ALTE DOCUMENTE
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What's Your IQ?
© 2003 Esther Derby
This column originally appeared on Stickyminds.com
To some of us, influence is a dirty word. We think of influence peddling, organizational politics or strong arm tactics along the lines of "I made him an offer he couldn't refuse." But much of the work we do depends on our ability to work through and with other people, and that means influence. You don't have to be in charge to have influence; the elements of influence are available to us every day.
Let's eavesdrop on two conversations to see what we can learn about influence.
Cindy: "You can't do the tables that way, Brandon,"
Cindy (cutting
Cindy: "Were going to have to write 10% more code, at least. And then we'll have to test it all. It's a bad idea."
Cindy: "Do you really want us to blow our project deadlines? Is that what you want?"
After a couple more brow-beatings
from Cindy,
Cindy, however, felt a little twinge
of pride. She believed that she had
exerted her influence and moved
Cindy is exhibiting one sort of influence, perhaps the sort that gives influence a bad name: browbeating and emotional manipulation.
He responded to Cindy's objection by explaining his position rather than exploring her objection.
He responded to her second objection by arguing the facts.
In another part of the country, Jason and Tom are working on a virtually identical project:
Jason: "Tom, the customers are really screaming about having to convert their databases with every release. I think I've found a way to eliminate a conversion for the next release. Is this a good time to walk through my design?"
Tom: "Sure, show me what you've got."
Jason walked through the design.
Tom : "Well, the way you have it set up, we'll have to write another call every time we access this table."
Jason : "Ah. That's true. When I did the analysis I saw there would be an extra call. Can you tell me more about the impact you think that will have?
Tom : "Well, I'm worried about writing and testing those calls. We're already on a really tight schedule."
Jason : "Can you tell me more about that?"
Tom: "The project manager is sweating the deadline. We just got hit with a big new feature, and we don't need one more thing to make us late."
Jason: "Oh, so your concern is that the extra coding and testing will make you miss your project dates."
Tom: "Yep, I don't see how we can add this to the plate."
Jason: "I see. Well, what if we talk to the project manager about the trade-offs and see if we can shift something around to make this work."
Tom: "Well, all right. I'll agree to have the conversation with the project manager."
Ok, so maybe Cindy would need Prozac to be this mellow. But most people will hear more and be willing to cooperate when they feel like you have heard their concerns and understand that your goals intersect with their goals.
Here's what Jason did:
When Jason approached Tom, he checked to make sure it was a good time to walk through the design before he started.
Jason stated his goal explicitly, and tied it to something they both cared about, customer satisfaction.
When Jason heard Tom's objections, he asked for more information rather than starting to explain his position.
He acknowledged Tom's concern, and obtained Tom's agreement that he'd heard the concern correctly.
He showed his willingness to help Tom overcome that concern by talking to the project manager.
So what's your IQ? What strategies do you use to work through and with people? When have they worked best, and when have they backfired?
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