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Tips on becoming a better listener
Merlin Mann | Jul 10 2006
When we meet, you and I, you will see for yourself one of my most humiliating traits. No it's not my acromegaly, my plaid pants, nor my atrocious hairpiece. No, friend, you will be deeply annoyed to hear me ask you to repeat your name at least twice, and possibly five times, during our inaugural conversation. And, in subsequent meetings, even though your face will be forever etched upon my brain (a skill at which I absolutely excel), I will probably call you "Champ," "Chief," or possibly "Tex." Because, yes, I will have completely forgotten your name. And it's not just a bad memory that's to blame here (although, of course, my memory sucks, too) -- I'm convinced it's because I am a terrible listener, and because I suffer intermittent encoding errors at the time data is written to disk, so to speak. In working to improve this socially-crippling liability, in general -- to hear what people are really saying rather than just using the down time to formulate a pseudo-clever response -- I've begun skimming the web for advice. I have these sites and tips to share with you so far, so listen up! From Becoming a Better Listener:
From The Top 10 Tips for Becoming a Better Listener:
From BookRags: How to Be a Better Listener Article:
From How can you listen better? - workopolis.com:
How'd you become a good listener? Got a good trick that put you on the right track to hearing people more and better? 33 Comments
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One of my tips for...Submitted by Tony Williams (not verified) on July 12, 2006 - 4:10pm.
One of my tips for becoming a better listener is to start becoming an 'active' listener and learn the art of the 'enabling question'. Ask people open ended questions that can't be answered with a yes or no. For example. don't ask "Was that fun?", instead say "Riding the rollercoaster sounds like fun, how was it for you?" - that question tells the other person you're listening as you include detail from what they were saying and leaves them with an open question. This is a favourite trick of good therapists and works wonders with "cocktail party" conversation. People will love talking to you and will come away convinced you're twice as smart as you actually are. Tony » POSTED IN:
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