Showing posts with label Communication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Communication. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Becoming A Great Receiver


I came across this article via the Harvard Business Review twitter handle. They are constantly tweeting great articles. This one happens to be about receiving communication. Read the full article written by Peter Bregman here

The better you are at receiving, the more likely people will talk to you. And that's precisely what every one of us needs: to be surrounded by people who are willing to speak the unspoken.
So how do you become a great receiver?
1. Be courageous. We often attribute courage to the speaker, but what about the receiver? 
I may have been scared broaching topics with Alma, but I had the advantage of time and preparation. I could control what I said and how I said it. I was able to think about it beforehand, write down a few notes, and test my thoughts with someone else. 
The receiver has no such advantage. Like Sam, he has to receive my throw, however, whenever, and wherever it lands. He has to be willing to listen to something that might make him feel afraid or insecure or defensive. And if he is a great receiver, he will take in the information or message thoughtfully, even if the delivery is awkward or the message jarring. That takes tremendous courage.

2. Don't judge. Receiving is as much about what you don't do as it is about what you do. 

Resist the temptation — blatantly or subtly — to be critical of the speaker or what the speaker is saying. Don't argue with her, poke fun at her, shame her, act aggressively, turn on her, become defensive, or act cold toward her. 

3. Be open. In order to receive a pass in any sport — and at work and in life — you need to be free, open, and unguarded. 
Yet we often guard ourselves. Powerful feelings like fear, anger, sadness, and insecurity do their best to block our ability to receive a pass. If you want to be a talented receiver, your task is to feel your feelings without letting them block or control you or your response. Breathe. Acknowledge what you're feeling to yourself — maybe even to the other person — without dwelling on it. 

Reiterate what you're hearing, ask questions, be curious. Not curious in an "I-will-find-out-enough-information-so-I-can-prove-you-wrong" way. Curious to understand what the person is saying and to understand what's underneath what they're saying.
If you can be courageous, avoid judging, and stay open — even if the toss is awkward and the message unsettling — then, like Sam, like Alba, you'll be able to catch pretty much anything.
And when you're skilled at that, you'll be a most valuable player of any team you're on.


Tuesday, May 14, 2013

"Talking" On Defense



The following comes from one of my favorite books "Toughness" by Jay Bilas

Talking on the floor is difficult and, to some players, seems unnatural. But when a player talks on defense, it is difficult if not impossible for that player not o be more engaged that he otherwise would be.

The talking player is more likely to be down in a stance and read, and more likely to be in the right position and prepared not only to cover his assignment, but to help a teammate and still recover.

Talk is essential to a winning team's confidence. Communicating is about connecting and being connected. It is about trust and commitment.

On defense, when one teammate is guarding the player with the ball, it is important for all other teammates or help defenders, to "play the ball" and talk to their teammate guarding the ball. That on-ball defender is your teammate, and he is on an island without the ability to see what is going on behind him. That teammate needs the confidence to pressure the ball without the fear of getting beaten off the dribble.

It is the talk, the communication of his teammates that instills that confidence and trust.

Monday, May 13, 2013

Jay Bilas on Communication





"When communication is built on trust, true toughness can emerge"

"Being a good team defender was not about keeping my assignment from scoring, but making certain that our team kept their team from scoring." 

"To be an effective communicator, a great teammate and tough player has to talk, but also has to be able to listen."

"On defense, a true team player, a tough player, needs to be responsible for his specific role and assignment, but accountable to the mission, which is to stop the opponent from scoring on the defensive end." 

From Toughness by Jay Bilas