What to do when you feel bullied (or at least a little intimidated)
This post is part of our Weekly Tips series.
This post is part of our Weekly Tips series.
This post is part of our Weekly Tips series.
The last few weeks have been unusually demanding for me, including a lot of overseas travel and many intense days leading learning programs. About two-thirds into this recent sprint I found myself dragging—big time. Fortunately for my clients and for me, I remembered a little trick I use to help me refocus and re-energize.
This post is part of our Weekly Tips series.
If you’ve been to one of my workshops, you’ve probably heard me say, “Trusted advisorship is, first and foremost, an inside job.” In other words, being masterful in your relationships starts with you … mastering you. This week’s tip is a compilation of resources to help with exactly that.
This post is part of our Weekly Tips series.
I recently came across two great best practices for building trust virtually: one to use with your team and one to use with your clients.
For your team: A virtual happy hour. I hosted one of these a few weeks ago. We gathered various members of my team from various parts of the US (including different time zones) for 45 minutes using Zoom, so we were all on video. We called it a “happy hour” (as the old saying goes, it’s 5 o’clock somewhere) and I invited everyone to join with their drink of choice—alcoholic or otherwise.
This post is part of our Weekly Tips series.
If you’ve been to one of our workshops, you know we emphasize the importance of paraphrasing and empathizing as critical listening skills, and therefore critical influencing skills. These are not mere nice-to-haves in your trusted advisor toolkit. Master these two skills—no kidding and genuinely—and you’ve got a really good chance of being seen by clients as more than just a smart problem solver. “Genuinely,” of course, is a key word, which can be a challenge.