The Art of Verbal Communication

“I took myself down to the Tally Ho Tavern,
To buy me a bottle of beer.
I sat me down by a tender young maiden,
Who’s eyes were as dark as her hair.
And as I was searching from bottle to bottle,
For something un-foolish to say.
That silver tongued devil just slipped from the shadows,
And smilingly stole her away.
“*

  *lyrics from Silver Tongued Devil by Kris Kristofferson


Many of us wish we could be that “silver tongued devil” – someone skilled at getting what they want through the power of words–an expert in The Art of Verbal Communication. Verbal communication is an essential project management skill. Whether it is instructing team members, chatting in the break area, interviewing users, persuading clients, or presenting to management, I find these skills come into play almost every day of my working life. (And of course in my personal life!)

How you say it matters
Two people saying exactly the same thing can deliver two very different messages depending on how they express the message. Take tone, for example. A quiet tone with little variation in pitch or volume tends to be calming. If the quiet tone goes on too long though, it may become a narcotic putting the audience to sleep or encouraging them to look around for other action.

Your tone reflects your attitude and influences interpretation of your communication. Upbeat, positive tones increase agreement and comfort. It is okay to sound a little excited about a good idea or a new product. However, sarcastic, condescending, or monotone inflections are downers that discourage people and drive them away from your message.

Eye contact and smiling are powerful adjuncts to how you say something. Verbal communication, accompanied by looking at the audience or into the other person’s eyes and smiling, unconsciously moves the communication outcome in the direction of agreement.
And don’t forget that body language matters in verbal communication. Arm position, hand movements, smooth or jerky actions all integrate to create one verbal communication event. Now body language is a big subject that deserves its own post. However, for a good introduction to body language and its role in the art of verbal communication, check out “Understanding body language” from Changing Minds and “Body Language – Understanding non-verbal communication” from MindTools.

Repetition
Verbal communication beyond “social chitchat” benefits from repetition. NO – Not saying the exact same thing several times, but communicating the same message in different ways. In his book, What the Dog Saw (2009), Malcolm Gladwell talks about why some pitchmen are successful in selling ideas and products, “You have to explain to customers – not once or twice but three or four times with a different twist each time. You have to show them how it works and why it works… and how it fits into their routine.”

For project managers communicating with clients, stakeholders or potential customers, this means you follow the words of Dale Carnegie, “tell what you are going to say, tell them, then tell them that you’ve said.”

Get feedback
A unique virtue of oral verbal communication is the ability to get instant feedback from your audience. You should use the verbal and nonverbal feedback to shape or redirect your verbal communication. If people are looking directly at you, nodding their heads, and making agreeable noises, your presentation is having the desired effect. On the other hand, if the person or audience is looking away, texting on their Blackberries, or folding their arms over their chests and looking like they want to bite something, it is time to change verbal tactics. (You think?)

The most important thing you can do to improve the effectiveness of your verbal communication is to ask for feedback. This sounds real easy, but it isn’t and most people don’t do it. Ask in a way that shows you really want to know and paraphrase or restate comments or questions to make sure you are focusing on what the audience wants and needs from you.

Deal with filters
Based on previous life experiences, beliefs and values, people develop filters through which they interpret what they see and hear. Perception is reality. Project managers must keep this fact in mind when choosing words to speak and listening to words spoken. You may not understand or even need to know why your message is not being received as intended. However, it is essential that you know when there is a disconnect from what you expect – and take action to ameliorate it.

Summary
Follow the simple suggestions above:

  • Make your tone of voice upbeat and positive
  • Say the same thing in different ways,
  • Pay attention to your body language and your target audience
  • Choose words carefully and do not use words that are loaded with extra meaning
  • And, most importantly, GET FEEDBACK!

If you have other tips on communication please share your thoughts with other project managers via comments. Thanks!

Can you facilitate your way to project success?

“I’ll make him an offer he can’t refuse.” The “godfather” facilitated that way according to Mario Puzo. Even though it is extreme when practiced by the Corleone family, facilitation is a tool used by effective project managers to gain resources, helping team members achieve goals, and solve disputes.

I am not suggesting a parking lot brawl to facilitate a decision or someone’s behavior, but rather encouraging cooperation by figuring out what each party desires and offering it in exchange for what you want. Other phrases used to define, facilitate include:

  • To make easier
  • To assist the progress of
  • To increase the likelihood, strength, or effectiveness of
  • To help bring about
  • To free from difficulty or impediment

Why should a project manager also be a facilitator?
Project managers are responsible for achieving a successful end to a project. They also have a duty to the organization to enhance employee performance and to retain staff essential to reaching organizational goals beyond a single project.  To be successful a PM is going to use the art of facilitation in many of the day to day tasks they perform:  meetings, decision making, brainstorming, conflict resolution, problem solving and sometimes even team collaboration.

Looking at the last definition of facilitate, “To free from difficulty or impediment”, project managers are in a unique position to remove roadblocks to performance. Through effective planning and risk management, project managers ensure the placement of adequate resources or training in a timely manner to achieve project objectives.

Project managers improve their facilitation efforts by asking questions and listening to team members about the events, tasks, requirements, and tools that make their jobs difficult. A facilitator uses that information to acquire resources, training, or remove performance barriers.

Project managers have “been there, done that”. They know how to gain access to decision makers, retrieve information and supplies when time is critical — without going through channels –, and how to tailor a request for help that is more likely to succeed. Sharing that information with team members is part of training and mentoring.

Examples of facilitation that help a project and team members
Case 1: A junior developer is tasked to write a software module in a language with which he has limited experience. One project management strategy says “throwing him in the pool; either he learns or drowns”.  However, a project manager who is also a facilitator requests funding for a training class and lines up an internal expert to be available to answer questions.

Case 2: The project team is analyzing performance data using a simulation to optimize processing speed over a range of options. The code simulation requires significant horsepower and waiting for results slows the team down. A less-facilitating project manager tells the team to work 24-7 to get the results. A facilitating project manager contacts an ex-classmate currently working in the organization’s R&D department and asks for time on their supercomputer.

Case 3: Two team members are at loggerheads over the best method to integrate a software module into existing code. The disagreement has deteriorated into email attacks and their animosity is negatively affecting the entire team. A poor project manager locks them in a room and decides the winner is the one left standing. A facilitating project manager calls both of them into a closed-door meeting. Ground rules are set about staying on subject, no personal attacks, and taking turns. Together they:

  • Define the problem or issue
  • Voice how they feel about the conflict
  • Discuss past attempts to resolve the conflict
  • List characteristics of proposed solutions (benefits and risks)
  • Agree to try one solution within a specified timeframe and with measurement criteria for success
  • Schedule a follow up meeting

Case 4:  The project has reached a technical impasse and everyone is frustrated with no clear direction to go.  There is fighting and name calling between functional groups on how and why they got here.  The project manager calls a brainstorming session to facilitate problem solving.  The PM uses facilitated techniques to bring all team members into the meeting and lead them to a consensus on how to proceed.

Conflict or dispute resolution is stressful and many project managers avoid facilitating these meetings between warring factions. However, unresolved conflict running beneath the surface of a project can have disastrous consequences that long outlive one project.

If you want to sharpen your skills here are a few resources I have in my list:

Please offer your comments on situations when facilitation by project management was helpful (or not).

 

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