founder leadership workshop

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Founder Communication InnerSpace Semira Rahemtulla & Joe Greenstein Jul 7, 2016

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Page 1: Founder Leadership Workshop

Founder Communication

InnerSpaceSemira Rahemtulla & Joe Greenstein

Jul 7, 2016

Page 2: Founder Leadership Workshop

Why are we doing this? (Part 1)

Page 3: Founder Leadership Workshop

Why are we doing this? (Part 2)

Page 4: Founder Leadership Workshop

One Big Idea

Page 5: Founder Leadership Workshop

INTENTNeeds

MotivesStories

Reality #2

IMPACTAssumptions

FeelingsResponses

Reality #3

3 Realities (The “Net” Model)

The Net

BEHAVIORVerbal

Non-Verbal

Reality #1Shared

Page 6: Founder Leadership Workshop

Feelings & Emotions – Why??Feelings & Emotions – Why??

Page 7: Founder Leadership Workshop

Self-Disclosure

Will I be less liked,

respected, influential

(leader-like)?

Is it relevant? Will it further the discussion – the

relationship?

Will others use this

information against me?

How will others

see/assess/ judge me?

“What in my ‘bubble’

should I share?”

Self-Disclosure

Page 8: Founder Leadership Workshop

“ VULNERABILITY ISTHE BIRTHPLACEOF CONNECTION. ”BRENÉ BROWN

Page 9: Founder Leadership Workshop

Authentic Leaders

“The single factor distinguishing top quartile managers from bottom quartile managers was strength of affection.”--“Encouraging the Heart: A Leader’s Guide to Recognizing and Rewarding Others”, Kouzes & Posner

Authentic Leaders

Page 10: Founder Leadership Workshop

Photo by Woodleywonderworks [link]

Effective Teams

1. Participation2. Collaboration3. Cooperation (Commitment)

Research: All of these are correlated to Group EQ

“Building Emotional Intelligence”, Wolfe & Druskat, Harvard Business Review, 2004

Page 11: Founder Leadership Workshop

Photo by Woodleywonderworks [link]

“I’m starting to feel defensive”

Inward (my emotions)

Outward(others’ emotions)

Emotional Awareness

Emotional Management

(“Regulation”)

“He seems to begetting agitated”

• Take a deep breath• “Could you give me a sec?”• Take a walk

“Are you ok?”

EQ (Individual)

Page 12: Founder Leadership Workshop

High EQ individuals ≠ High EQ group

Group norms determine group EQ

Photo by Woodleywonderworks [link]

Group EQ

Page 13: Founder Leadership Workshop

Feedback & Influence

Page 14: Founder Leadership Workshop

Photo: Robbie Grubbs

Can I give you some feedback?

Page 15: Founder Leadership Workshop

My Feedback Dilemma

“You’re not handling the claims project very well. Your spec is disorganized and incomplete. And because of that, we’re now at a point where the feature won’t get done on time.

I need you to fix the spec like we talked about so we can get the project on track.”

Page 16: Founder Leadership Workshop

My Feedback Dilemma

“You’re not handling the claims project very well.

96%Chance of Defensiveness

Harsh Startup

Page 17: Founder Leadership Workshop

Social situations ≈ Physical threats

Threat Response

Page 18: Founder Leadership Workshop

So… how do we communicate feedback while minimizing defensiveness?

Page 19: Founder Leadership Workshop

INTENTNeeds

MotivesStories

Reality #2

IMPACTAssumptions

FeelingsResponses

Reality #3

3 Realities (The “Net” Model)

The Net

BEHAVIORVerbal

Non-Verbal

Reality #1Shared

Page 20: Founder Leadership Workshop

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityHow to Give Effective Feedback

• Focus on specific, observable behaviorWhen you do [x]…

• Describe the impact of that behavior on youI feel [y]…

• Ask about the other person’s motives or intentions

Can you tell me what’s going on for you?

Stay on your side of the net!

Page 21: Founder Leadership Workshop

Better feedback for Bob?

• Focus on specific, observable behaviorYou didn’t change the spec like we discussed

• Describe the impact of that behavior on youI’m feeling concerned about the project and getting it

done on schedule• Ask about the other person’s motives or

intentionsCan you tell me what’s going on for you?

Page 22: Founder Leadership Workshop

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityLet’s try some examples…

1. Joe, you clearly don’t care about this presentation.

2. Joe, I noticed that you are looking at your phone. You are clearly bored with this presentation.

3. Joe, I noticed that you are looking at your phone. I am feeling anxious about what message that might send to others in the room.

Page 23: Founder Leadership Workshop

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityHow to Give Effective Feedback

When you do [x]…

I feel [y == emotion] that / like

And my story is [z].

Can you tell me what’s going on for you?

Page 24: Founder Leadership Workshop

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityThe Setup

1. Check in – “Is now a good time?”

2. Soft Start– Do not use praise to buffer criticism (“The Sandwich”)– Do emphasize mutual goals & positive intent:

“My intention is…… / This matters to me because…”

Page 25: Founder Leadership Workshop

Photo by Ana Karenina [link]

1:1 Feedback

Page 26: Founder Leadership Workshop

#1 Factor for Happiness on the Job: Feeling appreciated-- 2014 BCG/The Network survey of 200K employees

Page 27: Founder Leadership Workshop

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityFostering a culture of appreciation

1. Create a space for it

2. Lead by example

Page 28: Founder Leadership Workshop

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityReceiving Feedback

• Look for “Grains of Truth”– Goal is understanding, not winning

• Help the other person feel heard– Ask clarifying questions– Restate what you’ve heard to confirm understanding

• Acknowledge your feelings– Manage your own defensiveness: “Affect Labeling”– Disclose your reactions, thoughts, feelings

• Gift mentality: Say “Thank you!”

Page 29: Founder Leadership Workshop

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityEnd with Agreements

• Make requests– What are we going to try / do differently going forward?

• Be specific• Discuss the error case

– What can we do if someone doesn’t do their part of the agreement?

Page 30: Founder Leadership Workshop

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilityLast Reminder

Stay on your side of the net:

When you do [x]…

I feel [y]…

And my story is [z].

Can you tell me what’s going on for you?

Use the Vocabulary of Emotions.

Page 31: Founder Leadership Workshop

Benefits of Self-Disclosure / VulnerabilitySuggested Topics For Feedback

Work Product– Timeliness, quality, quantity,

focus areaCommunication & Management

– Too much/little– Choice of format– Email etiquette– Language choices,

communication style with others– Transparency of project status,

hiring/firing/promotions

Role Modeling & Presence– What energy do you feel from this

person? – How do they impact others? – What do they model well? – Anything you worry about? – Arrival/departure times– How they speak/listen/act/dress

Page 32: Founder Leadership Workshop

Fostering a feedback-rich culture

• Train your team on giving/receiving feedback• Schedule feedback-focused 1:1s (or begin

1:1s with two-way feedback)– And set expectations of others to do the same

Page 33: Founder Leadership Workshop

Thanks, good-bye, and stay on your side of the net ☺