Buddy
The Living Force
The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.
—GEORGE BERNARD SHAW
I would like to mention a book I've found really enjoyable and useful in daily life. Crucial Conversations has now grown into Crucial Confrontations and spreading around the world. People from all walks of life are learning this model, implementing the skills and using them to improve relationships and get things done. I thought a mention of it would be worth posting about on here.
Crucial Conversations Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High
SECOND EDITION
Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, Al Switzler
Copyright © 2012 by Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, and Al Switzler. All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-07-177220-4
MHID: 0-07-177220-0
Foreword by Stephen R. Covey
Contents
FOREWORD TO THE SECOND EDITION
FOREWORD TO THE FIRST EDITION
PREFACE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CH. 1: What’s a Crucial Conversation?
And Who Cares? 1
CH. 2: Mastering Crucial Conversations
The Power of Dialogue
CH. 3: Start with Heart
How to Stay Focused on What You Really Want
CH. 4: Learn to Look
How to Notice When Safety Is at Risk
CH. 5: Make It Safe
How to Make It Safe to Talk About Almost Anything
CH. 6: Master My Stories
How to Stay in Dialogue When You’re Angry, Scared, or Hurt
CH. 7: STATE My Path
How to Speak Persuasively, Not Abrasively
CH. 8: Explore Others’ Paths
How to Listen When Others Blow Up or Clam Up
CH. 9: Move to Action
How to Turn Crucial Conversations into Action and Results
CH. 10: Yeah, But
Advice for Tough Cases
CH. 11: Putting It All Together
Definition:
Crucial Conversation: A discussion between two or more people where (1) stakes are high, (2) opinions vary, and (3) emotions run strong.
A key concept:
There are two common patterns people fall into that put safety at risk. With silence, people may be withdraw from conversation, avoid topics or respond in ways that obscure meaning. With violence, people may resort to verbal abuse, labeling, and manipulating the situation. Understanding these patterns will allow you to diagnose situations and be more effective. Also, there is a test that lets you identify your preferred pattern when in conflict so you can debug your own behaviour.
A note from Chapter 2:
There was a first chapter (22 page pdf) preview offered by VitalSmarts that I can't locate on the web ATM, so here's a similar example of the first chapter (16 page pdf):
_http://www.davidmaxfield.com/downloads/cc1firstchapter.pdf
As a summary, I found a 5 page pdf by Frumi Rachel Barr, MBA, PhD, who also does summaries for _www.100mustreads.com, to be better than others on the web. It no longer resides where I originally found it, so I uploaded a copy and linked it here:
_http://depositfiles.com/files/6h959go5s
Here's another good summary (8 page pdf):
_http://files.soundview.com.s3.amazonaws.com/sample-summary/crucial.pdf
—GEORGE BERNARD SHAW
I would like to mention a book I've found really enjoyable and useful in daily life. Crucial Conversations has now grown into Crucial Confrontations and spreading around the world. People from all walks of life are learning this model, implementing the skills and using them to improve relationships and get things done. I thought a mention of it would be worth posting about on here.
Crucial Conversations Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High
SECOND EDITION
Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, Al Switzler
Copyright © 2012 by Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, and Al Switzler. All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-07-177220-4
MHID: 0-07-177220-0
Foreword by Stephen R. Covey
Contents
FOREWORD TO THE SECOND EDITION
FOREWORD TO THE FIRST EDITION
PREFACE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CH. 1: What’s a Crucial Conversation?
And Who Cares? 1
CH. 2: Mastering Crucial Conversations
The Power of Dialogue
CH. 3: Start with Heart
How to Stay Focused on What You Really Want
CH. 4: Learn to Look
How to Notice When Safety Is at Risk
CH. 5: Make It Safe
How to Make It Safe to Talk About Almost Anything
CH. 6: Master My Stories
How to Stay in Dialogue When You’re Angry, Scared, or Hurt
CH. 7: STATE My Path
How to Speak Persuasively, Not Abrasively
CH. 8: Explore Others’ Paths
How to Listen When Others Blow Up or Clam Up
CH. 9: Move to Action
How to Turn Crucial Conversations into Action and Results
CH. 10: Yeah, But
Advice for Tough Cases
CH. 11: Putting It All Together
Definition:
Crucial Conversation: A discussion between two or more people where (1) stakes are high, (2) opinions vary, and (3) emotions run strong.
A key concept:
There are two common patterns people fall into that put safety at risk. With silence, people may be withdraw from conversation, avoid topics or respond in ways that obscure meaning. With violence, people may resort to verbal abuse, labeling, and manipulating the situation. Understanding these patterns will allow you to diagnose situations and be more effective. Also, there is a test that lets you identify your preferred pattern when in conflict so you can debug your own behaviour.
A note from Chapter 2:
.DIALOGUE SKILLS ARE LEARNABLE
The skills required to master high-stakes interactions are quite easy to spot and moderately easy to learn. First consider the fact that a well-handled crucial conversation all but leaps out at you. In fact, when you see someone enter the dangerous waters of a high-stakes, high-emotion, controversial discussion—and the person does a particularly good job—your natural reaction is to step back in awe. “Wow!” is generally the first word out of your mouth. What starts as a doomed discussion ends up with a healthy resolution. It can take your breath away.
More important, not only are dialogue skills easy to spot, but they’re also fairly easy to learn. That’s where we’re going next. We’ve isolated and captured the skills of the dialogue-gifted through twenty-five years of nonstop “Wow!” research. First, we followed around Kevin and others like him.
Then, when conversations turned crucial , we took detailed notes. Afterward, we compared our observations, tested our hypotheses, and honed our models until we found the skills that consistently explain the success of brilliant communicators. Finally, we combined our philosophies, theories, models, and skills into a package of learnable tools—tools for talking when stakes are high. We then taught these skills and watched as key performance indicators and relationships improved.
Now we’re ready to share what we’ve learned. Stay with us as we explore how to transform crucial conversations from frightening events into interactions that yield success and results. It’s the most important set of skills you’ll ever master.
HERE’S WHERE WE’RE GOING
Throughout the remainder of the book we’ll explore the tools people use to help create the conditions of dialogue. The focus is on how we think about problem situations and what we do to prepare for them. As we work on ourselves, watch for problems, examine our own thought processes, discover our own styles, and then catch problems before they get out of hand, everyone benefits. As you read on, you will learn how to create conditions in yourself and others that make dialogue the path of least resistance .
Next, we’ll examine the tools for talking, listening, and acting together. This is what most people have in mind when they think of crucial conversations. How do I express delicate feedback? How do I speak persuasively, not abrasively? And how about listening? Or better still, what can we do to get people to talk when they seem nervous? And how do we move from thought to action? As you read on, you will learn the key skills of talking, listening, and acting together .
Finally, we’ll tie all of the theories and skills together by providing both a model and an extended example. Then, to see if you can really do what it takes, we provide seventeen situations that would give most of us fits—even people who are gifted at dialogue. As you read on, you will master the tools for talking when stakes are high.
There was a first chapter (22 page pdf) preview offered by VitalSmarts that I can't locate on the web ATM, so here's a similar example of the first chapter (16 page pdf):
_http://www.davidmaxfield.com/downloads/cc1firstchapter.pdf
As a summary, I found a 5 page pdf by Frumi Rachel Barr, MBA, PhD, who also does summaries for _www.100mustreads.com, to be better than others on the web. It no longer resides where I originally found it, so I uploaded a copy and linked it here:
_http://depositfiles.com/files/6h959go5s
Here's another good summary (8 page pdf):
_http://files.soundview.com.s3.amazonaws.com/sample-summary/crucial.pdf