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Index Page » Self Enhancement » Effective Communication
 

Effective Communication: Hear the Unspoken, Speak Well, and Say What You Mean!

 

Are you a good communicator? Do people understand you easily? I've had several experiences lately that made me realize once again the tremendous importance of EFFECTIVE communication. I tend to forget that everything I do or say, or DON'T do or say, is an important form of communication. Our words, body language, facial expressions, silence, and tone of voice all communicate volumes to everyone around us. What language are you, speaking? Does your listener understand it?

Let's start with the basics ... communication takes two, right? A 'speaker' and a 'listener'. Most conversations, verbal or not, have one of each at any given point. Are you a good listener? Do you know when to speak and when to listen? As a coach, I do a tremendous amount of listening, and I've discovered there is quite an art to it. Active listening takes into account not only the words being said, but the tone, silences, speed, emotion, and most of all the words NOT being said. The better you are at "reading between the lines" the more effective you can be as a listener. Pay attention to the clues and you'll learn a lot more about the speaker ... they're communication style may be vastly different from yours!

When it comes to the speaking part of the equation, how do you present yourself? Are you passionate, confident, and full of conversation? Find yourself drawn to speakers who are? Or do you say very little, but hope that each word falls on attentive and understanding ears? There are also some who prefer mostly verbal, and others who rely on non-verbal ... be sensitive to what your listener prefers and you'll find yourself understood more often. I tend to be a woman of few words, but regardless of your style, my words to live by in that department are simply "speak the truth in love". There are times when the truth is very hard to speak, and even harder to hear. The way it's delivered can have a huge effect on whether it's truly heard or not. I had a friend speak some painful truth to me last week, offering a perspective on my actions that was difficult to hear (and hard for her to say), and it was spoken in love. After a bit of protest I was able to hear it, and learned some valuable lessons from it.

My friend's observations also illustrated nicely the other half of effective communication ... the unspoken part. She was seeing and responding primarily to how I was speaking and what I wasn't saying, which spoke much louder than what I was saying with my words. In my coaching, I often point out what's not being said, and offer feedback in the form of "What I'm hearing from you is ..." which lets the listener know what exactly I am hearing and understanding. Feedback is critical to let the speaker know what's going on in the listener's head, and usually comes in the form of a reaction or a response. The difference? Reactions are sudden, intuitive, and usually emotional. Responses are thoughtful, considered, and delivered consciously, and sometimes silence is the strongest response! Both can be very effective forms of communication, but beware of letting reactions rule the landscape or you may get communications you didn't bargain for!

The bottom line ... even if you're having a conversation with someone in your native tongue of French or English or what have you, stay conscious of what and how you're communicating, and learn to read the clues offered by the other person. You'll find that speaking the truth in love, and in a language your listener understands, will go a long way towards avoiding misunderstandings!

Author: Bethany Rule
 
Author Bio:

Bethany Rule

Bethany brings depth, intuitive vision, a keen ear, careful analysis, and fierce determination to every client she coaches. She creates and maintains calm and empowering environments where her clients explore their options, discover opportunities, remove obstacles, and uncover their own passion for change. She also fills the role of a muse, getting clients into action to become more than they?re allowing themselves to be.

Bethany uses her active listening skills, keen insights into human nature, and focusing abilities to teach her clients to cut through the clutter and baggage and zero in on what really is, what isn?t, and what can be. She has successfully refocused a change-management company on their core values, improved the effectiveness of internal communications at multiple organizations, and coached workaholics into jumping off the corporate track to start their own dream organizations. She gets you, and she helps you get it done.

Bethany?s background includes experience as a marketing designer in both large and small companies, corporate maze navigator, entrepreneur, change management architect, and travel fiend. She believes in living a life without regrets, the power of listening, in taking chances, in the strength of hearts, and the value of honest relationships. In pursuit of her own life without regrets, she?s been known to jump out of a plane, travel to 18 countries on 4 continents, get married barefoot, start 4 businesses, give birth at an Amish farmhouse, and fly halfway around the world just to spend 18 hours with a lonely friend.

Bethany holds a BFA from the University of Illinois at Chicago. In addition, she has completed formal Life Coaching training at the International Coach Academy.

 
 
 

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