Ask without telling, the art of asking questions

To make good questions and help your team to develop their problem-solving skills, you need to know how to ask without telling.

One thing that everybody does every day is asking questions.  We ask questions to learn, clarify doubts, or obtain information.  As a leader, you ask questions to learn about a situation.  Also, you make questions to guide your team on their learning process.  However, are you asking or disguising your solutions as questions?  To promote a learning environment, leaders need to ask without telling.

Sometimes a leader needs to tell

Leaders have the responsibility to communicate, set direction, and provide a purpose.  To accomplish them, they tell information and share news or concerns with their team.  Moreover, there are times when they need to set direction.  Sometimes, there is a need to change a strategy or adjust a plan.  When that happens, the leader tells the group what the change is and why it is needed.  Also, how it will affect them and the new expectations.  During these situations, telling is the right thing to do.

Another responsibility of leadership is to teach and coach their team.   The objective is to transfer knowledge and create capabilities.  While facilitating the learning process, leaders tell new information.

Finally, sometimes leaders need to advise people.  It is common to share previous experiences or tell a story to illustrate a point.  If that is the case, say what you are trying to do, do not hide it behind questions.  The best leaders are humble and compassionate.  There is nothing wrong with showing your humanity by using past experiences to illustrate a point.

Why do you need to ask without telling?

A servant leader’s job is to develop more leaders by teaching, motivating, facilitating, and supporting the team.  By asking questions without telling, they promote learning.  Also, their team’s confidence in their ability to solve problems and create more value grows.  As their confidence grows, their participation in the improvement process grows as well. 

A critical step to change the culture is to empower the people.  While asking questions with respect, leaders guide them to find answers by themselves.  By allowing people to use their brains and participate in the daily management processes and innovation, they feel more engaged with their work and happier when they come back home.  

How can you ask without telling?  How to ask better questions?

When you ask questions that people can answer with a simple yes or no, they don’t put too much effort. Closed questions do not lead to engagement or promote thinking.  When you don’t receive answers, the next thing you do is telling people what to do.  On the other hand, with open questions, people need to think.  Use the 5W and 1H to ask questions.  That is, reframe your questions using who, what, where, when, why, and how.

To keep the brain’s wheels turning, ask one question at a time and give people time to think.  In general, we are not comfortable with silence.  Therefore, right after asking something, people jump to tell their answer.  To be successful in asking without telling, you will need to become comfortable with silence.

Sometimes it is easier to ask closed questions.  Therefore, you would need to stop and think about how to reframe it as an open question.  There are two questions that I used often.  The first one is, what makes you think that way? or ” What do you think we can do differently?”  The second question I often used is, “How do you think we can accomplish that? 

Ask without telling that is what we should do.

Contrary to common perception, leaders are not supposed to have all the answers.  However, very often, they have ideas or solutions to share with the team.  During those times, tell the group that you want to share something with them.  You can always tell people, here is a suggestion and then ask how they can improve it.  Do not hide answers using questions.  Let people think, promote learning and problem-solving skills.

By telling, leadership is not fulfilling their responsibility of teaching and coaching.  Once again, this is a stop-and-think situation.  Think about your idea, do you have any doubts about it?  What parts of it need fine-tuning?  Use your doubts or unknown parts to ask open questions.

A continuous improvement culture seeks to foster a learning environment.  Servant leaders teach, motivate, facilitate, and support their teams.  Show them that you care by helping them to develop their skills and grow.  Learning how to ask questions without telling is a way to achieve that.

Bored employees, is your team part of them?

Boredom in the workplace

Do you have bored employees? How often you hear your kids saying they are bored?  All the time, right?  Not only do kids get bored, adults too. Often, they don’t say it. However, their actions are a reflection of it.  

The 2016 Workplace Boredom Study by Udemy for Business indicated that 43% of US office employees are bored. Moreover, they mentioned that boredom is a leading indicator of disengagement.  What are the causes of boredom?  What can you do to fight against it? 

Why people get bored? 

Monotony is probably the most known cause of boredom. Repetition or lack of interest in a task cause boredom. Personality and personal traits determine how well people react to boredom. Some people need more novelty or variety than others. Therefore, they have a higher risk of apathy. Besides, people with attention problems also tend to boredom.

Lack of flow is another cause of boredom. Shahram Heshmat, in a 2017 post in Psychology Today, talked about task flow. He indicated that flow occurs when a person’s skills match the environmental challenges. It also happens when a task includes clear goals and immediate feedback.

Reasons for workplace boredom

The top two reasons why employees feel bored at work are lack of opportunities to learn new skills and unchallenging work.

The Udemy study that I mentioned before noted as a takeaway the following. “The biggest driver of engagement is an employee’s personal view of their future. Today’s workers desire to be more involved in shaping their own experience in the workplace. Business and HR leaders must help people envision their future career and learning path in order to effectively engage them“.  

This is how you can fight boredom in the workplace.

Doesn’t that Udemy takeaway, remember you the continuous improvement tenet Respect for People? As servant leaders, our job is to create a culture of respect. Within it, we help the team to flourish and be what they can be. You do so by providing opportunities to develop their skills and get better jobs.

Empower your team to take control of their tasks and workplace. Do it by facilitating and supporting collaboration, learning, and personal development.  Provide a learning environment where employees feel comfortable exploring and testing new things. Finding ways to do their job and improve their work conditions becomes a challenge. Therefore, they have a focus, a purpose, or a challenge that keeps them engaged.  

Take time to know each person in your team. When you do, you can recognize characteristics that make them prone to boredom. As a result, you can create individualized development plans.  Get to know your team members’ aspirations and personal goals. Also, try to encourage them to work towards their achievement.

Everybody feels boredom sometimes, but we can fight it most of the time!

Reference:

Heshmat, S. (2017, June).  Eight Reasons Why We Get Bored:  Boredom can be viewed as a crisis of desire.  [Blog post] Accessed 11.18/2020.   https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/science-choice/201706/eight-reasons-why-we-get-bored

(Udemy for Business). 2016 Udemy Workplace Boredom Study.  Accessed 11/18/2020.  https://research.udemy.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/2016-Udemy-Workplace-Boredom-Study.pdf

Show they matter, give the gift of giving.

Although it should happen all the time, during the holidays, it is more common. We show the people we love that they matter. But this Christmas season is like no other. Many things that we take for granted our entire lives are now challenging, scarce, or even non-existent. One of them is traveling to see our family. Despite the health situation, you can still travel following the appropriate precautions. Some people will choose not to travel to avoid health complications to their loved ones. But this does not mean that we have to be isolated or not have meaningful communication with the people we love and appreciate.

Feeling connected

Many people have a hard time feeling connected.  It happens with our family, friends, and the workplace.  The continuous improvement tenet of servant leadership is a universal concept that does not have to live inside a workplace. It can and should be how we express kindness and respect everywhere.

The following are different ways we can check-in with our family, friends, and colleagues to make them feel connected, and seen.

Show they matter, be present

One of the best ways to show people they matter is to be present.  If you are lucky enough to have the chance to visit and spend face to face time with your love ones, be mindful of that privilege.  Do now wasted spending time on your phone browsing through social media.  But if you won’t spend face to face time, you can plan for virtual events or a phone call. 

Sometimes we don’t reach out to people only because they haven’t reach out to us in a while.  Many things happen in life, we don’t know the reasons why this happened, but if you care about this person, it does not care.  Take the phone, call or send a text, or a message through any of the available messaging systems.  Or why not? a written note.  Send a postal card, or an old fashion letter.  If this is too old for you, then an email, but reach out.

Acknowledge their feelings 

Every year, we have around us people that is not too happy around this period.  Most of the time happen because they lose a loved one, or a job.  This year this situation is amplified by all the fallouts from the pandemic.  Gatherings of all type may have a different taste, but it is important to acknowledge the feelings, and the fact that this too will pass.  Hope and laughter are great things to share.  And while you are in that mood, acknowledge your feelings too!  It is ok to be feeling sad, missing the celebrations as we know them, and craving for human contact.  

Seize small opportunities to connect

You don’t need a party to initiate a conversation with someone you haven’t see in a while.  Do not miss the chance to use a Facebook birthday reminder or a LinkedIn work anniversary to connect.  Sometimes a simple hello, I was thinking about you goes a long way.  

Give the gift of giving, show they matter

Create the right environment to keep a connection with the people around you. Help those in need any way you can. For example, motivate those who feel sad to enjoy life and keep fighting the good fight.  Show people you care, share what you have, be a good neighbor, friend, colleague, leader, and family member.  During the holidays and all year long, the best gift is the gift of giving.  It makes you feel good, and it makes the other person feel connected and loved.  

What is Servant Leadership?

Servant leadership focuses on the development and well-being of the people.

Many years ago, the company I was working with was getting ready for a transformation.  The hourly rate structure had too many classifications. Also, it had a great variety of job functions. I team up with the human resources team to create the new structure.  

After a detailed analysis of every function and its responsibilities, we combined some functions and created new names for them.  The HR manager suggested changing the Supervisor’s position name to Facilitators.  I did not understand why. 100% of my peers did not understand either.

Fast forward a couple of years, and now I am leading the lean implementation. During a meeting, my lean coach brought up the concept of servant leadership. It was the first time I heard about it. He explained that continuous improvement is a people-centric system. Leadership’s job is to take care of the team. Facilitate events and teach tools are a secondary job. The tools are important, but it is the people who matter, he said.

Servant leadership is a different way to do things. It is a distinctive leadership style or attitude.  A Servant Leader focuses on the development and well-being of the people.  The employees are first!  Therefore, the leader’s job is to develop more leaders by teaching, motivating, facilitating, and supporting the team.  Below are examples of how you can be a better leader.

Servant leadership and Teaching

  • With teaching and mentoring, you get people to do things that otherwise they wouldn’t. These skills and experiences change their work and their entire life.  
  • A servant leader creates the right environment for learning and building trust.
  • It also handover the tools needed to be safe and effective.  

Motivate

  • Encourage exploring new things and testing different ways to get better results.  
  • Follow-up on suggestions and ideas. Seen your ideas implemented is a powerful motivation.

Facilitate & Support

  • Facilitate and endorse collaboration between teams by promoting participation in kaizen to solve cross-functional problems.
  • Give them information, resources, and better work environments to ensure success.
  • Provide the right continuous improvement support system. For example, provide training schedules, suggestion programs, quality circles, daily improvements, and fair compensation systems.
  • Understand and support the team all the time, regardless they succeed or not. Moreover, show that in continuous improvement, you win, or you learn.  
  • Not everybody learns at the same pace, be patient and empathic. Help the team to achieve what they believe is not possible. Also, to trust their skills.

Practicing Servant Leadership

To be a servant leader, focus on the needs of others before your own. Every day, go and see what is going on for yourself. Experience the facts firsthand and listen to their concerns and ideas. Learn about them as individuals, get to know the person behind the team member. Establish a relationship with your team and create the right environment for people to flourish. Are you ready to be a servant leader? Can you understand now why the name Facilitator was not such a bad idea? I do.