"He who asks a question is a fool for five
minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever.” ~ Chinese Proverb
Last
Sunday, I was listening to Jack Canfield's interview on Hay House World Summit
in which he was asked to comment on how FEAR limits us from our opportunities and
Mr. Canfield states, "Don’t Be Afraid To Ask For What You Want."
Leaders
who are helping others to grow and innovate are always trying to craft the best
questions to make a difference. Here is how to ask the questions that will
propel your team and your organization forward.
Questions
are the expressive, probing language for growing others; listening is the
receptive, facilitating language for growing others. These two complementary
approaches form a continuous growth conversation loop. The deeper the
questions, the deeper the listening; the deeper the listening, the deeper the
next question. As we dig together with each tool, we mutually excavate new
discoveries. As a result, the learning is never one-sided; it is a co-created
process that engenders empathy, trust, and collaboration.
The Power Of Authentic Questions
Innovators
working on solving problems and coming up with creative solutions rely on
crafting the right questions. Leaders who are helping others to grow and
innovate are always trying to craft the best questions to make a difference.
Not only do innovators make asking questions an integral part of their lives,
and ask more questions than non-innovators, they also ask more provocative
ones--questions that provoke deep insight and understanding. Developing other
leaders through questioning not only helps them grow, but it forces them to own
their unique learning experiences.
Imagine
yourself in your next team meeting. Observe and check your impulses to be the
expert, the problem solver, or the holder of the most seasoned experiences and
perspectives. See yourself using questions more to:
- Challenge yourself to look at solutions from a different point of view.
- Stay in the state of curiosity longer to sort out where others are coming from.
- Probe deeper into motivations, perspectives, and experiences.
- Bring the "unspeakable" question to the surface.
- Challenge the status quo to move the conversation to the next level.
- Build on what is being said and take it one or two steps further.
- Engage with people at a deeper level.
- What would be the impact to your team and organization if you leveraged the power of questions more?
- What would happen if you used your drive, analytical capabilities, and intelligence to help others to grow versus having the answers and solving the problems?
The Power of Authentic Listening
Questions
without authentic listening are thinly veiled challenges, judgments, and
assertions; challenging questions with authentic listening activates latent
power, potential, and collaboration.
How
often do we pause to be genuinely present with someone? How often do we really
hear what the other person is saying and feeling versus filtering it heavily
through our own immediate concerns and time pressures? Authentic listening is
not easy. We hear the words, but rarely do we really slow down to listen and
squint with our ears to hear the emotions, fears, and underlying concerns.
Despite its value-creating properties, listening is rare for many leaders, and
this lack of listening is one of the key reasons leaders derail.
I have
observed three common pitfalls that inhibit people from stepping back for
authentic listening:
Listening
Pitfall 1: Hyper Self-Confidence
When
we see ourselves as the quintessential expert, the most experienced or accurate
person in the room, we position ourselves to fall into a listening black hole.
Others with valuable insights defer rather than speak up, diminishing rather
than strengthening leadership teams. The kiss of death for collaboration,
connection, and innovation is moving too quickly to our own perceived
"right" answer. Slow down, and challenge yourself to pause and to
listen a few minutes longer to move from transaction or hyper action to
transformation.
Listening
Pitfall 2: Impatience and Boredom
When
conversations or meetings don't reflect our point of view or are not
intellectually challenging enough, we may get impatient or bored. Our inner
voice, drowning out other voices in the room, says, "They are not getting
it!" They may not be getting your solution, but they are getting
something, possibly something valuable but hidden to you. If we are too caught
up in our judgmental self-conversation, we can never really genuinely listen
and hear what is going on around us. We
lose on multiple levels: we don't learn; we don't know what is happening; we
don't connect; and we don't innovate. Fight your impatience and boredom by
looking deeper. Pause to question: What are they seeing and understanding that
I don't see? What are the beliefs underneath what is being said? What are the
hopes and fears underneath the surface? Stretch yourself mentally and
emotionally to stay engaged by looking deeper. Remember, you can always
disagree or reframe the conversation later, but as St. Francis advised,
"Seek first to understand."
Listening
Pitfall 3: Bias for Action
Sometimes
listening is challenging because we want to do something, not just hear about
it. Our hyperactive impulses derive from our certainty that we know the
solution and reactively want to implement it. However, it isn't always optimal
to rush in with the answers, unintentionally creating dependency, stunting the
growth of others, and sacrificing transformative breakthroughs. Pause a bit
longer to let groups struggle and strain more as they explore ideas, options,
and deeper solutions. Listen to how they are collaborating, resolving conflict,
and problem solving. Give introverts space to speak up. Step back more and step
in only when absolutely necessary.
What Listening Does
Pausing
to listen to the needs, concerns, and aspirations of our key people is crucial
to growing talent. If you find yourself rushing about from meeting to meeting,
project to project, and rarely pausing to check in with your key people, your
team and organizational risk is mounting. Having deeper developmental
discussions, really engaging people, communicates care and connection. Pausing
for developmental dialogue elevates the business conversation from management tactics
to leadership excellence.
Try practicing authentic listening. Be with people and
have the goal to fully understand the thoughts and feelings they are trying to
express. Use your questions and comments to draw them out, to open them up, and
to clarify what is said rather than expressing your view, closing them down,
and saying only what you want. Not only will this help you to understand the
value and contribution the other person brings, it will create a new openness
in the relationship that will allow you to express yourself and be heard more
authentically as well.
Authentic
listening creates the platform for true synergy and team effectiveness. Valuing
and attending to different perspectives from diverse sources results in a more
complete understanding of issues and more elegant solutions. Authentic listening is the soul of
growing others.
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