Observe, inquire, listen
Rev
Up Your Leadership With the OIL Method
Too often I see leaders communicating by telling...what's wrong with this
technique? First of all this is what managers do, not leaders. And, you may
be missing opportunities for innovation and employee development. The OIL
Method is Observe, Inquire and Listen.
Observation: The ability to observe what
others may not see is a huge advantage to a leader. These are some of the
things you should be observing daily: Employee Interaction; Performance;
Behaviors; Environment and other external factors
Inquiry: Most
mangers and leaders underrate questioning skills. In order to master
inquiry, you first need to define the goal you want to accomplish. Some
goals that a leader may want to accomplish are: Coaching employees to self
reflect and commit to specific actions; Learning about situations, people,
processes; Persuading others to move in a specific direction or make a
certain decision; Seeking clarification and understanding to redirect
misunderstandings or conflicts; Building existing or new relationships by
asking people for their opinions
Listen: The goal of listening is to gain
understanding, which means that the listener needs to not just hear noise
and words coming out of a person’s mouth but understand exactly what the
person is trying to communicate. So what gets in the way of actively
listening? Doing other things in addition to listening, such as email;
personal opinions and biases that distract you from listening to the
message being delivered; emotions that you have about the subject can shut down
your ability to listen and understand the other person’s point of view; not
identifying what is missing; not clarifying what you just heard from the
other person.
Beth Armknecht Miller
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