The Six Keys to Positive Communication
Communicating better can help you achieve your goals and deepen your
relationships.
When I was 15 years old, I enrolled in a program to
study English in what seemed like the middle of nowhere, also known as
Iowa.
By Julien C. Mirivel
Having grown up in France and Switzerland, I spoke zero English. In Iowa, I couldn’t understand what people were telling me, and I couldn’t express myself. I couldn’t connect with people, I couldn’t create interactions, I couldn’t build friendships. I faced some of the most difficult months of my life because I was in some ways mute, and in some ways deaf.
But that experience taught me the most beautiful aspect of human communication. As I learned to speak, as I learned to listen, as I learned to connect, I was able to create a social network around me. It was human communication that set me free.
Fast forward to today, and I have spent my whole career researching and sharing what I know about effective ethical communication. Some questions that have animated my work include: What communication behaviors exemplify our best potential as humans? What are some small actions that will help us interact more effectively? What communication behaviors have a butterfly effect?
Based on my research, I’ll share six concrete behaviors that you can enact in your life today to improve your communication. At work or at home, these tips can help you start to inspire and influence the people around you. They can help you grow and change yourself, allowing you to deepen your relationships and create a better social world around you.
1. Greet to create human contact
In most people’s minds, communication is a mode of transmission: You have an idea to send out, and once the message is sent, you have accomplished the goal of communication.
But communication is more than transmission; it’s also creation. It creates experiences and builds relationships. If we take away communication, we take away relationship. In fact, I would propose that when you communicate, you are doing the work of relationship. You are relating.
The work of communication often starts with greeting, which is a simple but significant behavior: the moment when you initiate the process of making contact. One of the most disrespectful things a doctor can do when they meet with a patient is not greet them. When educators greet their students, it actually affects learning. And the best managers and leaders create opportunities for connection: They check on their employees and ask how they’re doing. They’re constantly in the process of building relationships.
As part of the New Zealand Language at Work project, researchers studied over 500 emails from two organizations: one company that was experiencing a lot of conflict, low morale, and turnover, and another with a very positive culture. After looking closely, the researchers noticed something striking: In the organization where people did not get along, the emails sounded like this:
The meeting
is at 3:00 p.m.
That’s it. But in the company where people were
getting along, the emails sounded more like this:
Hi everybody,
Hope
you are doing well. Looking forward to seeing you at our meeting on Friday at
3:00 p.m.
Have a great week.
Warmly,
John
The
content is the same, but the little details that we add help us manage our
connections with other people. Communication oils the social wheels; it is not
just a mode of transmission.
To put this into practice, try
initiating contact with three people that you do not know very well, but who
are stakeholders in your organization; they can be anybody in the
organizational hierarchy. Greet them. Ask them how they’re doing; set up a
Zoom call or a lunch; take a little bit of time to connect with them. If you
practice this, then you’d be able to create deeper connections with people
around you and expand your network of influence.
2. Ask to discover the
unknown
When we ask questions, we are going on a quest. We are
putting ourselves in a position to discover more, to learn from a position of
humility and curiosity.
On a basic level, we can distinguish
between closed-ended questions and open-ended questions. Closed-ended
questions—“Do you like blue or yellow?”—tend to narrow and control human
interaction. Open-ended questions, on the other hand, tend to expand and give
people freedom to decide what to share and what not to share—like “Tell me
about some of your favorite experiences in your life” or “What conversations
have impacted you?”
One way of improving your communication is to
learn to flip your questions from closed-ended to open-ended.
On
annual reviews, for example, it’s very tempting to say, “Did you have a good
year?” But what if we flip the script and ask, “What can we do to help you
reach your potential? What can we do this year to serve you and help you
grow?” I learned this from an organization called Performance Group Management
in Little Rock, Arkansas. With those questions, not only was the organization
able to retain their employees, but they were able to find ways of helping
them grow internally and build what has been widely celebrated as a very
positive culture.
As another example, I do some research with
Heifer International, which is trying to help create personal transformation
in individuals around the world and help them end poverty in their own
communities. Instead of asking, “Do you need help?,” they begin the process of
change by asking people, “What are your dreams? What are your hopes?”
3.
Compliment to affect people’s sense of self
The single most
important truth in the field of human communication is that what we say, what
we do, affects people. It affects who they are, in the moment, and it affects
who they become. I think a lot about this as the father of three young
children.
Complimenting is just one behavior among many that
illustrates our capacity for affecting people in a positive way.
Sometimes,
when I do trainings, leaders ask me how many compliments they should give to
get their staff to do what they want. But compliments should not be used in a
robotic way. Instead, I am advocating for a way of being. Complimenting is the
choice to affect who people are and who they become, their sense of self. In
fact, research suggests that we underestimate how good compliments make people
feel.
“What we say, what we do, affects people. It affects who they
are, in the moment, and it affects who they become”
―Julien C.
Mirivel, Ph.D.
What is the best compliment that you have ever
received? What has someone said to you that has positively impacted you? In my research, we have found that often those moments come from leaders, managers,
supervisors, or teachers. When people we look up to say something about us
that resonates, we take it in; we integrate it.
To put this into
practice and make your own mark, you can think of three people that you really
value around you, and deliver a meaningful compliment to them about their
strengths. Or you can send an email to your team and say, “I want to celebrate
the work that you’ve done, the strength that you’ve shown, especially as we
respond to a global pandemic.” Communicating positively is about being
intentional. As a leader, a parent, a partner, or a friend, we can all choose
to use our words to do a little good.
4. Disclose to deepen
relationships
The second important truth about communication is
that the connection and closeness we feel with others is not a state that we
can hold on to; it’s something we do. And the way we go about enacting this
sense of love and collegiality is by the act of disclosure: revealing how we
think, how we feel, and who we are in an authentic way.
Not all
disclosure has the same function, but it does have some common elements.
First, the disclosure needs to be authentic. It has to reflect this congruency
between what you feel on the inside, and what’s happening on the outside. It
has to be communication that’s truthful, honest, and personal, that reflects
what you think and what you value.
It has to have integrity, and,
more importantly, it has to be human. The more your experience can reflect our
common humanity, the more it’s likely to resonate with other people when it’s
spoken.
Research by Robert Ulmer, who is an expert in crisis
communication at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, suggests that when
leaders practice open and honest disclosure, they’re able to respond much more
effectively to crises. In one case he studied, Malden Mills CEO Aaron
Feuerstein immediately responded to a fire affecting several manufacturing
buildings by communicating openly and publicly with his stakeholders: “We’re
going to continue to operate in Lawrence. . . . We had the opportunity to run
to the south many years ago. We didn’t do it then and we’re not going to do it
now.” Being open and honest shows that we care about our stakeholders and want
to learn from the crisis.
To put this into practice, think of
somebody that you can text right now to share that you’re grateful for them.
Be open and be honest with them. You can just say, “I’m thinking of you, and I
just wanted you to know that I’m grateful to have you in my life.” Pay
attention to the feelings and thoughts going on inside of you—should I do it,
should I not do it, how are they going to respond? Despite all that, in this
moment you can choose to express your gratitude. That’s disclosure.
5.
Encourage to give support
Human communication, I would argue, is
just as tangible a way of giving as giving money. We use communication to give
love. We use communication to give affection. And when we choose to encourage
others, we are using communication to give people the social support they need
to develop and succeed.
I believe that we can transform any
ordinary moment into an extraordinary one by what we say and share with other
people, no matter what our role is.
Here’s an example from my own
career. For many years, whenever my students struggled, I would always say,
“Hey, why don’t you just ride the wave a little?” Then, during one incredibly
hard year of work, I got to my office and found an email from my wife. Inside
was the message, “Ride the wave, baby,” with a Photoshopped picture of me on a
real surfer. I remember that moment to this day.
That is the power
of encouragement. What we say and do can make an impact not only in that
moment, but as a source of support for years to come.
6. Listen to
transcend differences
Learning how to become a better listener is
not a small feat, but experts agree that it’s a common trait of good leaders.
If you can choose to listen deeply, you can transcend the perceived
differences that exist between you and other people.
You can learn
to listen more deeply by maintaining a high degree of openness to other
people’s perspectives and viewpoints. It also requires withholding judgment of
people and their actions. Psychologist Carl Rogers called this “unconditional positive regard”: a way of looking at people with warmth, without any
conditions. In order to listen deeply, you have to cultivate deep empathy, the
ability to look at other people’s perspectives not to see whether they’re
right or wrong, but to understand their vantage point.
Finally, you
have to learn how to give somebody your full attention. Physically leaning in
with your body will start the process of deeper listening. If you get really
frustrated, take your hand, put it underneath the table, and open it
slightly—a physical gesture of openness. Listening can be uncomfortable, but
there is a lot to learn if we quiet everything going on inside of us and turn
our attention to other people.
I believe that if you practice
positive communication, it’s going to help you grow as a professional and as a
person, create high-quality relationships at work and at home, and lead more
effectively. When you take these small actions, you’re beginning a butterfly
effect. You’re starting to change the script on your interactions, which
affects the relationships that you care about, the groups you work in, and the
communities you belong to. And if we do this together, we will co-create a
better society for ourselves and our children.