founder communication workshop - 05/21/15

40
Founder Communication Joe Greenstein & Semira Rahemtulla May 21, 2015

Upload: hannah-knapp

Post on 05-Aug-2015

87 views

Category:

Small Business & Entrepreneurship


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Founder Communication

Joe Greenstein & Semira Rahemtulla May 21, 2015

Page 2: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Topics for Today

• What makes an effective leader?• What makes an effective team?

Format: Learn together, not talk at you

Page 3: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

One Big Idea

Page 4: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

INTENTNeeds

MotivesStories

Reality #1

BEHAVIORVerbal

Non-Verbal

Reality #2Common

IMPACTAssumptions

FeelingsResponses

Reality #3

The Net

3 Realities (The “Net” Model)

Page 5: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Feelings & Emotions – Why??

Everyone feels them; we just pretend we

don’t.

Convey crucial information; absence of emotion leaves out

half the story.

Emotions indicate importance. Most

powerful motivator?

They are an early warning

system

Feelings & Emotions – Why??

Page 6: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Self-Disclosure

Will I be less liked,

respected, influential

(leader-like)?

Is it relevant? Will it further the discussion – the

relationship?

Will others use this

information against me?

How will others

see/assess/ judge me?

“What in my ‘bubble’

should I share?”

We are constantly making the choice of letting our self be more fully known

Self-Disclosure

Page 7: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Vulnerability

“I define vulnerability as

the expression of

uncertainty, risk, and

emotional exposure.”

Vulnerability

Page 8: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Authentic Leaders

“The single factor distinguishing top quartile

managers from bottom quartile managers was

strength of affection – both given & received – with

their team.”

--“Encouraging the Heart: A Leader’s Guide to Recognizing and Rewarding Others”, Kouzes & Barry

Authentic Leaders

Page 9: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Authentic Leaders

You prefer to look strong rather than “weak.”

Problem: Everyone knows that.

Result: Willingness to show (some)“weakness” is perceived as sign of strength.

Paradox of Trust

Page 10: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / Vulnerability

• Build connection, trust• Repair distortions• Avoid “progressive impoverishment”

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / Vulnerability

Page 11: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by Rita Willaert [link]

Richard Francisco

In what ways do we communicate?

Increasing levels of difficulty, risk & learning

5 Levels of Communication

Page 12: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

1: Ritual

2: Extended Ritual

3: Content

4: Feelings About Content

5: Feelings About Each Other

Photo by Rita Willaert [link]

5 Levels of Communication

Page 13: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

5: Feelings About Each Other

Hardest

Riskiest

Most powerful for feedback

Photo by Rita Willaert [link]

5 Levels of Communication

Page 14: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / Vulnerability

1. Disclosure & vulnerability are critical to connection.

2. Effective leaders form strong connections.

Conclusion: Consider being more open.

The Bottom Line

Page 15: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by Woodleywonderworks [link]

Team & Culture

Page 16: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by Woodleywonderworks [link]

Effective Teams

1. Participation

2. Collaboration

3. Cooperation (Commitment)

Research: All of these are correlated to Group EQ

“Building Emotional Intelligence”, Wolfe & Druskat, Harvard Business Review, 2004

Page 17: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by Woodleywonderworks [link]

Inward (my emotions)

Outward(others’ emotions)

Emotional Awareness

Emotional Regulation

EQ (Individual)

Page 18: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by Woodleywonderworks [link]

Inward (Our Team)

Outward(Other Teams)

Emotional Awareness

Emotional Regulation

EQ (Group)

Page 19: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

High EQ individuals ≠ High EQ group

Group norms determine group EQ

Photo by Woodleywonderworks [link]

Group EQ

Page 20: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by jm3 [link]

Our Norms

Page 21: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

What norms do we have?

What norms do we need?

What can you do as leaders?

Photo by jm3 [link]

Our Norms

Page 22: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Feedback & Influence

Page 23: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Working AgreementsJohari Window

OPEN/PUBLIC

PRIVATE UNKNOWN

I know I don’t know

You know

You don’t know

Reactions/Feedback

Disclosure

BLIND

Page 24: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityWhy is Feedback Important?

1. Personal Development

2. Team Effectiveness

3. Stronger Relationships

Bottom Line: Feedback is how we grow

Page 25: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo: Robbie Grubbs

Can I give you some feedback?

Page 26: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by State Farm [link]Social situations ≈ Physical threats

Threat Response

Page 27: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by Andrew Vargas [link]

David RockWhat social situations triggera threat response?

StatusCertaintyAutonomyRelatednessFairness

SCARF Model

Page 28: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

So… how do we communicate feedback while minimizing defensiveness?

Page 29: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

INTENTNeeds

MotivesStories

Reality #1

BEHAVIORVerbal

Non-Verbal

Reality #2Common

IMPACTFeelings

ReactionsResponses

Reality #3

The Net

The Net (again)

Feedback

Page 30: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityHow to Give Effective Feedback

1. Focus on specific, observable behavior

2. Describe the impact of that behavior on you

3. Do not address my motives or intentions (Do listen actively if I choose to share them.)

Stay on your side of the net!

Page 31: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Old Mental Model

1. Tell others what is wrong with them

2. Goal: get them to change

New Mental Model

1. Feedback is new information about my internal reactions to your behavior

2. New information increases our shared reality

3. Goal: enter into joint problem solving

Mental Models of Feedback

Feedback is a gift!

Page 32: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityThe Simplest Feedback Model

When you do [x], I feel [y].

Page 33: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityLet’s try some examples…

1. Semira, you clearly don’t care about this presentation.

2. Semira, I noticed that you are looking at your phone. You are clearly bored with this presentation.

3. Semira, I noticed that you are looking at your phone. I am feeling anxious about whether I am doing a good job with this presentation.

Page 34: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by Ana Karenina [link]

1:1 Feedback

Page 35: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityTips for Receiving Feedback

• Look for “Grains of Truth”– Learning is better than being right– Goal is understanding, not winning

• Listen and ask clarifying questions• Acknowledge your feelings• Gift mentality

– Say “Thank you!”

Page 36: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityTips for Constructive Feedback

• Assume good intent; be curious• Use a soft start

– Emphasize mutual goals & positive intent for the conversation

• Be aware of your own stress• Goal is joint problem solving

Page 37: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityTips for Complimentary Feedback

• Give more!!!• Do not praise to buffer criticism

– Avoid “The Sandwich”

• Do not praise to overcome resistance• Avoid platitudes. Be specific:

– Weak: “Joe, you’re a great cofounder.”– Strong: “Joe, when you give me specific feedback, I feel

more comfortable in our working relationship.”

Page 38: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityLast Reminder

Stay on your side of the net

When you do [x], I feel [y].

Use the Vocabulary of Emotions.

Page 39: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Photo by Daniel Oines [link]

Challenge Yourself

Page 40: Founder Communication Workshop - 05/21/15

Thanks, good-bye, and stay on your side of the net