Learn to Question!
Socrates was one of the greatest
teachers the world has ever seen. Teaching the pedagogic way by means of asking
questions was his hallmark. He would never provide answers to the questions his
pupils asked, instead, hurled back a question to make the student think and
reflect. The outcome was a deep learning and in the process, a skill building
for the pupil to learn to question. Thus born the art and science of Socratic
Questioning!
Cut to the modern times-
personal and professional lives!
In an era of communication,
where listening and questioning skills are at a premium, we find many a
professional struggling when it comes to asking impactful and incisive
questions. Leaders, people managers, sales professionals, students name them
and this takes epidemic proportions.
We see modern managers
interacting with individuals prescriptively. Sales professionals struggling to
put forth the right questions to their customers to get them reveal their
preferences and motives. Teachers showing a bias towards the students who come
up with fitting answers and worse even, admonishing those minorities who ask
frequent questions in classes! What's gone wrong?
Let's be bold enough in
admitting that many of us even as performance professionals dread this skill
while coaching, engaging and consulting with stakeholders! This seems deep
rooted. We like to talk matters down
rather than listening about it as a discourse.
I attribute two intrinsic
reasons to this syndrome
§ Societal practices
§ Personal preferences
As a society, we encourage and
promote kind of superiority for answers and solutions. We love to be branded as
a 'go- to-answer' man, 'knows it all' persona. Since
childhood, we are accustomed to hear from our parents as to how we fared
answering questions in classes or exams. Very few would recollect their parents
enquiring them if they had asked good questions to their teachers or friends.
Neil Postman once said 'Children come to school as question marks
but unfortunately leave school as periods'. Apathy and fear towards
questioning start taking toots from the beginning of our childhood.
As human being, we love to hear
our own voices rather than listening to others and this preference marginalize
a culture of discourse. Exploring
through questions takes a back seat. As we grow up and climb ladders of success
many of us develop a 'tell-mode'
approach to work and life. No wonder, listening is equally a challenging skill
as Questioning.
Growing body of evidences and
best practices suggest that effective leaders are good teachers who engage
their people through series of thought- provoking questions and storytelling.
Contrast this with an average manager who seldom asks any incisive question to
his team and monopolizes conversation. General wisdom will tell that the more
you make others talk and reveal, the better equipped you are in terms of
knowledge and information about the person and the situation.
How do we then gain mastery over
the art of questioning?
Like any other skills, it
requires self- awareness as spring board to start off.
1. Know your current questioning skills and
styles - A self-aware soul will do better and go further
2. Build your repertoire of questioning styles
- Gaining a practical understanding of various types of questions and their
relevance in communication. Open- ended, Closed- ended, Leading, Exploring and
Rhetorical questions are the ones mostly used for effective engagement.
3. Take a genuine interest in the person or
the subject you are engaging with - your questions will appear solution-driven
rather a probe.
4. Allow the person to respond and clarify - Don't
just assume and interpret. Trust in communication starts from here.
5. Be open to clarify and rephrase to elicit
desired response - At the end of it, the meaning of your communication is
the response that you get.
6.
Encourage
respondents with warmth and positivity – A friendly environment will add to
your confidence and flow.
7. Match your questioning skills with a deep
listening skill -You'll be reciprocated.
8. Match your questions with suitable body-
language - They play out synergy.
9. Ask for feedback - Your progress will
be amplified with nuggets of feedback from colleagues and friends
10.
Practice
it the right way! Seek help from others who do it better.
Questioning skills and its
mastery will determine the richness in our relationship, communication and
leadership. Questioning should be matched with an astute sense of listening.
Leaders and their organizations will reap disproportionate benefits by cultivating
and promoting a questioning culture.
Examples of a position of Chief Questioning Officer in some German companies
are few but make real business sense.
Let the tribe grow!