How to be more mindful of your communications? Check to see if you are guilty of using some of these โconversation killersโย or โblockersโ:
โThe problem with communication is the illusion that itย has been accomplished.โ โGeorge Bernard Shaw
We are constantly told that communication is essential and thereโs no such thing as over-communicating. We see communication as a standard price-of-entry. Almost every job description has it as a required skill. However, most of us experience at least one miscommunication every day.
Whatโs going on?
First, we vastly overestimate the importance of our words to the neglect of our non-verbals. As a famous quote from Stanford University goes, โYou cannotย notย communicate.โย That is, even if you are saying nothing, you are saying something. In fact, 93 per centย of communication is actually aboutย body language, tone, and emphasis rather than the content or words being spoken.1
Read 15 Body Language Secrets of Successful People
Be mindful of your body language and tone and whether it matches the message.
This is easier said than done. One, it requires you to be in the momentโnot just mentally but physically. It also requires you to be aware of what you are truly feeling about the moment.
Sometimes your nonverbals betray you. For instance, perhaps you want to help solve a problem between two colleagues, but you are unintentionally lean towards the colleague you like or believe more.
Being mindful of your body language is especially important if you are working across a dispersed workforce with English not being peopleโs first language.
Individuals less comfortable with English are going to be looking for clues in your body language and tone even more.
Read 10 Steps for Having a Difficult Conversation
And to add further complications to this, gestures may mean different things in different cultures. Watch for clues in the other personโs body language to see if your message is being delivered as you intended and verbally clarify your intent.
Being mindful about your non-verbal sometimes will require you explicitly communicate about why there is a disconnect between your body language and your message. For instance, you may need to say, โI am interested in what you have to sayโIโm just a bit cold, so I need to cross my arms.โย It may seem tedious, but the small gesture can keep rapport and conversation open.
Given that we live in a technological age of phone calls, emails, and social media, many times we donโt get to see or hear the body language or tone of the message. So letโs also talk about the remaining 7 percentย (actual content) and understand what we are saying.
Recognize how you are framing your language: 11 Conversation Killers/Blockers to avoid
Being more mindful of the specific words you are using is important. This is tricky inย stressfulย situations like tight deadlines or when mistakes have been made.
Check to see if you are guilty of using some of these โconversation killersโย or โblockersโ:
1. Trying to prove that you are right:ย
โLet me tell you what happened/the facts,โ or โYou are wrong.โ
2. Telling the person what they โoughtโย or โshouldโย do:ย
โYou should have done it this way.โ
3. Threatening the person with โor elseโsโย or โif you donโtsโ
โFix this now or else.โ
4. Negating their own experience
โMost people donโt react like this,โ or โYou arenโt thinking straight.โ
5. Not staying focused on the actual issue or bringing up things from the past
โThis is just like the project twoย years ago,โ or โAnd you also were late last week.โ
6. Labeling the person rather than the behavior
โYou are sloppy,โ or โThis shows how inconsiderate you are.โ
7. Diminishing any positives with โbutโ
โYou have so much potential, butโฆโ or โYou are an intelligent person, butโฆโ
8. Interrogating
โWhy did you do this?!โ
9. Jumping to assumptions
โClearly you have an issue with them,โ or โYou have a problem with any routine.โ
10. Minimizing
โIf you think thatโs badโฆโ or โThatโs nothing, what I had to do wasโฆโ
11. Dismissing your part in the problem/solution
โYou are smartโyou will figure this out,โ or โYour job is to have this figured out.โ
Reframe to a more open style.
Practising appropriate language in less stressful times will help develop the habit. Instead of using the conversation killers listed above, try these approaches instead:
1. Discuss your contributions to the issue
โI recognize that I didnโt ask you earlier how things were coming along.โ
2. Clarify what result/goal you were expecting
โI was expecting this to have been completed yesterday.โ
3. Express the consequences to the team or the level of urgency to justify any non-negotiables
โIf this is delayed,ย we will miss our launch date.โ
4. Recognize that your perspective is subjective and ask them to discuss their experience
โFrom my perspective, the message didnโt seem to land. What was your take?โ
5. Ask for their process/story
โCan you outline the steps you took?โ
6. Apologizeย or recognize out loud when you sidetrack or get emotional.
This helps demonstrate vulnerability and commitment to remain open
โIโm sorry, I was frustrated and brought up old issues that donโt matter to this project, please continue.โ
7. Donโt soften the blow with disingenuous compliments.
If there are genuine positives, discuss those and talk about how those can be leveraged to overcome gaps
โAlthough the project was late, the final version was impeccable. Letโs make it a template so we can accelerate the process next time.โ
8. Move from victim language to owner language
Instead ofย โYou made me pissed off,โ say โI felt frustrated whenโฆโ
9. Ask more questions and then test assumptions
โSo, what I am hearing is thatโฆโ
Remember that any discussion should be given ample time;ย allotting too much time is better than trying to rush to resolution. It also helps prevent โemotional dumpingโย where you try to get everything you experienced out quickly without allowing time for each other to explore or react.
Read The Art of Conversation: 25 Great Conversation Starters
Finally, itโs important to remember that we tend to know and judge ourselves by ourย intentions, but we assume and judge others by theirย impactย (our interpretation of their actions).
Thus, we need to remember that even when we have good intentions, we can have a negative impactโand just because you were negatively impacted, doesnโt mean the person had negative intentions. Be kind, give people the benefit of the doubt, and find solutions together.
References
Mehrabian, 1971
Written by: Lauren Florko, Ph.D For more information contact Lauren Florko atย http://www.triplethreatconsulting.ca/ Originally appeared on Psychology Today Republished with permission.
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