Ignorer la navigation
How to Listen and How to Be Heard
Book

How to Listen and How to Be Heard

Inclusive Conversations at Work

Career Press, 2020 plus...

Buy the book


Editorial Rating

8

getAbstract Rating

  • Applicable
  • Eye Opening
  • Concrete Examples

Recommendation

Companies with diverse, inclusive workplaces perform better. Their employees are more engaged and more productive. Workplace expert Alissa Carpenter explains how to improve your firm’s inclusivity. Her practical, applicable advice on handling challenging conversations, turning differences into strengths and overcoming bias is relevant to any manager. While some points may seem obvious – such as seeking opportunities to interact with your colleagues in person – they are also poignant reminders about the value of personal connection and perhaps about the potential of the hybrid in-and-out of the office model.

Summary

Diverse workforces benefit from a range of individual strengths.

To increase your team members’ motivation, productivity and engagement, identify their individual strengths.Recognize that people think and work differently, so resist the temptation to classify certain ways of working as good or bad. View them as neutral traits.

Identifying your own strengths requires introspection. Consider how you act and react to certain situations. Ask your colleagues for their feedback, since they may have other perspectives to share, depending on how closely you collaborate.

To identify your co-workers’ or team members’ strengths, observe how they approach certain tasks. Minor behaviors can reveal strengths: The co-worker who insists on clear deadlines and always makes careful lists could help a team stay on track thanks to his or her organizational skills. Informal behavior also provides clues. For example, when you interact socially with new hires, you can observe their strengths developing over time.

Psychometric or other analytical tests may provide further guidance and a shared language. Commonly used methodologies include CliftonStrengths...

About the Author

Multigenerational workplace expert Alissa Carpenter owns Everything’s Not OK and That’s OK, where she provides training, consulting and speaking services.


Comment on this summary

More on this topic

Related Skills

Développer sa créativité
Développer son intelligence émotionnelle
Stimuler la performance de l'équipe
Promouvoir une culture de l'innovation
Favoriser la culture d'équipe
Ressources Humaines
S'ouvrir aux autres cultures
Innovation
Diriger de façon éthique
S’auto-diriger
Leadership
Bien vivre
Gérer le changement
Management
Développer ses compétences interpersonnelles
Naviguer dans les défis de leadership
Développement personnel
Façonner la culture d'entreprise
Compétences relationnelles
Renforcer sa culture numérique
Compétences professionnelles
Nouer des relations solides
Communiquer de façon transparente
Promouvoir la diversité, l'équité et l'inclusion
Promouvoir la neuro-inclusion
Promouvoir l'inclusion socio-économique
Conduire le changement
Motiver son équipe
Collaborer avec créativité
Pratiquer le Servant Leadership
Améliorer la collaboration virtuelle
Communiquer clairement
Promouvoir l'inclusion LGBTQ+
Comprendre la communication
Communiquer efficacement
Promouvoir une communication ouverte
Promouvoir l'inclusion des personnes handicapées
Comprendre les préjugés inconscients
Oser se montrer vulnérable
Savoir collaborer
Devenir un allié des minorités dans l’équipe
Communiquer numériquement
Pratiquez le leadership transformationnel
Composer avec les personnes difficiles
Créer un sentiment d'appartenance
Promouvoir l'inclusion générationnelle
Susciter la confiance
Promouvoir l'inclusion des femmes
Renforcer la collaboration d'équipe
Communiquer de façon inclusive
Promouvoir l'inclusion ethnique
Lutter contre les microagressions
Renforcer la sécurité psychologique
Diriger de façon inclusive
Promouvoir la collaboration
Comprendre les micro-agressions
Encourager la collaboration interfonctionnelle
Construire une culture inclusive