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Disarming Defensive Behavior
by Laurie Weiss, Lau
No matter what you say to them about a problem, they can explain...
Why they couldn't help making a mistake...
Why they are not to blame because they meant well...
Why it's your fault that they made the mistake....

They're so defensive, it's a real challenge to get them toaddress any problem.

David, an engineer who leads a team of prickly Ph.D.
researchers, sidesteps this defensiveness, and you can too.

He has developed a strategy of asking penetrating questions that almost force people to think through situations in depth. Then he listens very carefully to their responses.

David explained: "I ask questions in order to get very clear about what is happening." These are questions about details.Questions like:
"What happened first?"
"Then what happened?"
"How did you recognize that there was a problem?"

David wants to make it safe for the people he works with to tell the truth. He never blames anyone else for a problem or a miscommunication. If there is any blame, he assumes it himself by the way he asks his questions.

He demonstrates taking responsibility for learning by
modeling that responsibility for others. He is likely to preface a question with a disarming statement such as
"I'm really confused here."
"I'm sorry, would you mind going over that again?"
"I must have heard this wrong before."
"I must have really screwed up."

David reports that whenever he offers to assume blame for a problem, others are quick to argue that they are responsible for the problem themselves.

Use some of David's techniques next time you must solve a problem with someone who always insists on being right.

Excerpted from Lesson 16 of "The Integrity Course,"
Copyright 2005 Laurie Weiss, Ph.D.
Laurie Weiss has sinced written about articles on various topics from Burnout, Travel and Leisure and Guide Guitar. Learn more in "The Integrity Course," an online, multimedia course to help you say what you think without getting fired or losing your friends.
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