14 Ground Rules for Respectful Dialogue and Professional Behavior
Often times when we are communicating with our co-workers, partners or even loved ones we forget how to communicate effectively. Many times in-effective communication leads to conflicts. When we are involved in conflicts we tend to react rather then respond. I want to share some ground rules with you. Fellow entrepreneurs, take note.
These rules provide a framework that support open, respectful dialogue, and maximum participation for discussing controversial subjects.
- Listen Actively -- respect others when they are talking and do not interrupt.
- Treat others' feeling with respect and dignity. Do not dominate the conversation.
- Speak from our own experience instead of generalizing. One way to do this is to use 'I' instead of "they," "We," and "you".
- Speak about problem(s) directly with the person(s) involved and avoid complaining to others about the problem.
- Be candid and honest, but do not blame, attack, embarrass, or put-down other people.
- Ask questions respectfully for clarification or to get information, but not to intimidate.
- Refrain from personal attacks -- focus on ideas and core issues rather than personalities. Attack the idea or the problem, not the person.
- Participate to the fullest of your ability -- a cooperative spirit and team progress depends on the inclusion of every individual voice.
- Instead of invalidating somebody else's story with your own spin on their experience, share your own story and experience.
- The goal is not to always agree -- it is about hearing and exploring divergent perspectives. Examine consequences and consider alternatives.
- As we think about the past, focus on the lessons we have learned from the past. Focus on the future that you would like to create.
- Be conscious of body language and nonverbal response -- they can be disrespectful as words. This is specially true when working with people that come from different cultures and backgrounds.
- Take responsibility for observing the ground rules.
- Come up with your own ground rules. Rules that work for your team. Make sure everyone in your team or group agrees with the new ground rules.
MY COMMENT: Any chance you could instill your MPs with these rules - not just when they communicate with each other but when they communicate with those who elect them?
Thanks dodeja
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