In this episode of Speak In Flow, we delve into the art of increasing your influence, a skill that can elevate your personal and professional life. Host Melinda Lee guides us through key insights and strategies to enhance your ability to make an impact in your interactions with others. Tune in to discover how you can become a more influential communicator.
Understanding Your Motivation
Clarity: The Key to Influence
Overcoming Resistance
Mastering Difficult Conversations
Conclusion
About Melinda:
Melinda Lee is a Presentation Skills Expert, Speaking Coach and nationally renowned Motivational Speaker. She holds an M.A. in Organizational Psychology, is an Insights Practitioner, and is a Certified Professional in Talent Development as well as Certified in Conflict Resolution. For over a decade, Melinda has researched and studied the state of “flow” and used it as a proven technique to help corporate leaders and business owners amplify their voices, access flow, and present their mission in a more powerful way to achieve results.
She has been the TEDx Berkeley Speaker Coach and worked with hundreds of executives and teams from Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Caltrans, Bay Area Rapid Transit System, and more. Currently, she lives in San Francisco, California, and is breaking the ancestral lineage of silence.
Website: https://speakinflow.com/
Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/speakinflow
Instagram: https://instagram.com/speakinflow
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mpowerall
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This day, we're going to talk about an important
Melinda Lee:aspect of influence. And that is deep listening. I have a
Melinda Lee:question for you, when you are about to meet with someone
Melinda Lee:interact or communicate with somebody, are you seeking
Melinda Lee:certainty, or clarity. And in order to illustrate these
Melinda Lee:concepts, I'm going to tell you a story what happened over the
Melinda Lee:weekend, I was at a baby shower and sitting on the couch
Melinda Lee:admiring the decorations, the balloons, the flowers, and then
Melinda Lee:my old client who happened to be there sat on the couch next to
Melinda Lee:me. And because we know each other very well, she starts
Melinda Lee:talking to me about her husband and says, Melinda, you know, my
Melinda Lee:husband has ADHD, he I not mad at him for having it, he cannot
Melinda Lee:help but have it yet, I am so frustrated and tired, because
Melinda Lee:he's not doing anything about it. He's not reading up on it,
Melinda Lee:he's not learning about it to help himself. And so I'm doing
Melinda Lee:so much I send him YouTube videos, or or give him an
Melinda Lee:article or a book. And yet, he just doesn't do anything. And so
Melinda Lee:it's quite frustrating for me, and I just don't know what to
Melinda Lee:do. So I turned around and asked her, I said, What do you think
Melinda Lee:he thinks about this? Like, when you look at him, is he happy in
Melinda Lee:his life? And she just looked back at me with this really
Melinda Lee:blank stare. I haven't never asked, I don't know what he
Melinda Lee:thinks about it. I don't know if he's happy? That's a good
Melinda Lee:question. That's a great point. And so I want to ask you, are
Melinda Lee:you seeking certainty or clarity? In that interaction,
Melinda Lee:she was seeking certainty, and clarifying in understanding her
Melinda Lee:own assumptions, or forging her own assumptions. So let me
Melinda Lee:explain a little bit more the difference between certainty and
Melinda Lee:clarity. Certainty is when we validate our own assumptions
Melinda Lee:with certainty is like, we want to know that we are right, or we
Melinda Lee:want to know we're what's about to happen is what we assume
Melinda Lee:that's about to happen. So we're constantly seeking certainty
Melinda Lee:because our brain loves it, it helps us feel safe, it helps us
Melinda Lee:feel like we know. And so for her, she was so certain, my
Melinda Lee:client was so certain that she had all the solutions, she had
Melinda Lee:all the answers. So she was trying to clarify her own
Melinda Lee:assumptions. And so this is happening all the time. And it's
Melinda Lee:not just her, we as people, as humans have biases. And we're
Melinda Lee:constantly seeking certainty to clarify our own biases, you
Melinda Lee:might see somebody walking down the street, and they're dressed
Melinda Lee:really nicely. And you might want to assume or infer that
Melinda Lee:this person has a nice job, they're responsible, or you're
Melinda Lee:about to go into a meeting. And this is a high person, that's
Melinda Lee:authority of you. And you may have had a bad interaction with
Melinda Lee:this person of authority. And so in your mind, your brain is
Melinda Lee:going to prepare you and assume that this might happen again,
Melinda Lee:because it just wants to feel certain. And it wants to know
Melinda Lee:and be prepared. If it's an unknown, it just wants to be
Melinda Lee:prepared. And so we're boring, our brain is doing that. But
Melinda Lee:what happens when we're constantly doing that is that we
Melinda Lee:start to bring in our own assumptions into the reality,
Melinda Lee:what we think is a reality. And it might not be the other
Melinda Lee:person's reality. And it might not be with the other person
Melinda Lee:where that person is at. And so there's a disconnect between the
Melinda Lee:person that person reality and my reality. So we want to move
Melinda Lee:more into clarity and seeking clarity in our own in the other
Melinda Lee:person's world has nothing to do with us now. So we are moving
Melinda Lee:into the other person's world and asking genuine questions,
Melinda Lee:seeking clarity about where the other person's at, in my case
Melinda Lee:with that my client, she couldn't ask genuine questions
Melinda Lee:about where her husband is at today. And I'm saying today,
Melinda Lee:because people change, I change. And so you change. And so we
Melinda Lee:always want to see clarity of where the person is at today.
Melinda Lee:What is motivating them today? What are they feeling today? Do
Melinda Lee:they feel that they even have a problem to be solved? And so
Melinda Lee:asking genuine questions, if you want to influence your team
Melinda Lee:member, you want to ask genuine questions, what might be holding
Melinda Lee:them back? What they might be resisting, they're playing a
Melinda Lee:story in their head of why they're resisting or why they
Melinda Lee:don't want to do what they do. And so it's your job to see and
Melinda Lee:understand that story and draw it out from them. And if you've
Melinda Lee:done it correctly, they will tell you that That means that
Melinda Lee:you are connected to them. And that is your whole goal is to
Melinda Lee:listen deeply without judging. And if they don't feel judged,
Melinda Lee:if they don't feel evaluated, then they're going to tell you
Melinda Lee:their story. And when you hear that story out, then you could
Melinda Lee:potentially seek inconsistencies with what they're saying, or
Melinda Lee:bring in your specific solution that is right for them in this
Melinda Lee:moment. And that is the key. So listening deeply, without
Melinda Lee:judgement, forging that connection, that trust and
Melinda Lee:leveraging your own influence in that way. People don't want to
Melinda Lee:be told what to do. You want to motivate them, because you want
Melinda Lee:them to want to do it. And so my question to you is, are you
Melinda Lee:seeking certainty and validating your own assumptions? validating
Melinda Lee:that you have all the solutions? And you're right? Or are you
Melinda Lee:seeking clarity and understanding of the other
Melinda Lee:person's worlds? I have an activity for you a fun activity
Melinda Lee:you can do right after this podcast, I want you to start to
Melinda Lee:be aware of your own mindset. When it comes to these
Melinda Lee:interactions. Are you seeking certainty and validate your
Melinda Lee:assumptions, or clarity, there is a storytelling approach
Melinda Lee:called character creation, and cost play. So in character
Melinda Lee:creation, you get all these traits. And then you can create
Melinda Lee:a story based on that trait, you can create their behaviour, you
Melinda Lee:can create the motivation of that character. That sounds like
Melinda Lee:clarifying our own assumptions, right? That sounds like
Melinda Lee:certainty. And so are you doing that? Are you getting the traits
Melinda Lee:of this person and looking at that person's trait and creating
Melinda Lee:your own story? Or are you moving into cosplay, and cosplay
Melinda Lee:is a method where you go into the realm of this environment,
Melinda Lee:you don't know what is about to happen, you don't know the
Melinda Lee:character. So want you to go even if you've known this
Melinda Lee:person, or even if you had interactions with this person,
Melinda Lee:constantly seek clarity, and move into the realm of cost
Melinda Lee:play, which is really just seeking to understand the person
Melinda Lee:today, as if you've never met them before. What is happening
Melinda Lee:today? What are their feelings today? What are their problems
Melinda Lee:today? They might not know what their problem is? And you by
Melinda Lee:asking genuine questions can help them clarify this problem?
Melinda Lee:And asking, what is the impact of the problem? Oh, it's
Melinda Lee:impacting your relationships, it's impacting your health, they
Melinda Lee:might see that, then only then you might offer for them to
Melinda Lee:figure out their own solution. So what do you think might help?
Melinda Lee:What do you think are the best next steps for you, then the
Melinda Lee:person feels more motivated to help themselves versus coming in
Melinda Lee:with our own assumptions of what we might think that they need.
Melinda Lee:So moving into understanding, first seeking to understand the
Melinda Lee:person deep listening without judgement, just accepting the
Melinda Lee:roam the environment, the character as is, and then
Melinda Lee:helping him or her to clarify their situation, and possibly
Melinda Lee:their own solutions. So this is a very different way of
Melinda Lee:listening and influencing. And when you do this, when you're
Melinda Lee:able to listen at this level, you are increasing your your
Melinda Lee:trust, and building that trust and that connection, forging
Melinda Lee:meaningful relationships. And then and only then will your
Melinda Lee:influence skyrocket. Because you're there for them. You're
Melinda Lee:helping them see their own problem, clarifying their own
Melinda Lee:solutions based on what they want to do. And when you can do
Melinda Lee:that you're building their relationship, you're then
Melinda Lee:therefore making a bigger impact in that person's life. And
Melinda Lee:therefore impacting more people, perhaps your team impacting the
Melinda Lee:organisation and you are seeing even more so as that powerful,
Melinda Lee:effective leader that you are. I hope that you take these these
Melinda Lee:tips for deep listening, forging meaningful connection and
Melinda Lee:building trust and making a bigger influence in the world.
Melinda Lee:And so, until next time, I'll see you on the next episode.
Melinda Lee:Take care