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Archives for August 2017

Your Job is to Unlock the Answers Within

 

Foundation of Agile Coaching

Asking powerful questions over giving advice is the foundation of a coaching approach.

The days of the rambling monologue are over. Thankfully. Agile team leaders today are expected to stimulate conversation and collaboration. As Forbes Magazine describes, “today’s great leaders understand how to unlock hidden value and unleash creativity and passion with the use of well-timed questions.”

Timing of Questions

Knowing when to ask a question is a useful skill.

Knowing how to ask a powerful question is a critical skill.  

Asking powerful questions over giving advice is the foundation of a coaching approach.  Whether the coaching is a one-on-one coaching conversation or a team-coaching conversation, the belief is the same: People have their own answers within. They are naturally creative, resourceful and complete.  Leaders, like coaches, who hold this belief seek to unlock other’s perspectives, contributions and answers.   

The Role of the “Unlocker”

This starts with assuming good intent, i.e., the person is doing his or her best.  Assuming good intent is inherent to effective listening.  Effective listening will:

  • Suspend judgment and communicate curiosity and respect
  • Channel the attention
  • Bring to the surface any underlying assumptions
  • Invite new possibilities
  • Generate energy and forward movement

Ultimately, when done well, a coaching conversation using effective listening creates deep meaning and evokes more powerful questions.

Some skeptics doubt the value of powerful questions.  It could be that they don’t hold the belief that people have their own answers within.  As Peter Drucker, well-known management consultant, educator and author says, “Asking questions invites creativity, is empowering, and inspires us to consider alternatives…[it] helps us to calibrate and access our own capability to solve problems…building our self-confidence and self-efficacy.” Let’s look at what happens when we ask powerful questions.

What Makes a Question Powerful?  

  • It’s short.  It is only 7 words or less.
  • It’s open-ended. It cannot be answered with a yes or no.
  • It focuses on the future, rather than the past.
  • It starts with “What” or “How”.

What Makes a Question Less Powerful or Not Powerful At All?

  • It starts with “Why”.  To some people, the word “Why”, sounds blaming (flashback to “Why did you spill your milk?!”) and they can take a defensive stance, even without meaning to.
  • It is closed-ended or seeks to gather data that the person already knows, and doesn’t require any reflection.

          A: “How many people are on your team?”

         B: “Ten.”

         A: “How long have you been doing that?”

         B: “Two years.”

These are not inherently bad questions, but they are stronger when followed by a powerful question.  

        A: “How many people are on your team?”

        B: “Ten.”

        A: “What is your pattern with this team?” *

        B: “I tend to let the two most outspoken people dominate.”

        A: “How long have you been doing that?”

        B: “Two years.”

        A: “What works well about using that method?” *

        B: “Some team members have started coming to the meetings more prepared to speak up.”  

Notice the two questions with * are open-ended and more powerful, especially when following a closed-ended or data gathering question.  Other elements, tones, or unintended stances that a close-ended question reveals:

  • The question asker is looking for a specific answer or tone (even inadvertently).
  • The question asker stops listening and responds to his or her own question, sometimes not leaving any space for the other to respond.
             “What could we do about tomorrow’s meeting? I’m only asking because I think we should…”
  • The question is not a question at all, it’s a suggestion or disguised opinion. We call them “que-gestions!”  Beware of anybody who starts a question that way!  
             “Don’t you think you should pick this option?”
             “Doesn’t it seem obvious that you are heading in the wrong direction?”  

Instead, prepare to inspire a great conversation by having a few powerful and versatile questions in your back pocket.  Here are some to get started, but remember, the best questions come from careful listening and deep curiosity.

Powerful Questions

  • What is important about that?
  • What’s frustrating you?
  • What’s inspiring you?
  • What help do you need?
  • What makes you see it that way?
  • How could that go wrong?
  • How will you know when you’ve achieved that?
  • How will you plan for success?
  • How are others seeing the situation?
  • How will this impact others?

Practice Asking the Right Questions

As you practice using powerful questions, notice how the conversation goes. Does it feel different than other conversations? In what way? Notice how much you can learn about the other person.

Did they tell you anything surprising? Notice where the other person takes the conversation…and remain curious.

As we coaches like to say… “Notice what you notice!”

Rich Understanding & Communication for Rich Results

Heineken’s new viral video has an important message about the role that container building and conversation plays in overcoming barriers and conflicts. Check it out…

Politics in the United States is providing us with a heightened sense of awareness about our differences. But these kinds of exchanges are not new, we’re just lately watching them on bigger screens.

Rich Conversations In The Workplace

How do we adapt and use these kinds of conversations in our workplace, day-to-day? Or for the teams that we serve? With a little proactive work, these are rich and valuable conversations that we can be fostering in our teams as well.

As team leaders or facilitators we’re helping teams daily to navigate conflict by finding the balance between inquiry and advocacy. Heineken’s video demonstrates some useful tools that we’ll break down for you further on in the post.

Let us just say this:

Laying the Groundwork and Engaging in Different Kinds of Conversations Does Take More Time!

The results for the team are richer understanding between team members, higher quality outcomes, and improved velocity.

What would that look like?

The same conversation that keeps happening at each meeting due to the same unresolved conflicts would be eliminated. The habit of not listening and talking past one another? Gone.

How about by talking with and listening to each other, team members will actually achieve the results you know you and your team are capable of producing? It is that satisfaction and achievement that builds momentum inside a group.

If you haven’t seen the video by now, definitely watch it before you move on to help identify how you might prepare your team for these kinds of conversations.

Lay the Groundwork for Rich Communication

Step one:

In order to work with conflict, teams can’t just dive into the deep end of the pool. They need to spend time laying the groundwork. And, to be clear, laying the groundwork is not a one time task; it’s ongoing.

Here are some principles to keep in mind:

Get to know one another as people. We each have dreams, hopes, fears and challenges. When we put labels on people we start to view them as a concept or idea to be debated or defeated. When we take the time to know others as people first, rather than the label we’ve placed on them, it shifts our perspective.

Find Common Ground

  • When we start by acknowledging the things that we are aligned with, then we can build from there.
  • When we start from disagreement, it’s harder to find alignment and we become stuck in the back and forth nature of conflict: where one person “must be” right and the other “must be” wrong.
  • When we can find common ground, even if is just a shared value, there is an energy created from alignment. The alignment can move the conversation forward with more depth and meaning.

Work Together on a Task

When teams come together they need a purpose. Simply put, a common task provides that common ground and creates a feeling of forward progress and achievement that they can attain, and feel together.  Resulting in a very positive foundation for a high performing team.

Engage in a conversation

Step 2:

When you lay the groundwork you create an enabling environment that supports more difficult conversations. Here are some principles to think about:

Aim For Dialogue

Dialogue is a specific kind of conversation. It’s ‘in the flow of meaning’ participants actively seek to deepen understanding beyond what they already know. In dialogue there is balance between inquiry and advocacy.

Voice Your Authentic View

In order to be in dialogue, we need to know what’s really true for others. Holding back or filtering what we say does not help to further the conversation. It only gets the group lost in trying to decipher what you’re saying, from what you really intend.

Inquire: Ask Powerful Questions

Powerful questions are short, often start with “What” or “How” and inquire about the other. When we come from a place of ‘knowing’ versus the place of inquiry we miss out on the opportunities to learn and find places of alignment and empathy.

Questions like “What’s it like to be you?” “What’s important about this?” or “What are three things we have in common?” are powerful inquiries!

By focusing on similarities and common tasks to be achieved, it’s easier for team members to remember they are actually on the same team. When the communication is strong and the inquiry level is high, more challenging conversations can be held without dissension and without defensiveness.

Next, Take a Look at Your Team

In order to help you activate these two powerful steps, take a few minutes and identify:

  • Where do you encounter similar types of conversations, as the video illustrated, at work?
  • Where do you need a different kind of conversation?
  • What’s one thing you could do today that might lay the groundwork?
  • Where does conflict exist in your team?
  • When conflicts or differences emerge in your team think about how you might apply some lessons from either the Heineken video, or the steps above.

You and your team can build strength and trust when you lay the groundwork and then engage in conversation in an ongoing manner. Breakthroughs and solutions come from better understanding. So do better team results.

TeamCatapult and The Grove Consultants Announce Partnership for Virtual Team Facilitation Course

agile team partnership announcement

Virtual Team Facilitation Course Partnership Announcement

TeamCatapult and The Grove Consultants International have formed a partnership to co-deliver the Virtual Team Facilitation course. The partnership leverages TeamCatapult’s proven core curriculum for agile coaches and leaders and The Grove’s expertise in virtual environments, graphic facilitation, and team development. The launch of this class takes the foundational mindset and skills of agile team facilitation to the virtual environment.

Facilitating a Virtual Working Environment

The partnership addresses the daunting task many agile coaches face to effectively facilitate teams in the ever-increasing virtual working environment.  Nearly 3% of the workforce, or 3.7 million people, work remotely (Global Workplace Analytics, Jan. 2016). “So much of our work today takes place virtually and yet people cringe when they are invited to virtual meetings. We want to help facilitators transform virtual meetings to a place where people are engaged and productive. We have long been users of the Drexler/Sibbet Team Performance model by the Grove and are excited to partner with them on this new course,” Marsha Acker, CEO of TeamCatapult, the first company in 2012 to offer the ICAgile accredited Agile Team Facilitation.

Virtual Teams and Virtual Meetings Facilitation

Rachel Smith, Senior Consultant and Director of Digital Facilitation Services at The Grove Consultants, and author of the soon to be released book Beyond Virtual Meetings, notes, “We are thrilled about this partnership and excited to be part of launching the program. I am really looking forward to the course and the new insights it will bring in this area.”  Rachel brings in-depth experience and expertise of group process in a virtual environment, having successfully facilitated large scale, multi-month, remote organizational change initiatives.

Collaborative Leadership

The virtual team facilitation program continues TeamCatapult’s mission of providing a learning journey for 21st century collaborative leaders who want to grow their capacity of working with agile teams. The Grove Consultants are experts in team development and visual facilitation. The co-leadership of the virtual facilitation course will enhance the facilitation mindset with a very real opportunity to lead virtual teams with measurable success. “…remote collaboration can be absolutely painful, but it doesn’t have to be. It’s also not going to go away.” beyondvirtualmeetings.com

 

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