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Increasing Your Influence

Three Reasons to Stop Focusing on Your Strengths and Weaknesses

September 27, 2017 By Patti Cotton Leave a Comment

Three Reasons to Stop Focusing on Your Strengths and Weaknesses

Are you focusing too much on your weaknesses – or just as bad, are you focusing too much on your strengths?

You can actually arrest your own leadership development by doing so.

Here’s why:

Before the rising of the popular strengths-based coaching approach, workplace mentoring and coaching focused on helping its workforce to strengthen identified weaknesses. But we discovered after some time that the results were poor. In fact, employees were showing negative outcomes.

Focusing on weaknesses in leadership development can result in the following:

  • It can give a false sense of ineptitude and negative self-image. By giving weaknesses too much attention, the executive in question may begin to feel inept. Little discussion is made about what is going well, and so a negative self-image may begin to form, diminishing confidence.
  • By neglecting to bring strengths into the process, an imbalanced approach to getting the work done may actually result in an even poorer performance.
  • The weakness in question needs to be relative to the role the executive plays. Is the weakness in question hindering performance or hampering company goals? Or is it simply a result of a list that has no relevance to the job?

Face it – it’s more fun to focus on strengths! But there’s a drawback to swinging over to focusing on strengths, as well.

Focusing on strengths in leadership development can result in the following:

  • It can give the executive a false sense of competence, paving the way to neglect what might be hampering his or her best work.
  • By neglecting to address what is not working, focusing on strengths can give just as imbalanced an approach as focusing on weaknesses. In fact, focusing too much on developing a strength can actually render that strength a weakness. For example, if an executive has great ambition, developing that to the point of exaggeration can actually send wrong messages and behaviors and derail a career.
  • The strength in question needs to be relative to the role an executive plays, or it doesn’t matter how special that strength is! Is the strength key to performance? Is it aligned with company goals?

A balanced approach to your personal and professional leadership development with methodologies that are evidence-based – proven to work – is the first step.

If you are working on this to improve your performance and your career trajectory, make sure that what you are doing is actually relevant and supportive of where you are – and where you want to go!

Patti Cotton

Patti Cotton reenergizes talented leaders and their teams to achieve fulfillment and extraordinary results. For more information on how Patti Cotton can help you and your organization, click here.

A Powerful 5-Step Planning Tool

September 6, 2017 By Patti Cotton Leave a Comment

A Powerful 5-Step Planning Tool for Executives to Finish Strong

A Powerful 5-Step Planning Tool for Executives to Finish Strong

It’s September.

If you are an executive in charge, acting “on purpose” to guide your team or entity to this year’s finish line is crucial.

I know it’s already on your mind.

Yet September is usually when I see executives start to slide.

 They have pushed hard during the first couple of quarters, and have allowed the summer’s workplace to slow things down.

Psychologically, it’s pretty tough to pick back up after ramping up and slowing down. It can cause stress, a feeling of overload as you try to get back on track, and a sense of being behind that can follow you through December 31st.

In fact, you may feel just a wee bit tired and demotivated just reading this, because you know what I mean.

Are you ready to get in front of this so you finish the year strong, avoiding the stress and overload that comes with year-end frenzy?

It’s time to get intentional.

I can help you do that so you finish out the next quarter in a strong and productive way that helps you and your team celebrate effectiveness and achievement.

It’s something I use with my private clients, no matter what time of year, to ramp up their success.

The 5-Step Powerful Planning Tool

1. Review your business foundation.

Gather your team and review your mission, vision, and values statements. Together, these should comprise a strong and exciting philosophy that does not change. These share the inspiration, the “why” of what you do that will fuel your motivation and drive over the next 90 days. Get clear on these before proceeding to step 2.

2. Assess your progress to date.

Review your current goals and strategies. Are these currently meeting and exceeding your business objectives? How well? Refer to any milestones and benchmarks associated with them to see if you are firmly on track, or if you need to adjust or shift any approaches you take to finish out the year. Celebrate the wins, cut the losses, and above all, quickly eliminate any work associated with that which is not working. Clear the deck for your last quarter.

3. Determine your priorities for the next quarter.

What priorities rise to the top? Identify or review the initiatives and projects associated with these. If you find it difficult to triage, do a quick analysis of priorities and projects so that you don’t hang on to the misnomer that “everything is equally important.” Take the lean and mean approach so you can finish strong, allow your team to be recognized well, and save your sanity.

4. Outline your 90-day action plan.

Working a 90-day action plan is incredibly effective at keeping you and your team motivated and energized, if you will include incremental milestones and short-term wins. So, as you identify major projects and activities, responsible parties and key stakeholders, ask yourself: What are the incremental milestones we can celebrate at the end of 90 days? Where are the best short-term wins to be captured that will support longer-range goals? And finally, do a quick assessment to ensure that the plan and its tenets support the enterprise’s mission, vision, and values. This is a great team-building exercise.

5. Up-level your ability to execute.

Use this 90-day action plan to perform a “personal 360°” on your plan and yourself. Have your team do the same, and then come together to discuss so that you can best support one another.

Here are questions to ask yourself:

  • As I look to the end of this next quarter, what commitments, activities, and calendar items do I need to shift, put aside, and/or eliminate in order to accomplish the 90-day action plan’s objectives?
  • What are those personal leadership behaviors I need to adopt in order to do well?
  • What needs eliminating?
  • What needs shifting?
  • What does meeting with my team to assess progress look like?
  • And how shall we celebrate our success at the end of these next 90 days?

I hope you enjoy this process as much as have my clients. They have used this for team-building, heightening performance, productivity, and morale.

What are your biggest barriers to meeting year-end goals? How do you move past these in order to succeed?

Patti Cotton

Patti Cotton reenergizes talented leaders and their teams to achieve fulfillment and extraordinary results. For more information on how Patti Cotton can help you and your organization, click here.

How to Botch a Critical Conversation: A Brief Checklist

August 2, 2017 By Patti Cotton Leave a Comment

How to Botch a Critical Conversation: A Brief Checklist
Image Credit: Shutterstock

All of us have walked away at least once in our lives from a conversation, saying, “Boy, I really blew that one!”

But a lot of times, we do it without realizing it.

What should you watch for, so that you can head off disaster?

If you find yourself in a conversation with any of the following thoughts or behaviors…think again!

  1. They can’t tell you anything you don’t already know.

    You have crowned yourself the Knowledge Expert on this topic. You are comfortable allowing the other person to speak, although you may find you want to interrupt frequently. After all, once they receive the wealth of information you hold, they will see the light. Right?

  2. Assume you know best.

    This is somewhat different than #1 – you may not have all the information, but you consider yourself a wise individual who will gather the information from your conversation partner, and then decide what should be done with it, tell the other person what to do. Hmmm…

  3. This is a chance to get your personal agenda passed.

    You get excited, realizing you can work this particular conversation around to something you need personally. It may be a decision, a favor, or something else – but you are ready to be a willing listener and supporter so that you can work this around to your own goal. It’s okay if the conversation goes a bit off topic if it leads to yours.

  4. Don’t ask questions.

    Assume you have enough information from your conversation partner, during the first round in the discussion, to make an informed decision. Further, you can guess what they are going to say, and you are busy formulating your answer while they are still speaking. Ugh.

  5. Ask too many questions.

    Here, you’ve determined you know what the topic is, and you zero in on the details “rapid-fire” style while the other person is still attempting to share. You figure you appear interested, so you continue your interrogation. Do you wonder why people abandon their conversations with you before finishing? Hmmm…

Do you or someone you know identify with any of these? If so, it’s time to do some “deep listening.” Conversation is much more enjoyable when you realize that you not only don’t know all there is to know about a subject, but that your conversation partner can bring valuable, new things to the table that can widen your perspective and open up new vistas for you.

Want to know more about deep listening?

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Fill out the form below and get instant access to the HOW TO RAISE YOUR INFLUENCE IN LESS THAN 5 SECONDS infographic.

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Patti Cotton

Patti Cotton reenergizes talented leaders and their teams to achieve fulfillment and extraordinary results. For more information on how Patti Cotton can help you and your organization, click here.

How to Raise Your Influence in Less Than 5 Seconds

July 26, 2017 By Patti Cotton 2 Comments

How to Raise Your Influence in Less Than 5 Seconds

You can raise your “influence quotient” with someone in just five seconds.

This may sound unbelievable, but it’s true.

In the past three articles, we have focused on raising your ability to influence others. Although these tips have focused on sending the right “outer signals” – making an emotional connection, using appropriate verbal and non-verbal language, and asking for a favor – it is important to remember that these “outer signals” must come from the right “inner motives”.

In the best of worlds, influence should be used for good – it should be borne out of genuine passion for something you believe will make the world (or at least your world) a better place.

These tips I’ve been sharing are really about being able to marry the “outer to the inner,” to show the other person that you care about them as a human being and that you are willing to be vulnerable and real with them. In reality, many people really care, but they simply don’t know how to show it.

There’s one shift that requires the inner and outer parts of a person to work together, that really brings congruency to your motives and outer behaviors, and that is listening.

Deep listening.

There is a big difference between hearing and listening. And it is listening that will cause you to become more influential.

Pauline Oliveros, an American composer, actually devoted her life’s work to deep listening, and coined the term after descending 14 feet into an underground cistern to make a recording. She then designed a like setting to inspire both trained and untrained performers to practice the art of listening and responding to environmental conditions in solo and ensemble situations. What she was after was the deep and empathic understanding that comes of truly connecting at the visceral level.

Oliveros instructed her listeners to “walk so silently until the bottoms of your feet become ears.”

Oliveros went on to form the “Deep Listening Band,” to allow new and experienced musicians to practice this art of deep listening, “integrating principles of improvisation, electronic music, ritual, teaching and meditation” (Wikipedia).

Extrapolating from this, one might say that we should still our personal agenda to truly connect to understand. This is deep listening.

Without listening, we cannot communicate. Listening requires at least two people because there will be an exchange of information, a synthesis of that information, and feedback. True communication is a continuous loop of these processes. How we listen determines the extent to which we can connect to make great things happen.

How does this relate to increasing your influence? Think for a moment.

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In the coaching world, we say there are five levels of listening.

Here they are adapted from Stephen R. Covey‘s “Listening Continuum,” in his book, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People.

Level 1: Ignoring, or Not Listening

The Ignorer does not appear to be listening. They may not hear you or, if willfully ignoring, are sending the message that they do not want to acknowledge you. There is no exchange of information, much less communication. Their personal agenda is clearly something else! This can be very irritating to the speaker because he knows the listener is not paying attention to anything but is merely thinking of what he will say when he gets a chance to talk.

This means the conversation follows the listener’s (or non-listener in this case!) agenda, not the speaker’s agenda. An example might be when you are talking about a business matter, and when you finish your thought, the listener speaks up and asks how you enjoyed the party last weekend.

Level 2: Pretend Listening (Patronizing)

The Patronizing Listener may occasionally nod their head or make a gesture in your direction, but they also show you they are paying attention to other things or allowing distractions to become their focus instead of you. Their personal agenda is to judge whether or not they need to pay attention to your message.

Level 3: Selective Listening

The Selective Listener will indicate they are listening at times, but hearing only part of your message. They will often pay attention to only those parts of your message with which they agree, and may often interrupt you or cut you off to ask, “So what’s your point?” Their personal agenda is to hear your story so they can respond with theirs.

For instance, you might be saying that your son really enjoyed soccer camp this summer and the listener responds by saying that her son went last year, and he didn’t like it much.

Level 4: Attentive Listening

The Attentive Listener wants to hear you, but will use their frame of reference to communicate with you. They will often respond by offering advice. Their personal agenda is to hear you, to apply any information they glean from your message, and to see if it is appropriate to apply within their own frame of reference.

Now we are getting into real listening. In this case you might be saying that you have had some difficulty getting your manager to buy into your ideas about something and the listener asks you to tell her more about it.

Level 5: Empathetic Listening (Mirroring or Active Listening)

The Empathic Listener seeks to listen beyond your words, to put themselves in your shoes to the heart and feelings that lie behind the words. This requires stepping out of their own frame of reference, values, personal story, and tendency to judge. This means that the listener has left their personal agenda and bias behind to seek to understand you. It is at this level that a true empathic exchange occurs, building trust, safe space, and an arena where true change and resolution can occur.

With the first four levels, the listener hears while operating from their own frame of reference. The fifth level of listening requires that the listener leave this personal agenda to truly connect empathically.

Here you might be saying that you’d better not go out for drinks after work, and the listener asks if you are worried about your kids being home alone. He hit the nail on the head, and you admit that you really are worried about that and would rather go right home.

How many people in your life can you identify at each of these levels?

It’s rather easy to think of people who exhibit levels 1-4, but it’s rare to know people who reflect level 5.

Why?

Because listening at level 5 means putting one’s own agenda completely aside to become neutral and caring. When we do encounter these people who listen at level 5, we fall in love with them.

Why is that?

It is because we feel heard. We feel understood and acknowledged as a human being.

Developing such a high level of listening takes time, patience, a willing heart, and a whole lot more that is quite another article! But if you are with someone else and you truly want to connect to become more influential in their lives, then this is what you must strive for. Because in the end, even if you seek to influence someone else toward your own agenda, true listening in the process may bring to light something you didn’t realize – and which may turn your own agenda on its head.

How do you increase your influence with someone in just five seconds?

It is with a shift in thinking: putting your own agenda aside for just a brief moment.

I’ve outlined a conversation to follow this shift that will truly acknowledge both you and the other person. The results from such a conversation can be not only rewarding, but relationship-changing for you both. (This outline assumes you’ve proposed your agenda, and you have made the 5-second shift to put this aside, now, to listen to the other person):

  1. Remain silent while the other person speaks. Tell yourself that whatever you are thinking right now can wait to be said, and really try to hear what they are saying.
  2. When they pause, you can say something like, “Tell me more,” or “What’s behind that?” And listen. Listen with the soles of your feet – put yourself in this person’s shoes and try to see through his eyes, from his perspective.
  3. Once the person is done talking, instead of rebutting, or giving advice, mirror back what he has just said as you show you are seeking to understand and acknowledge his point of view. “Here’s what I hear you saying, John…you are really worried about taking this course of action because it may place you in a position of vulnerability with your current project. Is that right?”
  4. As John acknowledges or edifies what you have just mirrored back, keep listening – go deeper into a mental space that is like Oliveros’ 14-foot cavern. Try not to formulate what you want to say – just listen. Reflect back what you have heard, again.
  5. Then finally, after you feel you have really listened to John, you can say something like, “John, I really hear what you are saying, and I don’t want to put you in a vulnerable position. Is there a way that we can solve this larger problem we are addressing together? What might that look like?

I challenge you to try this conversation out with a colleague or loved one. If you can do this, and begin to develop the art of deep listening, the results for you will be life-changing.

Patti Cotton

Patti Cotton reenergizes talented leaders and their teams to achieve fulfillment and extraordinary results. For more information on how Patti Cotton can help you and your organization, click here.

Asking for a Favor Can be a Powerful Tool

July 19, 2017 By Patti Cotton Leave a Comment

Asking for a Favor Can be a Powerful Tool
Image Credit: Shutterstock

Do you hesitate to ask for a favor when you know you already need a bigger one from that same person?

You’d be surprised that this is indeed the best time to ask!

And it’s especially helpful as you seek to influence that person toward a larger, more important goal.

Does that feel counter-intuitive? Many say it does.

Yet, Benjamin Franklin proved that when you ask someone for a favor, this person will be actually more predisposed to do another one for you!

To quote Mr. Franklin, “He that has once done you a kindness will be more ready to do you another, than he whom you yourself have obliged.’’

And he proved this by successfully testing out the theory to earn favor among high-ranking members of Philadelphia’s General Assembly.

Specifically, the story is told that while Franklin was running for reappointment as Clerk of the Assembly, a new, influential member ardently argued for a different candidate. Franklin saw this passion and wanted it for his own advocacy, instead.

So when he learned that this new member had a rare book collection, Franklin approached him and asked to borrow one of the most valuable books. The member agreed, Franklin quickly read the book and returned it.

The next time the two gentlemen met, the new member initiated a conversation with Franklin and offered his help on anything Franklin might need in the future. Guess what Franklin asked of him? You guessed it. And he got it. The new member not only advocated for Franklin, but they developed a influential relationship from there that lasted until the second gentleman’s death.

In social psychology, we now call this the “Ben Franklin Effect.” It’s a powerful tool to develop supportive relationships and to curry influence.

In the workforce, we see the Ben Franklin Effect work successfully in many situations.

First, if you are seeking a position, asking for an informational interview to learn more about the field, asking questions about trends in the industry, or seeking other advice usually results in the other person wanting to help you find a job.

In sales, you may want to ask the potential client about where they think the market is headed, or what product benefits they find most powerful or valuable.

And certainly, Frank could have used this with John (see the first article of this series where Frank blows the entire multi-million dollar deal with John because of his poor approach – click here).

With whom do you need more influence at this time? What favor can you ask of them in order to develop a closer, more fruitful relationship that can serve you both in future?


What impact are you having in life and business?
Click below to take the complimentary Impact Assessment.

TAKE THE IMPACT ASSESSMENThttp://inspireinfluenceimpactquiz.com/

Patti Cotton

Patti Cotton reenergizes talented leaders and their teams to achieve fulfillment and extraordinary results. For more information on how Patti Cotton can help you and your organization, click here.

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