Conversation Principles Columbus OH

In the business world, conversation is a fundamental key to success. The following article offers six tips for affective communication.

Local Companies

New Directions Career Center
614-849-0028
199 E Rich St
Columbus, OH
Teach Enterprise
614-857-1811
899 E Broad St
Columbus, OH
Career & Workforce Development Center
614-237-9675
1070 College Ave
Columbus, OH
Crossley Celia D & Associates Ltd
614-538-2808
3011 Bethel Rd Ste 201
Columbus, OH
MidWest Ministry Development Service
614-442-8822
1520 Old Henderson Rd
Columbus, OH
Cova-Center of Vocational Alternatives
614-294-7117
3770 N High St
Columbus, OH
Buckeye Resumes
614-861-6606
2092 Atterbury Ave
Columbus, OH
R L Stevens & Associates
614-431-3653
1105 Schrock RD
Columbus, OH
Research Associates International
614-885-1405
1425 E Dublin Granville RD
Columbus, OH
Worthington Career Services
614-890-1645
6636 Belleshire St
Columbus, OH

1. In an authentic conversation change happens. Effective collaboration, discovery and coaching can happen on the dance floor of conversation.

2. Begin a conversation with questions that set the tone for a respectful exchange. Just ask to-the-point information-seeking questions, like: 'What is our intention? What are you here for? How do you want to spend our time together?' Be clear of your intention prior to the conversation.

3. Conversations are not meant to be structured. Be open to conversations that you are unprepared for and focused on the interests of the other person (not your purpose). You know all about yourself already – get curious about the other.

4. Collaborate with potential rather than colluding with issues. Rather than getting pulled into solving problems that may not matter to the other person, allow time for the person to get to what's really important. Provide spaces where they can express their doubts and fears by being a thoughtful listener--without taking on the responsibility to fix or debate the issue. After all, you have invited the person to talk about what matters to her or him, not you, so allow time for the articulation of those thoughts and feelings.

5. Personal transformation happens when the right questions get asked--not by providing answers. When you invite people to answer their own questions, they discover what they were not aware of---and what is needed to move forward. When you focus on the solution, you are trying to sell the person something. Personal discovery is capacity building. Personal transformation leads to corporate transformation—one person at a time.

6. Claim value for the conversation. Articulating what you value from the conversation and inviting the other person to articulate what was valuable for them, creates a space of appreciation and acknowledgement. It also provides for reflection on the value of exploring ideas with others – building capacity for collaboration.

About the Author:

Judith Richardson, MA, BA, B.Ed, MEC
Recipient of International Coach of the Year and Canadian Progress Club Women of Excellence Award as Entrepreneur and Innovator, Judith works and plays across North America, Europe, Jamaica, Siberia, Australia, Sweden, Israel and Russia. A gifted speaker, teacher, organizational consultant, and executive coach, Judith Richardson combines exuberant, loving optimism and play with seriously-honed skills, limitless thinking, a piercing intelligence and an uncanny ability to weave in concrete concepts – grounding vision when we aren’t even aware of it. Judith works with the greater and profound potential of a person, company, project or organization. www.ponoconsultants.com Judith@ponoconsultants.com (902) 434-6695

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Featured Local Company

New Directions Career Center

614-849-0028
199 E Rich St
Columbus, OH