October 10, 2019 By Rebecca Teasdale
Recently, a colleague and I were at a dinner function with a
group of leaders from a client company. We found ourselves seated at a table
with a new member of the executive team who we were meeting for the first time.
Waiting for the plated meals to arrive, we eased into the conversation with
small talk about sports and weather, and then we went deeper inquiring about
his family, his career, his thoughts on the industry.
When the dinner wrapped
up 45 minutes later, my colleague and I had learned a lot about him. We had
learned about his years working abroad, his days as a partner at an IT
consulting firm and his time on Wall Street. Yet he had learned nothing about
me or my colleague. In 45 minutes of conversation, he hadn't asked either of us
a single question.
Sadly, this common, self-absorbed style of relating has reached
new, alarming levels. Social interactions no longer seem to be two-way. Whether
with friends, colleagues, new acquaintances or even family members, the common
courtesies of asking questions and listening have given way to an urgent need
to speak and be heard.
In my work as an executive coach, I try to talk no more than 30%
of the time, giving my clients the majority of the airtime. When I am talking,
I'm mostly asking questions. By giving my clients that airtime, I'm able to
understand their challenges, relate to their needs and extend the empathy they
badly want and need. For me, listening is how l learn. For my clients, it's a
way to show I value them.
A recent Harvard study
zeros in on the scale of this problem: People spend most of their time during
conversations talking about their own viewpoints and tend to self-promote when
meeting people for the first time. In contrast, high question-askers—those who
probe for information from others—are perceived as more responsive and are
better liked.
Of course, being liked is not the main goal of conversation, but
it can be the starting point for healthy relationships. The people in our lives
want to feel valued and validated. And asking people questions does this and
more. In my work with leaders and teams, I've learned that asking genuine
questions and listening to what people have to say can have these benefits:
- Improve engagement by showing
we value the views of others
- Improve the quality of decisions
by understanding multiple perspectives on an issue
- Improve collaboration and
buy-in by inviting dissenting views that may otherwise go unheard
- Increase influence by involving
others in decisions and direction setting
- Develop stronger workplace
relationships, leading us to want to invest in the success of others.
The job of the leader is to ensure that bad news surfaces fast.
The sooner the toughest issues get raised, the sooner they get fixed. Yet many
leaders I observe put more energy into telling and convincing than into
listening and learning. Leaders are often mistakenly viewed as the experts who
have all the answers.
At higher levels, the worse it seems to get. Many of the CEOs
and SVPs I work with are shielded from the real issues. They have failed to
create a culture of openness and candor, which must start with their own
curiosity and interest in others—with their willingness to ask and listen.
These same leaders often seek counsel from their coaches,
asking, "How do I develop better relationships with my people? How can we
increase employee engagement? How can I show people they are really valued? How
can we create a culture of learning and innovation?”
Fortunately, there's a simple approach that doesn't require a
big budget. Here are four ways to get started:
- In your meetings, observe
what's going on. How much are people talking and positioning versus
asking, listening and learning? What is your own tendency?
- Try not to talk first. Force
yourself to let others go first. Don't jump in too quickly to fill the
silence.
- Make a habit of asking
questions that increase learning like, "Tell me more about your
recommendation. What am I missing? What are we not thinking of? What are
some other ways we can approach this challenge? What's our real purpose in
this?”
- Go deep by asking follow-up
questions. Model showing curiosity about others' views.
As a leader, you are well served to ask the right questions
versus always having the right answers. Try it for a couple of weeks and see
what happens.
Rebecca Teasdale is a
leadership development expert and co-founder of the Trispective Group. She is
the co-author of The Loyalist Team: How Trust, Candor, and Authenticity
Create Great Organizations.
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