You’re Not Listening
What You’re Missing and Why it Matters
Kate Murphy
Who should read: If you feel like you are struggling with being heard, or struggling to stay present in a conversation.
Favorite quote: “The solutions to problems are often already within people, and just by listening, you help them access how best to handle things, now and also in the future.”
Why I feel it is important to veterinary medicine: Listening is such a critical skillset, and the world over has room for improvement in this area! By being a better listener yourself, you can begin to reverse hack how to engage others into listening to you better.
Who listens to you? Really, really listens? What is different about the interaction from every other interaction?
How much information do you think your clients get from you? Studies in human medicine show that the patient forgets 40-80% of what the doctor communicates, and half the information remembered is recalled incorrectly! (Kessels, 2003) Outside of a medical context, things aren’t any better, with only about a 20-25% retention rate. (Husman, 1988) Listening is such a powerful skill, that when scientists did fMRI scans of people communicating well, they found their brain patterns synched! I don’t know about you, but many, if not most of my daily frustrations as a veterinarian are related to people not listening to me. Or probably more accurately, not absorbing what I’m communicating. While we can’t force someone to listen to us, we can definitely hack our way to maximizing our success in them listening! Listening is a skill that ANYONE can improve on, so if we take the time to improve and bring awareness to our own skills, we can begin to recognize and address where we might be losing others in the midst of our communication.
Where Things Go Wrong During Listening:
Social Contract
There is a subconscious (for most of us) expectation and agreement for etiquette in communication. When one of the participants fails to adhere to these expectations, communication can break down and it becomes very difficult to listen well. Practicing your skills of each of the following maxims will improve your listener’s engagement.
1. Maxim of Quality: Expectation of truth.
If someone is giving us false information, we tend to ruminate on the offense, failing to catch much after. So, getting comfortable with “I don’t know”, or “I’ll have to look it up” can go a long way. As can an ability to recognize when understanding of the truth is at odds. If a client is religiously committed to a raw food diet, and you make a statement disagreeing with that, even if off-hand, they are going to struggle to listen to anything else. So, picking your battles strategically, or resolving your battles is vital. If the patient in question needs critical care or treatment, discuss this first, before launching a discussion about food, or leave the diet for another time.
2. Maxim of Quantity: Succinctness.
New information arrests our attention. Too much new information exhausts our attention. As a specialist, I often find my clients have either already had lengthy discussions with their veterinarian, or they are dedicated enough to have done a lengthy internet search. So, I’ve switched from having a script about common things (for instance, cranial cruciate ligament disease), and have moved to asking them to tell me what they know or understand, and where they have concerns or questions. This actually saves me a lot of time, gives me a clear understanding of where they may have misconceptions, and engages them into participating in the conversation, which promotes active listening. When I use my scripts, I usually find clients are much less engaged, there is a long awkward silence at completion (probably overwhelm), and I subjectively feel these cases are more prone to misunderstandings.
3. Maxim of Relation: Pertinent and orderly communication.
If I go off on a tangent about non-relevant hip dysplasia in a dog presenting for cranial cruciate ligament disease, I’m likely to lose attention. If my communication style behaves more like a fly on crack then a mosquito on a mission, I am also going to struggle to retain my client’s attention.
4. Maxim of Manner: Brief, and logical flow.
Brevity is a superpower. Not only do you retain your listener’s attention, but brevity tends to carry much more power and impact. Logical flow is also critical for listener retention. If you are leaping from subject to subject, you need your listener to leap too. And most of us just don’t spend a lot of time practicing leaps to have that kind of athleticism or patience!
Self-focus
We tend to spend more time thinking about we will say when it is our turn, than listening to the person talking. This is termed reactive listening, which prevents active listening. Active listeners pick up and understand much more in a conversation than reactive listeners. Now, you can’t make your clients practice this, but you can watch them closely for clues as to when you may have lost them to this rumination. If they generate a question while you are speaking, they are probably going to mentally stall, trying to remember or formulate the question. Stop, and address it. If they seem to be lost in their own heads, pause and ask questions about the info you just presented to re-engage them.
Speech-thought differential:
We actually think much faster than we speak. So, if you are in the role of a listener, and someone says something that triggers a question, memory or emotion, it is very easy to get pulled into your own head to attend to this trigger, which often hijacks attention away from the speaker. People struggling with anxiety or worry, introverts, and people with high intelligence tend to be more susceptible to this barrier for listening. Again, reading your client and interrupting the hijack can improve their active participation.
Where Things Promote Good Listening
Having self-awareness of your body language, cues and level of interest in the person you are communicating with can level up your skills at capturing attention. About 75-90% of communication is thought to be non-verbal. Excellent conversationalists promote a psychological safety for the other participant- they feel valued, important, engaged, free to express their fears and emotions without judgement. Your body language does a lot of that communicating for you. If your client doesn’t feel psychologically safe with you, they are unlikely to be able to focus on what you are saying.
Curiosity
This goes both ways- showing genuine interest in the other person puts them at ease and gains their attention. Promoting and valuing their questions keeps them active and engaged in the conversation. It can be hard under our time pressure and constraints, but the owner that asks questions is less likely to misunderstand something, and far more likely to be actively listening to you. “Good listeners are also great questioners.”
Respecting Listener Capacity
Engaged listening is energy consuming. The author reports that air traffic controllers are limited to 1.5-2 hours of active work before they are mandated to take a break, because the intensive listening required of them is so consuming! Being mindful of your client or employee’s listening capacity is advantageous to you. State the most important information succinctly, and early. Let them direct the conversation from there- if they are asking questions, they are still engaged and likely listening. If they aren’t, give them time and space. Important information can always be written down, or revisited at another time point.
Becoming a better listener yourself gives you an even greater capacity to recognize when others are listening, or when you’ve lost them! Where do you think you have the most room for growth? Can you see where my biggest struggle was in getting you this information? Honestly, I did edit a lot out to try to keep your attention! 🙂
Practical Implementation Exercises:
- Looking through the skills that make a great listener (Where things go right), what is your strength?
- Looking through the areas where people tend to lost their ability to listen (Where things go wrong), which do you struggle with the most? This can be personally, or with your clients listening.
- What is one *small* thing you could start practicing to try to improve your weakest link? Start tracking what impact this seems to have on your interactions.
- How can you ensure you remember to start practicing your new tactic?
Additional Resources:
Book Rounds: Emotional Intelligence: Information on how to build this skill deeper. A really good foundation for listening better.
Book Rounds: Emotional in the Workplace: A bit more about psychologic safety and building an environment for employees to listen well.
Patients’ memory for medical information. Roy P C Kessels, J R Soc Med, 2003, 96(5):219-222. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC539473/
Husman, R. C., Lahiff, J. M., & Penrose, J. M. (1988). Business communication: Strategies and skills. Chicago: Dryden Press.
What’s up every one, here every one is sharing these kinds
of know-how, so it’s pleasant to read this webpage, and I used to visit this weblog
everyday.
I’m extremely inspired together with your writing skills and also with the format on your weblog.
Is this a paid subject or did you modify it your self?
Anyway stay up the excellent quality writing, it’s rare to peer a
great blog like this one today..
certainly like your web site however you have to check
the spelling on quite a few of your posts. Many of them are rife with spelling problems and I
to find it very bothersome to tell the truth then again I will definitely come again again.
Incredible points. Sound arguments. Keep up the great spirit.
Excellent weblog right here! Also your site lots up fast!
What web host are you the use of? Can I am getting your associate link to your host?
I wish my site loaded up as quickly as yours lol
Informative article, just what I needed.
I think this is one of the most important information for me.
And i’m glad reading your article. But should
remark on some general things, The web site
style is great, the articles is really great : D. Good job, cheers
Hi my family member! I wish to say that this post is awesome, great written and include approximately all vital infos.
I’d like to see extra posts like this .
Thank you, I’ve just been looking for info about this topic for ages and yours is the best I’ve discovered till now. But, what about the bottom line? Are you sure about the source?
Hi ChrisIm 7 months old membre on neobuxIve earned 14$ without RR DR. My question is how can I invest this simple amount ? What pack of RR would u suggest me ? Thanks in advanne.
great publish, very informative. I wonder why the other specialists of this sector don’t understand this.
You should continue your writing. I’m sure, you’ve a great readers’ base already!
Hello! Would you mind if I share your blog with my zynga
group? There’s a lot of folks that I think would really appreciate your content.
Please let me know. Many thanks
Hey, I think your site might be having browser compatibility issues.
When I look at your blog site in Chrome, it looks fine
but when opening in Internet Explorer, it
has some overlapping. I just wanted to give you a quick
heads up! Other then that, terrific blog!
Creo que tienes el extremo equivocado del palo ahí, Gom. Estas cuentas sociales son las cuentas de otros miembros de Traffic Ivy, otros vendedores de internet, etc. ¡No estás invadiendo ninguna cuenta! 🙂
what opportunities are better than neobux
Do you mind if I quote a couple of your articles as
long as I provide credit and sources back to your blog?
My blog site is in the exact same niche as yours and my visitors would truly benefit from a lot
of the information you provide here. Please let me know if this ok with you.
Appreciate it!
I appreciate you sharing this blog post.Really thank you! Really Great.
You actually make it seem so easy with your presentation but I find this
matter to be really something which I think I would never
understand. It seems too complex and very broad for me.
I’m looking forward for your next post, I’ll try to get the hang of it!
Very good written information. It will be valuable to anybody who employess it, as well as yours truly :). Keep up the good work – for sure i will check out more posts.
Simply desire to say your article is as astounding.
The clarity in your publish is just great and i could think you’re an expert in this subject.
Well along with your permission allow me to seize your feed to stay up to date with approaching post.
Thanks a million and please keep up the gratifying work.