the opportunity to clarify and refine your
message.
4.
An
environment of openness and acceptance are a must for points 1 through 3 to
flourish. Easier said than done though, right?
What if you are not the one in the position of leadership with the
implied authority to create such and environment… is all lost?
No. YOU can contribute to a cleared
pathway for effective communication by adopting points 1 and 2 above: listen
without judgement and ask discovery type questions. In the absence of an open
and accepting environment this could be difficult, but still doable. And
slowly, you could see a paradigm shift in the quality of your own relationships
with those around you. It’s a start.
As we build our conversational intelligence
we’ll see the quality of our conversations evolve along this continuum:
TELL/ASK
>>>>>>>ADVOCATE/INQUIRE>>>>>>>>SHARE/DISCOVER
It is when we are operating in the share/discover
mode that conversations are most productive and where dysfunction in
relationships and culture disappear.
A
Personal Commitment to Building Conversational Intelligence
Going forward, let us, wherever we are, regardless
of our position of power in the relationship, seek to create a new context, one
that minimises fear, doubt, uncertainty and ambiguity. Here are some
suggestions as to how we can do this:
Maintain
an open posture: be open to new thoughts and ideas and let this inform your
body language and choice of words.
Display
appreciation: saying thanks and acknowledging good quells fear. And that’s
a good thing, right? Because fear distorts meaning and blocks understanding.
Focus
on Discovery in the conversation rather than seeking to make your own
point.
Practice
Empathy and Curiosity: This narrows the gap between expectations and
reality, the root of ambiguity and uncertainty.
Here’s to a 2018 where we level up
and become better parents, partners, leaders and servants by creating a context
where fear and ambiguity are minimized and where sharing and discovery can
thrive, and conversations are meaningful and productive.
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Courtesy Wheeler Blogs |
Labels: conversation, conversational intelligence, culture, dysfunction, organisational culture, relationships