How to Have a Meaningful Conversation
Here are four simple ways to ensure
that every business conversation is productive.
Everybody knows how to have a
conversation because they've been having them since they were toddlers.
However, most people develop bad habits that almost guarantee that their
business conversations will sometimes be meaningless wastes of time.
Here's a simple four step process
for making certain that every work conversation that you have is both
meaningful and worth having.
1.
Know WHY you're having the conversation.
Every conversation must have a
point, or there's no point in having it. With friends and family, the
"point" is often to simply enjoy each other's company. You already
know how to do that. Hey, relax and have fun.
In business, though, there's always
an agenda to every conversation, even if it seems as if the conversation
is only to "get to know" you better (or vice-versa), until such time
as your co-worker becomes a friend or a family member.
Therefore, whenever you start a
conversation with a co-worker (and this includes customers, bosses, colleagues,
and the guy who empties the trash), have an explicit goal in mind. That way
you're less likely to waste time and energy.
Similarly, if somebody opens a
conversation with you, it's worthwhile to wonder why the conversation is
happening and why now. It's not worth obsessing about, but if you've got a
sense of the "why" it's easier to get "where" the
conversation needs to go.
2.
Ignore your "monkey mind."
The ancient Chinese believed
everyone has a "monkey mind" that jumps from thought to thought, like
so:
- What is she thinking about me?
- Will I make a sale?
- What if I can't pay the mortgage?
- Gosh, that wallpaper is ugly.
- I've got to get the airport in two hours.
- Etc., etc., etc.
This constant mental noise pulls
your attention away from the customer and towards your own perspectives,
priorities and goals.
If you listen to your "monkey
mind," you'll only hear a percentage of what the other person is saying.
In all likelihood, you'll misunderstand and misremember what was said.
3.
Acknowledge what you've heard.
When the other person has finished
speaking, re-describe, and characterize what the other person just said. This
confirms that you were really listening to the other person, rather than your
internal dialog ("monkey mind").
It also prevents you from continuing
the conversation based upon a misunderstanding. The restatement gives the
other person an opportunity to correct your perception or elaborate as
necessary to make sure that you "get it."
4.
Think and then respond.
Pause a moment to consider what you
heard and have echoed back. Respond with a statement, story, or question that
adds to the conversation and moves it closer to its point and purpose.
Having this kind of conversation is
both difficult and easy. It's difficult because some people's "monkey
minds" are the size of King Kong and chatter so loudly that they can't
hear anything else.
However, once you've learned to
ignore the chatter, this way of listening, reflecting, and talking quickly
becomes second nature. And that's the easy part.
Geoffrey James http://www.inc.com/geoffrey-james/how-to-have-a-meaningful-conversation.html?cid=em01013week11a
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