|
|
|
COMMUNICATION IN EVERYDAY LIFE Assertiveness skills Body language Communicating with your children Conversation skills Difficult People Emotional Maturity Enhancing your marriage Family Life Interpersonal relationships Speaking skills Writing skills BUSINESS COMMUNICATION Business ethics Business etiquette Business writing Communication in the workplace Cross-cultural communication Conflict resolution Creative thinking Crisis management Customer relations Effective meetings Job-hunting skills Management strategies Marketing communication Negotiating skills Networking in business Presentation skills Team building Technology and communication Telephone marketing
|
Directness Takes Courage |
|
|
If someone has food stuck in their teeth after a meal, do you tell them, or do you just let it go, only to giggle about it with someone else later?
What prevents you from telling that person - perhaps a fear of embarrassing them?
Regardless of how embarrassed that person was, they would probably be grateful had you said something, to spare them from further humiliation. That's the power of directness - the more you use it, the more trusted and credible you become as a reliable source for reality.
Indirectness also has strength. It devours courage and it's the greatest source for toxic communication in a relationship. It's what people don't say that creates long-term toxicity, rather than what they do say.
Directness is candidly asserting your reality to others, face-to-face. Candidly asserting your reality transcends most people's definition of honesty and takes you to a place of not withholding what's going on inside you. It means being open to telling your truth and getting it "out there" into the world.
Naturally, this isn't an easy task - especially if an organizational culture doesn't support the truth and actually punishes the messengers.
| Far too many people use voicemail or email for messages that should be delivered face to face |
The face-to-face component of directness is the conduit that allows the most reality to flow through.
The telephone, voicemail and email are all good conversation tools, but face-to-face conversation is the best medium for sending certain messages. When sharing anything that could be perceived as change, ambiguous or hurtful, face-to-face conversations allow you to convey empathy and more accurately read others' emotions.
My experience tells me that far too many people use voicemail and email for messages that should be delivered face-to-face. And according to some research conducted by HR consulting firm, Towers-Perrin, 94 per cent of employees say there is a need for greater openness and candor in organizational communication from leaders.
Employees want to hear the truth about their company, their pay and benefits and their jobs. The report also finds that the most credible source of information comes from face-to-face meetings with their immediate supervisors or managers.
There are a lot of reasons people site for not being direct. Here are some of the reasons we hear most:If you catch yourself saying any of these statements, than perhaps it's an indication that you need to be more direct.
Direct, face-to-face conversations are not always about being nice and they're not always easy. But, employees owe it to themselves, their peers and their leaders to be direct. And leaders owe it to the bottom line and their people to create an environment of openness.
Being direct takes courage. And the upfront investment of discomfort is worth the eventual paybacks of respect, trust, collaboration and goodwill.
|
|
Copyright 2005 by Brady Wilson. All rights reserved.
Brady Wilson is co-founder of Juice Inc. a strategic communications training company that helps leaders create a culture where it’s easier to get results and it feels good to work. For more information about Juice Inc. and for many uselful resources, visit http://www.JuiceFactor.ca. To contact Brady, email him at info@JuiceFactor.ca.
Some Related Articles:
Mending Broken Working Relationships
Explain Yourself! The Reason Why Excuses Sabotage Your Success
Fixing Broken Trust
'Lone Ranger' Managers Have Had Their Day
The Boss Who Didn't Understand Why His Staff Wasn't Reading His Mind
Outcome Thinking: Getting Results Without the Boxing Gloves
|
|