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Weber, Craig. Conversational Capacity: the secret to building successful teams that perform when the pressure is on. McGraw-Hill Education. Toronto. 2013.

The key to open, balanced, and nondefensive dialogue in the workplace? Staying in the sweet spot that balances minimizing and winning.

A quick read to discover tools to improve dialogue and team dynamics.

Messages

Book Outline

Tests invite people to discuss our hypotheses

Solicit how others see things

Overcome differences in positional power

Inquiries invite people to share hypotheses

Raise unexplained hypotheses behind someone's position

Invite quiet members

Principles for team discipline

Personal Work Team Work
Meeting time is practice time Meeting time is practice time
Becoming a reflective practitioner Decision making: help the person making the decision make the most informed and effective choice possible
Look in the mirror Prepare for implementation and hold conversations needed for good implementation
Focus on one skill at a time Use visual reminders
Adopt a learner's mindset ("how interesting") Jointly design how to use the skills in your team
Document your progress (trigger journal) Help each other
Seek regular feedback Appoint a monitor or facilitator (monitoring, feedback and intervention during meetings)
Enroll your teammates Create a code of conversational conduct
Study Hold each other accountable (position, thinking, testing, inquiry)
Teach it to others Practice regularly
Be patient Acknowledge and reward people
Master mindfulness practice -
Use partners -
Give notice to prepare for conversations -
Record a meeting and "score" your balance -
Be the productive variable -

Effective Dialogue for Decision Making

Trigger Journal

Key elements in a conversational code of conduct