8.8
LISTENING TECHNIQUES: TACTICS
TO IMPROVEYOURLISTENING
Inspired by Carl Rogers, Chris Argyris, Donald Schon, and numerous other sources.
Listening occurs at many levels, and thus leaders need a wide repertoire of listening respons-
es. Adapt these examples to your unique situation.
254 SECTION 8 TOOLS FORCOMMUNICATION
- To show that you are interested
- To encourage others to continue talking
- To check your interpretation against that of
the other person - To demonstrate that you are listening and
that you understand what the other person is
saying - To encourage others to analyze deeper aspects
of the situation and discuss them with you. - To bring the discussion into focus
- To clarify priorities
- To help you and the other person agree on
major points - To get at additional information
- To help others explore a problem
- To help others clarify their ideas
- To make ideas more concrete
- To clarify how the situation will be dealt with
- To formulate a method for dealing with the
issue - To propose a method for dealing with the
issue - To show that you understand how the other
person feels about the situation - To help another express his or her feelings
- To clarify feelings and commitment
➢“Mmm ...” or “Uh-huh.”
➢“That’s interesting.”
➢“I understand” or “I see.”
➢“As I understand it, your plan is ...”
➢“You appear to have decided to ...”
➢“So, your reasons for favoring this option are ...”
➢“In summary, the key ideas you have expressed
are ...”
➢“If I understand how you see the situation, your
major points are ...”
➢“As I see it, we have agreed to ...”
➢“I’m not sure I understand; could you clarify ...?”
➢“Do you mean ...?”
➢“I don’t understand. Could you give me an
example of ...?”
➢“As I understand it, you are proposing xyz. Can
we step back and ...?”
➢“You have proposed gathering information on the
issue. Can we clarify the issue first?”
➢“You have given me a lot of data about the
problem. Can we talk for a moment about how
we can proceed to solve the problem?”
➢“You appear to feel that ...”
➢“You seemed shocked when you heard...”
➢“You seemed let down when ...”
Reassuring
Restating &
Paraphrasing
Summarizing
Clarifying
Content
Clarifying
Process
Showing
Empathy
Listening
technique Purposes Typical listening lead-ins