Monday, August 20, 2012

Make Your Message (Almost) as Vital as Air

Despite the millions already spent on one of the highest stakes campaigns now under way, what has either presidential candidate said that you remember? That's what I thought. Darn little, if anything.

How about you? Do people stop listening before you stop talking? Being quotable is essential to attracting more options into your life. Without it you may be rich, smart, hardworking, and even attractive and good hearted yet you are likely to lose to the person who paints a more compelling picture.

To become the top-of-mind choice in your profession or market, make your message almost as vital as oxygen. It is deceptively simple. To be remembered and repeated, include at least one of the three elements of A.I.R. in your message:

Actionable
Motivate people to take some first action, however small, and they are more likely to take another. Reduce the number of actions it takes for them to participate or to buy. To secure connection with your intended audience or market, aspire to offer the equivalent ease of Amazon Prime's one-click buying.

Early in some of my keynotes I'll sometimes say, "Turn to the most normal-looking person near you, shake hands, and ask them to be your partner" which usually evokes startled laughter as they look around. Then I add, "Move quickly or your options may get even more odd," causing a second wave of titters. They turn their bodies, smile and mirror each other in shaking hands — all behaviors that make them feel more open, and closely connected to each other and to me. That's because these actions evoke their warm side and make them look and act more alike.

Interestingness
Make your message so unexpected, novel, provocative or otherwise odd that they are compelled to pay attention even if they are supposed to be doing something else. "Love of the new," or neophilia, is hardwired into our brains at the deepest levels according to Winifred Gallagher, author of New who wrote that we "are attuned to things that are new or unfamiliar because they convey vital information about potential threats and resources."

Interestingness is perhaps the most powerful cue for grabbing attentions when other messages are always fighting for our attention.

For example, instead of admonishing Texas for dumping garbage on the roadside…See the rest of the A.I.R. formula at Harvard Business Review

Craft an Attention-Grabbing Message
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/08/make_your_message_almost_as_vi.html …. Then discover more ideas for crafting an attention-grabbing message:

http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2011/12/craft_an_attention-grabbing_me.html … and ways to boost participation and performance through apt storytelling http://www.forbes.com/sites/kareanderson/2012/08/18/5-ways-storytelling-can-boost-participation-and-performance/

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Accomplishing greater things 
T O G E T H E R
 @kareanderson

Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect

Saturday, August 18, 2012

5 Ways Storytelling Can Boost Participation and Performance

Remember how the jury consultant, played by Gene Backman, attempted to bribe jurors in the movie Runaway Jury?  It seems that jurors can be swayed by much less – by the same cues that affect us all in other settings. Here’s how.

A college professor of Jayson Zoller described a past class project in which students were offered the opportunity, by a federal judge to research ways to improve the jury deliberation process.  They researched factors as diverse as the mix of ethnic groups, ages, jury instructions and even the food jurors ate. They interviewed past jurors, trial attorneys and others players in the situation.

Much to their surprise, none of that mattered as much as one unexpected feature of the jury room.

According to Paul Smith in Lead with a Story, the shape of the table had the biggest impact. If it was rectangular, then whoever sat at the head of it “tended to dominate the conversation.”  Jurors were less open in expressing their views. Conversely they were more egalitarian when the table was round or oval. Consequently, writes Smith, it was those juries with round tables that came up with the most accurate and just verdicts.”

Hint: When you want convivial and collaborative meetings, or dinner parties you know what table shapes to seek.

But that wasn’t the biggest surprise. Learn what I discovered, reading the rest of this story at my Connected and Quotable column over at Forbes. Continue to conversation at @KareAnderson

Movingfrommetowe

Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Ping Pong Presidential Politics as Primer for Protecting Your Reputation

“Mr. President, you did not kill Osama bin Laden, America did. The work that the American military has done killed Osama bin Laden.

You did not,” asserts Ben Smith, a former Navy SEAL in a 22-minute mini-documentary created by a group of former U.S. intelligence and Special Opps operatives that was leaked to Reuters On August 15th.

Within hours, Team Obama dubbed the attack “Swift Boat tactics.”

Then Fox News pinned a label back on Obama, “Team Obama has transformed the 2012 election into a Chicago knife fight.” And the mini-documentary- related TV ads for the battle ground states haven’t even aired yet.

Ping pong back and forth faster.

The speed of attack and response is spiraling up. Minutes matter in how swiftly opponents must respond in this non-stop battle for the presidency. Every corporation and cause-backer should follow this multi-million dollar campaign as a free primer on the pitfalls and the practical policies to put in place to protect reputation in this “always on” world.

See, for example, how long (in Internet time) the delayed, uneven response to the “loses girl on solo trip” story is sticking to United Airlines. Or compare the usually adept Southwest Airlinesflubbed response to the glitch in its Flash one-day ticket promotion as compared to El Al Israel Airlines’ customer-delighting, rapid response success in its response to a ticket offer error.

From my consulting with companies on rapid response preparedness, I have found that many smart leaders in the C-suite make certain mistakes.

Top management sometimes:

• Believes that they are already adequately prepared and believe that the savvy and connections that got them to the top will service them sufficiently well in crisis.

• Puts higher priority on the problems or opportunities they are currently facing rather than on the ones that may be bigger yet haven’t yet happened.

• Is reluctant to loosen control and involve other employees in creating and participating in rapid response.

• Prefers to hold onto their turf in the firm and their close relationships outside of it rather than collaborating with colleagues to consider how to best leverage their intertwined relationships.

Here are some hints for leveraging the collective talent and connections inside your organization to quell a crisis or capture a sudden opportunity.

1. Identify and follow your key stakeholders

Involving top management, collectively agree on a core list of your most avid customers and fans and your current and potential critics, competitors or other kind of opponents. Craft a similar list of your second tier stakeholders.

2. Create a Key Contact System and corresponding Ambassador Corp

To ensure that your consistently support and strengthen your relationships with key allies identified in #1, match one lead employee with each ally. Provide a simple internal Ambassador Ecosystem through which all employees can provide information on each key contact and be tapped to support an Ambassador, if called upon, in outreach to the key contact.

Key to the success of such an approach is the “Give first and well” belief. From all parts of your organization your people regularly, relevantly and authentically provide adept support and praise to key stakeholders before the you ever need to ask for it.

Also match an Ambassador to each current or potential critic or opponent to track their actions and, wherever, build relationships with them. Recall the saying, “Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.” In this increasingly connected yet complex world, The Law of Unintended Consequences happens more often. Interests can shift. One of your most formidable former critics might become one of your most informed allies.

Provide training on the use of the Ecosystem, and on best methods for supporting allies. Soon after your system is in place, the best learning and improvements will bubble up from the participants themselves. Giving them that responsibility and opportunity builds esprit de corps and demonstrates that top management supports social business.

3. Strengthen cross-functional connections between departments

Create concrete cross-functional communication between internal departments such as public affairs, media relations, communications, customer service, and marketing. Establish a rapid response / SWAT team approach, create “what if” scenarios for both bad and good news hitting and regularly practice your coordinated response, using one of the scenarios.  If you haven’t already done so, include related social media training and a plan for rapid response that includes comprehensive use of it.

4. Help employees become more quotable

The art of framing a situation so vividly it becomes the way that others see it will become increasingly vital in our information-gutted world.

As a quick primer, here are some of the traits of a message that will stick in others minds and move them to share it with others:

A.   Specific

The specific detail proves the general conclusion yet never the reverse. Begin with the specific detail – swift boating, for example, to then make your generalization more credible.

B. Pithy

The fewer the words the greater the chance that people will read it and remember it.

C. Familiar

Compare your point to an action, quote, personality or other immediately recognizable piece of information and you are piggybacking on that imbedded information to stick it in their brain.

For related insights see Before You Start Talking, Think by the authors of the new book, Talk, Inc. and the eBook,  Moving From Me to We.


Movingfrommetowe

Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect

Monday, August 6, 2012

How to Avoid Relationship-Damaging Mental Traps

How to Avoid Relationship-Damaging Mental Traps

Ashamed as I am to admit after all these years, my instinctive reaction is to defend or retreat still kicks into gear when I feel wronged or simply slightly mistreated.

When others appear to be behaving badly, we tend to sink into our own feelings, blinding ourselves to theirs

Out of our primitive fight or flight instinct, our first move is self-protection. Empathy evaporates.  Friendships fray.  Instead, as in defensive driving where we look several cars ahead to avoid accidents, recognize these traps. The ultimate reward, as Peter Bregman so astutely noted in “Do You Know What You Are Feeling” is that you can actually deepen a relationship rather than damage it.

Avoid Some of the Damaging Ways of Thinking and Behaving

1. Mental Filter

You pick out a single negative detail and dwell on it, ignoring all others. For example, one sentence of perceived criticism erases all praise you have received from someone. Just like healthy marriages, enduring relationships need at least a 5:1 ratio of positive to negative interactions to thrive. Those with negative Mental Filters need a much higher ratio and, sadly, are less likely to attract it.

“If it’s mentionable, it’s manageable.” ~ Mr. Rogers

2. Over-Generalization

You see a single, negative event as the extension of a never-ending pattern of negativity. Probably you use “never” or “always” when thinking speaking or writing about it.  This is one of the three patterns of pessimistic people cited by Marty Seligman in Learned Optimism for which he offers alternative behaviors.

“Every person you fight with has many other people in his life with whom he gets along quite well. You cannot look at a person who seems difficult to you without also looking at yourself.” ~ Jeffrey Kottler

3. All or Nothing Perception

You see things as white or black categories. If a situation is anything less than perfect, you see it as a total failure.  You probably have trouble making a decision, when faced with aplethora of choices. As Barry Schwartz notes in The Paradox of Choice, you are less likely to be satisficing — making a choice sooner, with less stress and with which you feel comfortable.

“We don’t see things as they are. We see things as we are.” ~ Anais Nin
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See more of the most frequent mental traps, and what you can do about them at my column (that you can “follow”) Connected and Quotable in theLeadership section at Forbes. Find more ideas on human behavior at https://twitter.com/KareAnderson.

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T O G E T H E R

Accomplishing greater things 
Movingfrommetowe

Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect

Friday, July 27, 2012

Unexpected Customer-Attracting Event Turns Bland Moments Into Grand Memory

I have a new column over at Forbes and the first posting covers some surprise events I co-created awhile back. I thought of them recently and here’s why. You have probably noticed that, when many people are waiting in line, they are often restlessly staring at their phones even if they are with someone.  We noticed that one lovely summer evening whilst in a movie theatre line in Mill Valley. The air was fragrant with the scent from a nearby flower stand and there were several rather eccentric people passing by.  Yet, we observed that there were as many couples and groups of friends looking down at their screens as there were people talking with each other.

That scene reminded me of how many of us love unexpected opportunities to talk with friends, friends of friends and strangers because serendipitous moments of shared connection often happen. And it is often just plain fun. Sometimes we remember those conversations longer than the thing we were going to. That’s one of the reasons I found it fun to co-create an attention grabbing, customer-attracting experience for people in some other movie theatre lines awhile back.

Yes, I described exactly what we did that got people in line to smile, laugh and starting talking with each other —  in my new column at Forbes, Quotable and Connected. Not only did our surprise event introduce whole groups of people to a delectable new product, it forged friendships among the individuals who collaborated on it, leading to further profitable partnerships. Who knows? You might adapt our partnership method to your situation and also attract new customers and free media coverage.

Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Hooked?

When I was a reporter covering business trends and profiles of executives throughout Europe the stories usually fascinated me, yet I was often more struck by the off-hand advice of my interpreter, a young French woman. Amélie has become a lifelong friend, by the way.

Becoming Besotted by You

With great equanimity Amélie once suggested that I, “think of it as a fish biting the bait and getting the hook caught in his mouth“ when giving advice on romance. “Once a man is hooked on you he only sees the things you do as adorable. They reinforce his besotted view of you.” And, yes she did actually use the word “besotted”, which also amazed me as no American had ever used that word in conversation with me, up to that point.

Now, it seems that her advice is backed up by research and that the phenomenon affects both sexes.

If you act as if someone is attractive to you, you actually become more “susceptibility to their charms, and increase the likelihood of falling in love,” according to researcher Richard Wiseman.

This is akin to the research that shows you can smile your way into a better mood, also dubbed the “As If” principle.

That may be why people in arranged marriages are more likely to fall deeper in love over time while the opposite happens in other marriages, suggests Wiseman. Those in marriages arranged for them are primed by the notion that they families had their best interests at heart and thus their spouse is the right person for them to love.

Want to become more loveable?

It occurs to me that this effect could be helpful in most any relationship or interaction. Act as if you truly like someone and it is more likely that you will.

Whenever you feel bathed in the feeling that someone really enjoys my company, don’t you instinctively like them and respond positively to what they do and say? It appears to be a near universal reaction.

People like people who like them

That back-and-forth positivity — as people like Bill Clinton, Ellen DeGeneres and Nick Kristof are famously aware – can create a spiral up into a strong bond of admiration.

To nudge myself into using the acting “As If” cue, I look for the part of someone I can most admire or like, when first meeting or re-meeting them.

This is most difficult, of course, when you have a prior history if friction to overcome.  It is also when the approach can be most valuable to turn around a souring relationship or at least mitigate the friction.

Now here’s a three-part opportunity, perhaps disguised as a challenge I am publically giving myself, and you.  Try this act “As If” you adore them approach on three people – the next individual you encounter in person, someone you care deeply about and someone who often irritates you.

If you are eager to turn the page to a new chapter of your life adventure with others, consider taking one or more these concrete steps soon, before you are distracted by your usual habits:

1. Read …

• Richard Wiseman’s new book Rip It Up: The radically new approach to changing your life: The Simple Idea That Changes Everything.

• Split-Second Persuasion by Kevin Dutton to discover sounds and other cues that cause us to shift our mood or change our mind almost instantly.

• My bookMoving From Me to We, which offers a road map into that new chapter of the adventure your life is meant to be.

It includes over 300 research-based tips to become more connected with others in ways that deepen mutual support.

Tips also cover ways to become more frequently quoted.

2. Instigate a connection with an unlikely ally by honoring them. It takes just a few minutes via the #OneforOne movement launched by Deanna ZandtMelissa Pierce, and Andrew Rasiej.

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Kare@SayitBetter.com

Accomplishing greater things 
T O G E T H E R
Kare Anderson

Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect

Thursday, June 28, 2012

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Take a Life-Changing Way to Celebrate This Holiday

What’s next for you?

What do you really want to Dare Dream Do now?

See this holiday as an opportunity to reach deep inside to consider what you are most called to do at this time in your life.

What’s atrophied inside your soul?

Most of all what are the passionate interests you keep putting off?

Jumpstart your new life this holiday:

1. What if you spend quiet time contemplating the dream you most want to come true?

2. Making it more concrete in the here and now?

3. Then take a walk/talk with someone close and bounce around the “what if?” idea that keeps bubbling up inside of you.

Imagine actually turning the page to the next chapter of the adventure story you are truly meant to live.  From getting clearabout your core strengths to picturing the new characters, scenes and storyline you want to craft, to the very specific methods you can employ to bring out other’s better side so they see and support yours, you can take steps, beginning right now.

To support you on this path, at every step of the way, get Moving From Me to We, my eBookof over 300 tips, buttressed by stories to take you into and through that next chapter where you can experience more joy and accomplishment by using your best talent more often.

Why wait any longer to become a bigger co-author — along with God or the fates, however you see the universe —  to have the life you truly want to live?

As you celebrate our country’s independence why not initiate your own? Ironically, as you are grounded in your dream and act out of your own greater strengths more often, you may find you are savoring more meaningful moments with others.

I look forward to learning with you and from you as we share adventures along the way.


Accomplishing greater things 
T O G E T H E R
Kare Anderson
Talk on Twitter? @kareanderson

Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect

Friday, June 22, 2012

Gut Instincts Quiz: See How to Get Along Better

How well do you understand how gut instincts influence your likes, dislikes, and even your attention span? Want to find out?

Here are nine questions. Some of the answers may surprise you.

1. Do people get along better when talking to each other if they are facing each other or if they are standing side by side?

2. Who tends to face the person with whom they are speaking (men or women) and who tends to stand side by side, facing more or less the same way (women or men)?

3. If you want to increase the chance of knowing if someone is lying to you, what is one helpful phenomenon to notice about that person’s face when he or she is talking to you?

4. If you want to keep someone’s attention, is it better to wear a patterned shirt or blouse or a plain blouse or shirt?

5. What is the most directly emotional of all the senses, bypassing the thinking facilities and causing a quicker, more intense reaction in the limbic (emotions) system than any other sense?

6. Are you more likely to get someone to support you or buy something if you give them something up front, unasked, before you ask for the favor?

7. Who tends to maintain wider peripheral vision when entering a new place, men or women?

8. Who tends to be more specific in their descriptions, adults or children?

9. Of the previous eight questions, which is the one that people are most likely to ask for the answer to first.

Hint: It is the same one that, if you are reading these questions in a group, people are most likely to comment on first.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Answers to Quiz

1. People get along better when they “sidle” stand or sit side by side rather than when they face each other.

2. Men are more likely to sidle than women.

3. Observe the timing and duration of the first “reactive” expression on someone’s face when you think that person is not telling you the truth.

When lying, most people can put an innocent expression on their faces, yet few (except pathological liars) will have the right timing or duration of that expression.

If you ignore the expression itself and, instead, consider whether the timing and duration of the expression seem natural, you’ll greatly increase your chances of knowing if that person is lying.

4. Wearing a plain (un-patterned) shirt or blouse will increase the chances that the listener will hear you longer. A patterned top or ornate jewelry or loud tie will break up the listener’s attention span sooner, and that person is more likely to go on more “mental vacations” sooner.

5. Smell is the most directly emotional of the senses. Some natural (non-artificial chemical) scents can refresh or relax you and others in your home or work place. Vanilla, apple, and chocolate are the scents Americans are most likely to like.

6. Yes, up to 14 times more likely to get their support or a purchase. This gut instinct is often called “reciprocity reflex.”

7. Women. That is why storeowners who serve men will increase their sales if they have prominent, eye-level signage over large displays where men will see the signage soon after entering the store.

8. Children are more vividly specific, hitting their prime around fourth grade. Then unfortunately, they begin to speak in generalities, more like adults.

Yet the specific detail proves the general conclusion, not the reverse. Specifics are more memorable and more credible.

9. Question number 3. It seems that we have an inordinate interest in lying.

Three ways to get along better with others, now that you know some of your gut instinctual reactions

MOTION

Finding 1: Move to Motivate

Motion is emotional.

It increases the emotional intensity of whatever is happening. Further, people remember more the things they dislike or fear that they experience in motion, more than things they enjoy.

Motion is always an intensifying two-edge sword.

Motion attracts attention and causes people to remember more of what’s happening and feel more strongly about it, for better or for worse.

Tip: TV visual possibility:

This is another justification for golf.

Think of the golf swing. The more dimensions of motion involved (body moving up/down, left/right, backward/forward), the more memorable the motion.

Imagine the bizarre picture of someone swinging his whole body around, sweeping down low before you, and then reaching out to shake hands. While moving in many dimensions will surely make you more memorable, it won’t necessarily make you more credible.

Get others involved in motions with you that create good will: walking, sharing a meal, handing or receiving a gift, shaking hands, turning to face a new scene.  You are more likely to literally get “in sync.” As your vital signs become more similar (eye pupil dilation, skin temperature, heartbeat) you feel more familiar and thus more comfortable with each other.

PASSION

Finding 2: Deep Convictions

The more time, actions, and/or other effort someone has put into something, someone, or some course of action, the more deeply that person will believe in it, defend it, and work on it further.

Tip: If you want more from the other person, wait to ask for it after she has invested more time, energy, money, or other resources. The more someone talks about it, repeats and revises what they have said, writes it down, and explains it to others, the more deeply they will believe it. And frequently they will tell others about it.

Idea: I can give you several examples of how a TV personality could inspire an audience member or other person he or she contacts by phone to become a more passionate advocate for a product, cause, person, and so on, literally as the TV personality involves them in more actions on behalf of it . . . and could follow up by phone or in person later to see how the intensity of conviction lingers.

LIKEABILITY

Finding 3: True Timing

If a person likes the way he acts when he is around you, he often sees the qualities in you that he most admires.

The opposite is also true.

Two universal truths:

People like people who are like them, and people like people who like them.

Tips:

Pick the moments when someone feels most at ease and happy to move the relationship forward.

Don’t make suggestions or requests when they are acting in an unbecoming way your efforts will only backfire.

Praise the behavior you want to flourish.

Don’t ask for more from someone until they have invested more time, money, other resources, or emotional “chits” in the relationship.

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Talk on Twitter? @kareanderson

Accomplishing greater things 
T O G E T H E R
Kare Anderson
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B007X6V8V4

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Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Next Time Don’t Shoot Yourself in the Foot: 39 Negotiation Tips POSTED

Long ago one of my heroes, the unflappable and well-liked Howard Raiffa once said something like, “It is easier to deal with a jerk who knows what he wants than a pleasant person who doesn’t.”

He also offered this gem in his classic book, The Art and Science of Negotiation: “We act like a zero-sum society, when in reality there is a lot of non zero-sum fat to be skimmed off to everyone’s mutual advantage.”

From Raiffa and others along the way, I have learned these maxims and unevenly applied them to situations in my work and life.  I could have been more mindful and been able to use them more, so sharing them here is myself-nudge to do so. We scar our lives with self-inflicted, unnecessary and, sadly, sometimes unresolved conflict.

We do so through our stubborn and repeated blindness, most often by thinking that when they do something it means the same thing as when we do it, and by not:

• Stepping into the other person’s shoes to see the situation their way

• Demonstrating even a smidgen of good will, especially in the face of rancor where that response can sometimes quell yet rarely escalate the battle

Yet the fourth most common relationship-sabotaging mistake is one that even the laziest amongst us could sidestep with a little forethought. And I do literally mean forethought, so it is the first of 39 powerfully simple ways you can reach better agreements more easily.

Using some of them you may literally get more out of the big and little negotiations you face… and be able to preserve the relationship or, at least not provoke their desire to avoid you or retaliate, in the moment and later.

1. Anticipate what you want out of a situation before you go into it.

Know your most important goal in the situation in advance, then you will be more able to listen, open and flexible in the situation.  Without a goal, you have less context, thus you listen less and are more likely to be rigid and reactionary.  You can always change your goal in the situation.

2.  Demonstrate visible goodwill upfront.

Establish your willingness to find a compromise and ability to be genial even and especially if you don’t like the person or the situation.  This is first a commitment to your own standard of behavior, and secondly the best way to keep the channels open.

3.  Know that “less is often more.”

Especially in the beginning, listen more, talk and move less and keep your motions and voice lower and slower.  These animal behaviors increase the chances that others will feel more safe and comfortable around you.

4. Go slow to go fast.

When you first meet and re-meet people, move and talk more slowly and obliquely.  Give them room to “own their territory” and feel heard. Later you can be more direct and move quickly.

For role models, watch of the classic TV lead characters (with the sound on and off) inMurder, She WroteMatlock and Columbo.

5. Act as if the world is going to treat you well.

Look to their positive intent, especially when they appear to have none, and you are more likely to eventually bring out their more positive side.

6. Play with your full deck.

You have a wide variety of physical and verbal ways of behaving, from understated to outspoken, most of which you’ve lost after around fourth grade.  Now you have a more narrow range of behaviors.  “Play with your full deck” by using more “cards”, that is more ways of reacting to others.   Widen your range of behaviors to act more like the person you are with: voice level and rage, kinds and number of body motions, etc.

When you are more like them, you will feel more  familiar to them so you can get “in sync” and they can feel more comfortable with you and what you have to say.

7. Step outside yourself to see the situation as the other people might.

In hostile situations we tend to focus on the best parts of how we are acting and the worst parts of how they are acting.  This causes escalation.  Presume innocence.  You can’t support the positive side of people by giving more negative feedback.

8. Make an instinctual habit to refer to the other person’s interests first.

Practice the thoughtful approach to connecting with others,  “Triangle Talk” and refer to their interests first (you), then how the topic relates to your mutual interests (us) and finally, how it relates to your interests (me.) Research shows they will listen sooner, longer, remember more and assume you have a higher I.Q. than if you were to address your interests first, and then theirs.

9. Act to enable them to save face and self – correct and you will preserve the relationship.

If you think they are lying, keep asking questions (until you lose control or run out of imagination)  rather than accusing them of misrepresentation.  Asking questions gives you the time to see if, if fact, you were mistaken, thus possibly saving face for yourself.  If your suspicions prove correction, by asking questions, you are gentling inquiring rather than blaming and allowing them to acknowledge a mistake or misunderstanding and saving face.  They are then more likely to correct the situation.   You also leave room to escalate later if they do not acknowledge the error.

10. Honor commonalities more frequently than bringing up the differences.

What ever you refer to most and most intensely will be the center of your relationship.  Keep referring to the part of them and their points that you can support and want to expand upon.

11. Don’t assume they readily see the picture you are presenting.

Do not presume that the other person recognizes all the benefits of what you are proposing.  Take time to vividly describe them in their terms.

12. Don’t push to close.

When considering how fast to move in suggesting a “final offer” or other form of agreement, lean  towards moving slower, especially at first.  The best results, as with a Chinese meal, happen with the most time spent on advanced preparation and groundwork, so the final part goes most smoothly and quickly.

13. Have a main spokesperson.

If there is more than one person representing you or your group’s  interests, make sure that only one person is responsible for taking the lead in discussions and that each person know the content area and personality style they will represent.

14. Don’t offer what you can’t accept.

Do not bluff in making an offer you cannot life with, if accepted.  For example, including parts which you believe the other person would find unacceptable and not accept and then would move onto another alternative.

15. Make the same offer a different way.

Do not overlook rearranging the same elements of an offer to find a more mutually attractive compromise.  For example, in money, consider alternative timing and division of payments.

16. Walk your talk.

Find ways to reflect your values in how you approach your work and all the people in your life. Your mission gives you your daily context and boundaries.

17. Be present.

As many contests require, “You have to be present to win.”  Keep grounded and involved in what is happening right now, what is being said at the moment, glancing to the past and future only for context and balance.

18. Consider how you say what you say.

Consider their perspective in how you make any request.  For example, a priest once asked his superior if he could smoke while praying, which led to a denial of his request.  Yet if he’d asked if he could pray while smoking he might have received a positive response.

19. Make and keep agreements.

In an often unpredictable world, you build an “emotional deposit’ of trust when your words and actions aren’t contradictory.  Then when you make mestakes, as you will, they have built up a level of trust to help them forgive your lapse.

20. Have a larger vision of yourself as your reference point for making daily choices.

Establish your central life purpose and core values and let your actions reflect them.  Your choices are much easier to make, you will inspire loyalty and attract others to act out their best side when around you.

21. Take your high road.

Have a core set of values and a vision of your service and role in your life; relate your vision to your  mission of your organization, your role among family and friends and your actions in reachign agreements

22. Use time, rather than letting it control you.

Plan and act early to avoid last minute rushing and thinking.  Do not be panicked when you have unavoidable outside time constraints.  Use the time ressure to get more accomplished in less time.

23. Find fairness first.

Remember it is usually more important to be — and appear to be– fair than well-liked.  And, while not mutually exclusive, they are not always synonymous options.

24. Agree amongst yourselves first.

If more than one person is involved in representing one perspective in a conflict, it is always helpful to agree on the bottom line first among yourselves; and to not mistake knowing the content to be discussed with agreeing on your common bottom line.  We don’t always hear the same things, even among genial colleagues.  Thus your bottom line and specific approach bear repeating amongst yourselves before entering discussions with others.

25. Always show respect in your process even if you can’t respect the person.

If you embarrass someone while trying to reach agreement, you may never have their full attention again.

26. Recognize your blind spots and your hot buttons.

When you find yourself getting angry with someone else, look to yourself before lashing out.

27. There is no single “right method.”

The best way to reach an agreement depends more on the situation than on a set negotiating style or method.

28. Show respect for yourself by respecting them.

Even and especially when you have the upper hand, do not make a victim of the underdog.

29. Trust the power of trust over all other qualities.

Being right, smart or hardworking is often no help in protecting your interests.  Being trusted to act in mutual best interests is often more valuable.

30. Be a “synthesizer “leader.

The person who listens longest at first, then most refers to others’ points in common as a way of stating their own perspective will eventually gain the most power in a group.

31. Support their pride in how they are performing well.

The more they like the way they are when they are around you, the greater the chance is that they will like you, even give you credit for things you did not do and go out of the way to help you, event to their own detriment.  On the other hand, if they do not like the way they are when they are around you, they will blame you for it, more than they are consciously aware.  They won’t give you credit for things you did and may even sabotage projects on which you are working, even to their own detriment.

32. There is no single “right method.”

The best way to reach an agreement depends more on the situation than on a set negotiating style or method.

33. Make them feel safe and respected

In every situation, people are guided by their fears and opportunities, their instinctual likes and dislikes.  They will always respond quicker, stronger and longer to what they fear and dislike.  Acknowledge and respond first to their concerns and they will be open to hearing about the opportunities.

34. Help them change.

People change most easily when they believe others they respect have already done something similar.  Your third party endorsements from those other people are a credible grounding for your points.

35. Paint your biggest, best picture for others.

Give people a vivid picture of all that they could have and they often won’t settle for the lesser option they originally considered.

36. Show them the positive longer view.

Many seemingly foolish disagreements and negotiations are simply acting to prevent looking foolish later on.  The best peacemakers work hardest to allay the other person’s worries first.

37. Look for the real source of the anger.

When someone is angry with you, consider that she may be upset with herself before you respond.

38. Problems seldom exist at the level at which they are discussed.

When you are involved in any argument lasting more than ten minutes, ask yourself:  “Are we arguing about what our disagreement is really about or is there a deeper conflict not being discussed?”

39. Aim humor at yourself.

One way to release tension is to poke fun at yourself.  Make reference to a situation where you did something foolish.

If you are moved to learn more about negotiation I recommend Raiffa’s Negotiation Analysis::  The Science and Art of Collaborative Decision Making. Tammy Lenski’s thoughtful blog, Conflict Zen and my slender volume, Resolving Conflict Sooner.

Also, if you are ready to turn your life into the adventure story you are meant to live, then get the roadmap to make it happen: Moving From Me to We, my ebook, with over 330 behavioral research-based tips, along with success stories for under $10.

See two of my columns over at Harvard Business Review, What Captures Your Attention Controls Your Life (over 300 comments) andCraft an Attention-Grabbing Message (over 250 comments)  — and share your ideas with me at Twitter.

I’d be honored to speak at your conference.

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Accomplishing greater things 
T O G E T H E R
Kare Anderson
http://www.sayitbetter.com/speak

Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Give Unforgettable Gifts by Involving Others

Give Unforgettable Gifts by Involving Others

Your apt, unexpected gift can reflect the flip side of Kim Kardashian’s present to Kayne West, a $750,000 Lamborghini, which may, in fact, have cost her nothing if the carmaker gave it to her as a product placement opportunity.
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In a celebrity obsessed, time-pressed and increasingly transient world where more people are working and living on their own, your thoughtful gift may be one of the most indelibly happy memories for someone.

A loved one, work colleague or even a stranger — all present opportunities for unexpected giving.

Even some prisonersnurses and, perhaps you know, first-hand, that us-building giving not only tenderizes those who receive a gift but, even more, those who choose to be unconditional givers.

Simply put your presents can be acts of collective giving:

1. Fill your life with positive, meaningful memories with others

2. Make you more empathic, sharpening your observations of other’s needs and interests as you picture the present that would most delight them

3. Pull others closer into your life, deepening relationships and sometimes jumpstarting rituals.

4. Reinforce the better side in others so they are more likely to see and support yours

5. Inspire others to imitate your gift giving, after they receive your gifts, observe their being given or hear about the gift.

Here is just one way to make an unexpectedly deep difference in someone’s life by how and where you give:

Honor them in front of some of the people who most matter to them. When Juan was chosen to be the employee of the month at the factory where he worked, Madge, his boss, asked others on his shift, “Is there some group to which he belongs?”

She discovered that he had belonged to a bonsai club for a decade. Madge called the club president to ask if she could present the cash award, at a club meeting, briefly describing his innovative ideas that had caused him to be chosen.

Not only did the president agree, he asked three members to be ready to toast Juan and stationed another member to photograph the lively ceremony. Later he included some of the photos in the club’s blog along with a description of the unusual ceremony.

He decided to sent two of the candid photos of the toasts to the editor of the local paper, who, because of the unexpectedly slant to how an award was given, chose to cover the “good news” story. The canny editor understood that such a story generated bragging rights for all participants, thus giving the story legs, something every editor and reporter craves.

He also sent the photos to Madge who posted them on the factory floor and included two in the employee newsletter.

Imagine if all the participants described the event on their Facebook page and Tweeted about it, then created pages on both Twylah and RebelMouse.  Then more people might hear about Juan’s honor – and the people who joined in celebrating it with him.

How can you magnify time impact of an honor or other recognition by involving people from more parts of the recipient’s life?

Give in a ways that multiply the opportunities for joy the recipient – and those who matter to them – to feel honored. Shining a brighter light on someone in these ways often means that others get to feel the warmth of participation.

Yet know that there’s an inherent paradox of gifts, according to Dr. SunWolf:  “I know what I have given you.  I do not know what you have received.”

A final takeaway: We can give without loving, but we cannot love without giving.

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Accomplishing greater things 
T O G E T H E R
Kare Anderson
Talk on Twitter? @kareanderson

"What Captures Your Attention Controls Your Life”, my latest column on Harvard Business Review, is currently

“Most Viewed”
 

1. See tips to be heard without shouting in a Harvard Business Review column that attracted the second most comments ever there

2. Discover over 300 ways to become more likable, respected, supported & frequently quoted by turning your life into the adventure story you were truly meant to live.

3. Bring Kare to speak at your conference on exactly how to become more quotable and connected

4. See how meeting planners can craft a stronger conference story

Posted via email from Kare Anderson on Communicate to Connect