How To Get Your Point Across To These Five
Personality Types
Not everyone thinks the same way. Here’s how to repurpose a
three-decade-old management theory to tailor your message to just about
anybody.
The VP of finance for a major multinational company recently came
to me with a problem. “I’ve been trying to start a conversation with the VP of
marketing, and he won’t talk to me,” he said. “Whenever I try to ask him what
he thinks about my ideas, he doesn’t respond.”
I asked him to describe the marketing VP to me. As he talked about
his personality, I thought of a potential solution: “Don’t ask him what he
thinks about your ideas,” I said. “Ask him what’s wrong with
them.”
A few weeks later, I heard back from my client. “Your advice was
amazing!” he said. “We spent two hours discussing issues, and he wants to meet
with me every week now!”
Why did I give him that advice? Because as he described the
marketing VP to me, I realized what type of speaking approach would most likely
resonate: one that appealed to his colleague’s problem-solving personality.
While psychological research has progressed quite a bit since
Edward de Bono released his influential book Six Thinking Hats in 1985, I
find framework still offers a handy set of metaphors for adjusting your
speaking style to fit listeners’ thinking styles and personalities (though I
typically prefer sticking to just five). Here are five ways to frame your
message, riffing on de Bono’s 33-year-old idea, according to the people or
person you’re communicating with.
1. PROBLEM SOLVERS
A “black hat” approach to speaking is all about solving problems.
When you’re addressing someone who thrives on figuring out puzzles (like that
VP of marketing), you need to focus on what’s wrong with something–usually in
solutions-oriented, technical terms.
Let’s say you’re tasked with giving a presentation about
productivity. With a black hat approach, your key message might be, “By
reducing the gaps in our sourcing systems, we can increase productivity.” Then
you’d go on to point out what those gaps actually are, and guide your audience
toward brainstorming ways of closing them.
2. DATA GEEKS
Analytical thinkers typically require a slightly different
approach. The “white hat” approach to speaking is objective and
straightforward. Rather than emphasize the problem areas, you lay out all the
relevant information you’ve got–focusing on data and analysis. You’ll also want
to rely more on charts and statistics to get your message across than you
otherwise might.
So if you’re taking a “white hat” approach to your productivity
presentation, you’d analyze your team’s output in terms of amount of hours
saved, money saved, and forecasted benefits–all backed up by hard facts and
concrete numbers. Your key message might be, “By improving our system, we can
increase productivity by x and contribute y to
the bottom line.”
3. TEAM PLAYERS
Sometimes you’re speaking to people who aren’t exactly number
crunchers but think in terms of shared purpose and teamwork. In that case, your
goal is to connect with the hearts of your listeners with an emotional appeal
that inspires belief, propels action, and instills a feeling of togetherness.
A “red hat” approach to the productivity issue would be more of a
pep talk; you’d discuss how increasing morale and building team spirit can
increase productivity. Your key message might be, “By working together, we can
conquer new frontiers and build an organization that keeps getting better and
better.”
4. CREATIVE TYPES
The “green hat” approach to speaking focused on creativity. If
your listeners are “outside the box” thinkers, you’ll need to use visual
imagery to get your audiences to imagine possibilities they may not have even
considered.
In your productivity presentation, you’d want to discuss potential
innovations that could help increase productivity. Rather than analyze the
past, you’d brainstorm programs and initiatives you could try in order to boost
productivity in the future, encouraging your team to think inventively. Your
key message might be, “By innovating, we can propel the organization to better
results and discover new opportunities we haven’t even imagined yet.
5. OPTIMISTS
Finally, if you’re speaking to glass-half-full thinkers who are
good at looking at the bright side, you should do the same. Stress the positive
and focus on what’s ahead–like a bright beacon guiding everyone to safety
and security.
Taking this “yellow hat” approach for your productivity
presentation would mean focusing on what’s going right already, and where
it’s bound to take you if you stay the course. Your key message might be, “By
capitalizing on our strengths, we can catapult our company to new heights with
our customers.”
As de Bono himself realized, these strategies are all about being
flexible. Our personalities are highly contextual–more tendencies than fixed
properties–and people change “hats” all the time. Your room full of yellow hat
optimists might turn into black hat problem solvers when the going gets tough.
So always think about what your message is, and to whom you’re delivering it.
You’ll find a little color can go a long way.
BY ANETT GRANT
https://www.fastcompany.com/40523342/how-to-get-your-point-across-to-these-five-personality-types?utm_source=postup&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Fast%20Company%20Daily&position=6&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=01312018
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