Kid: Dad, why is the sky blue?
Me: The sky is blue because of the way sunlight interacts with our atmosphere.
Kid: Dad, what is the atmosphere?
Me: The atmosphere is the air that people, plants and animals breathe to survive.
Kid: What is air?
Me: Stop asking me questions I don’t know the answer to!!!#@#!@Q@$
Of course, the length of this conversation and the level of yelling involved differ according to the parental patience level.
Credit by Sher Rill Ng
As an adult, asking good questions is an often underutilised superpower.
Research shows that asking good questions builds trust and establishes credibility and empathy between people. “The Surprising Power of Questions” by Alison Wood Brooks and Leslie K. John (Harvard Business Review) establishes the benefits of asking questions as:
It spurs learning and the exchange of ideas, it fuels innovation and performance improvement, it builds rapport and trust among team members. And it can mitigate business risk by uncovering unforeseen pitfalls and hazards.
Assuming you want to fuel innovation, improve performance, build rapport and trust, and mitigate business risk, asking your client questions seems like a great place to start.
But what makes a good question? And what stops us from asking questions in the first place?
According to Greg Busin, in “That’s a Great Question: Provocative Questions, Practical Results”, there are five main factors:
Arrogance: assuming we already know the answer
Self-centeredness: not caring what others think
Fear of embarrassment: A belief that asking questions may reveal ignorance
Disturbing the status quo: Risk of being unpopular by asking a challenging question
Fear of the answer: revealing an uncomfortable truth
Credit by Sher Rill Ng
In an agency, you may feel your need to demonstrate your expertise to clients at all times. Counterintuitively, overcoming the urge to be the expert and asking a good question instead puts you in control. Good questions gently guide the conversation to where you need it to be.
For more thorough responses, avoid questions that solicit yes or no answers. You want more than yes/no answers. You want your client to open up so you can learn something. Open-ended questions put you on a path of discovery.
Instead of asking “will you be the final decision maker?”, which invites a yes/no response, consider asking “who will be involved in the final decision?”
Open-ended questions get your client to teach you something about themselves. Some great examples include:
Credit by Sher Rill Ng
It might sound simple, but it takes practice to listen.
Advertising & marketing are opinionated industries. Agencies can be hired on the strength of their opinions alone, often leading to more talking and less listening. “Most people do not listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply.”
― Stephen R. Covey, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change
Most people listen on a superficial level. They are busy trying to figure out the point instead of concentrating fully on what is being said. The moment they think they have an idea about where the speaker is headed, their attention shifts back inward to what their response will be.
Chris Voss, a former lead international kidnapping negotiator for the FBI, tells Harvard Business School Online it’s vital to demonstrate your willingness to listen.
“A lot of people are used to being asked questions and not having their answers listened to,” Voss says. “If you turn them off, it gives them permission to turn you off.”
Simply adding a statement such as “tell me more” encourages your client to continue sharing. The best piece of advice is to stop talking and listen. You will be amazed at what you can learn.
Most people listen on a superficial level. They are busy trying to figure out the point instead of concentrating fully on what is being said. The moment they think they have an idea about where the speaker is headed, their attention shifts back inward to what their response will be.
Chris Voss, a former lead international kidnapping negotiator for the FBI, tells Harvard Business School Online it’s vital to demonstrate your willingness to listen.
Simply adding a statement such as “tell me more” encourages your client to continue sharing. The best piece of advice is to stop talking and listen. You will be amazed at what you can learn.
Credit by Sher Rill Ng
Credit by Sher Rill Ng
Developing a better understanding of your clients business while having them feeling respected and heard seems like a pretty solid outcome to all.
To bring it back to the kid, what a five year old you knew intuitively is that there are no dumb questions. Unfortunately, this seems to get beaten out of us as we get older.
So next time you are with your client, don’t be afraid to ask questions. They are your most straightforward path to learning, and your relationship will be all the better for it.
This blog was written by Stephen Neville, the CEO of BugHerd.com.
A version of this article was first published on the DAN
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