Having trouble winning over that one key person at work?
Expert negotiators at the FBI and elsewhere have found active listening to be
key in any negotiation. Here are seven keys to active listening. (Also see the
companion article Secrets of
successful business negotiation" for tips from former FBI hostage negotiator Chris Voss.)
Adapted from the article "Crisis Intervention: Using
Active Listening Skills in Negotiations" by Gary W. Noesner and Mike
Webster, published in the 1997 issue of the Law Enforcement Bulletin. Full text
available at: www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/fbi/crisis_interven2.htm.
Having trouble winning over that one key person at work?
Expert negotiators at the FBI and elsewhere have found active listening to be
key in any negotiation. Here are seven keys to active listening. (Also see the
companion article Secrets of successful business negotiation" for tips
from former FBI hostage negotiator Chris Voss.)
1. Showing Your Interest: Prove you're listening by using
body language or brief verbal replies that show interest and concern. Simple
phrases such as "yes," "OK" or "I see"
effectively show you are paying attention. This encourages the other person to
continue talking and relinquish more control of the situation to the
negotiator.
2. Paraphrasing: Tell the other person what you heard
them say, either quoting them or summarizing what they said.
3. Emotion Labeling: This means attaching a tentative
label to the feelings expressed or implied by other person's words and actions.
This shows you are paying attention to the emotional aspects of what other
person is conveying. When used effectively, emotion labeling is one of the most
powerful skills available to negotiators because it helps identify the issues
and feelings driving the other person's behavior.
4. Mirroring: Repeating the last words or main idea of
other person's message. This indicates interest and understanding. For example,
a subject may say, "I'm sick and tired of being pushed around," to
which a negotiator can respond, "Feel pushed, huh?" Mirroring can be
especially helpful in the early stages of a crisis, as negotiators attempt to
establish a nonconfrontational presence, gain initial intelligence and build
rapport.
5. Open-Ended Questions: Use open-ended questions instead
of "why" questions, which could imply interrogation. If you do most
of the talking, you decrease the opportunities to learn about other person.
Effective open-ended questions include, "Can you
tell me more about that?" "I didn't understand what you just said;
could you help me better understand by explaining that further?" and,
"Could you tell me more about what happened to you today?"
6. "I" Messages: Negotiators have to avoid
being provoking when they express how they feel about certain things the other
person says or does. Using "I" statements lets you ostensibly shed
the negotiator role and react to the subject as just another person.
For instance, you might say, "We've been talking for
several hours, and I feel frustrated that we haven't been able to come to an
agreement." This is also an effective tactic if the other person verbally
attacks, because it lets you respond with, "I feel frustrated when you
scream at me, because I'm trying to help you."
Remember: Never get pulled into an argument or trade
personal attacks with a subject.
7. Effective Pauses: Any good interviewer knows the power
of the long, awkward silence. People tend to speak to fill spaces in a
conversation. Therefore, you should, on occasion, consciously create a space or
void that will encourage the other person to speak and, in the process, provide
additional information.
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