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Miscellaneous See other Miscellaneous Articles Title: The 3 Minutes It Takes To Read This Will Improve Your Conversations Forever Pocket... How to ask better questions. Since my tips to improve your writing in two minutes were so popular, I thought Id share some similar tips to improve your next conversation. Following are the simplest tips I can give you to ask better questions, which will make your conversations more valuable to you and the people you engage with. Dont ask yes/no questions. Open-ended questions generate more interesting responses because they unlock more information from people. Example: Dont ask, Do you like movies? Youll get a more interesting answer if you ask, Why do you like movies? Ask why three times. This is the easiest way to deepen the level of a conversation. Example: If you ask a person why they like movies and they answer because its a good escape, you can follow up with, Why do you feel like you need an escape? If they answer because their job is stressful, you can follow up with Why is your job stressful? Repeated Why questions can turn a simple question about movies into a much deeper conversation. Ask about specifics, not generalizations. Questions about specifics lead people to give you answers that are not generic. Example: Dont ask, What was fun about your trip? Instead, drill down and ask, What was the single most fun moment of the trip? Ask about reactions. Frame questions around a persons reactions to experiences in their life what surprised them, challenged them, or changed their viewpoint. Example: Dont ask, Whats it like to be a doctor? Instead, ask Whats the most surprising thing youve discovered about being a doctor? Ask follow-up questions. When you ask a question, pay attention to the answer and ask a follow-up question about it to dig deeper. Example: If a person says the most surprising thing about being a doctor is how uncomfortable people get in hospitals, follow up with a question like, What do you do to help make them more comfortable? Ask about lessons. If your goal is to learn from somebody, the easiest shortcut to do that is to ask them what theyve learned. Example: Ask questions like, What did you learn from working with that client?, What do you wish you knew before you started working with them?, and What advice would you have for others who want to get into your field? Ask for a story. The most interesting information is found in stories, so ask people to tell you one. Example: Dont ask, Whats it like to be a teacher? Instead, ask Whats the craziest thing thats ever happened to you in a class? Ask like a kid. If you dont fully understand something and want more clarity, ask a person how they would explain it to a kid or somebody with no experience on the subject. Example: Instead of asking, Can you explain that product feature again?, ask How would you explain that feature to somebody whos never seen our product before? Ask what else you should ask. When you wrap up your questions, give the other person an opportunity to tell you what you should have asked. They will likely suggest a question that provides valuable information. Example: Ask, Am I missing anything? Whats the question nobody ever asks you but you wish they would? One more thing
Each week I share a collection of 10 actionable ideas like this to improve your work, art, and life in my For The Interested newsletter. You can check out previous issues here. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2.
#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)
Excellent points, thank you for posting this!!
Best question to ask is one to which you know the answer; determines if you're dealing with a shyster.
There are no replies to Comment # 2. End Trace Mode for Comment # 2.
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