The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Harvard’s Behaviour Expert: The Psychology Of Why People Don't Like You!
Episode Date: December 15, 2025Why do your conversations keep going wrong? Harvard behavioural scientist Professor Alison Wood Brooks reveals the SECRETS to better communication, real connection, negotiation skills and difficult co...nversations! Professor Alison Wood Brooks is a behavioural scientist with 2 decades of experience in conversational science. She teaches a Harvard course on negotiation and communication, and is the bestselling author of ‘Talk: The Science of Conversation and the Art of Being Ourselves’. She explains: ◼️The ONE word that transforms anxiety into peak performance ◼️The TALK framework for mastering any conversation ◼️Why being "too polite" is secretly destroying your relationships ◼️Why 99% of apologies fail, and the exact formula that works ◼️The question technique that creates connection with anyone (00:00) Intro (02:34) People Need This to Communicate Well (04:38) Giving Wrong Impressions (06:23) Being a Better Speaker and Group Conversations (11:31) Experimenting With Communication Skills With My Identical Twin (12:40) The Science on How to Reframe Anxiety (18:47) If You're Nervous, You're More Likely to Make a Bad Decision (20:16) Asking for a Salary Raise (24:39) The Conversational Compass (32:45) How People Should Really Apologize and When It's Too Much (37:31) The Validation Trick in Any Dispute (42:00) Don't Do This When You Disagree (46:19) Stop Doing This During Disagreements (48:07) How to Be Liked (50:02) The T-A-L-L Framework (51:47) Easy Ways to Have More Casual Conversations (55:13) If You Want to Be Liked, Don't Do This (59:23) The Importance of Asking in Conversations and Dates (01:03:27) Never Do This on a Date (01:07:26) The Meeting Mistake You Shouldn't Make (01:09:27) Poor Communication Skills May Be Blocking Your Career Growth (01:12:02) Ads (01:12:53) The Importance of Kindness in Any Conversation (01:17:20) When to Incorporate Levity (01:23:55) The Science Behind Introverts and Extroverts — Is It Real? (01:27:17) Your Contribution Score in a Conversation (01:41:59) Ads (01:43:56) The Male Crisis: Ask These Questions to Make Friends (01:52:57) 10 Questions to Be Liked (01:56:42) How to Persuade People and Be a Better Salesperson (01:58:47) People Confuse Agreement With Listening (02:09:21) This Is the Only Conversation That Feels Real (02:14:58) What Happens When Replacing Myself With AI (02:19:23) Show Your Real Self at Work: Yes or No? (02:25:14) How to Teach Your Kids to Speak Follow Alison: Instagram - https://bit.ly/3YoQOc4 Website - https://bit.ly/4aH172A TalkStudios - https://bit.ly/3MzbXxF You can purchase Alison’s book, ‘Talk: The Science of Conversation and the Art of Being Ourselves’, here: https://amzn.to/48Nl8Sv The Diary Of A CEO: ◼️Join DOAC circle here - https://doaccircle.com/ ◼️Buy The Diary Of A CEO book here - https://smarturl.it/DOACbook ◼️The 1% Diary is back - limited time only: https://bit.ly/3YFbJbt ◼️The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards (Second Edition): https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb ◼️Get email updates - https://bit.ly/diary-of-a-ceo-yt ◼️Follow Steven - https://g2ul0.app.link/gnGqL4IsKKb Sponsors: Wispr - https://wisprflow.ai/DOAC Shopify - https://shopify.com/bartlett SimpliSafe - https://simplisafe.com/DOAC to save 50% on a SimpliSafe home security system. Ketone - https://ketone.com/STEVEN for 30% off your subscription order
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I've just got back from a few weeks away on my speaking tour in Asia with my team,
and it was absolutely incredible.
Thank you to everybody that came.
We travelled to new cities.
We did live shows and places I'd never been to before.
During our downtime, talking about what's coming for each of us.
And now that we're back, my team has started planning their time off over the holiday period.
Some are heading home, some are going travelling,
and one or two of them have decided to host their places through our sponsor, Airbnb, while they're away.
I hadn't really considered this until Will, in my team, mentioned that his entire flat,
all of his roommates were doing this too.
And it got me thinking about how smart this is
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Find out how much at Airbnb.com.ca slash host.
That's Airbnb.combe.coma slash host.
People really care about what's making them disliked.
and they really want to know how to be liked.
Okay, so first, this is an exercise that I do in my class
at Harvard called 10 questions to fall and like.
So if I ask some of those questions, they're going to like me.
It's a great starting point.
But let's talk about this,
because there are going to be little clues
about how to be better liked,
and it's the most teachable, practical,
scientifically rigorous framework in the world for communication.
Do you want to hear about it, Stephen?
Of course I want to hear about it.
I want to be the most persuasive, influential, likable talker in the world.
So I shall follow your leader.
Oh my God.
Gosh. It's a lot of power. I love it. I love it so much.
Harvard Professor Alison Woodbrooks is a behavioral scientist.
Who has spent two decades studying conversational science.
And she's revealing the communication mistakes we all make.
The art of negotiation and how to get anyone to like you.
We all get to adulthood and we feel like conversation should be easy.
But as a scientist, when you look under the hood, you realize this is why we have so many awkward moments,
why we say things that we shouldn't, why we are boring, why we get angry and hostile.
and there's very clear strategies to help us with all of that.
Like, one of my biggest findings was how we reframe social anxiety as excitement,
which makes you focus on opportunities rather than threats.
And that paper ended up being featured in Inside Out, the movie.
And then there's small talk.
I hate small talk.
I'm going to help you reframe that because it's really important,
but the mistake that people make is that they say that it's way too long
and they need to move up this topic pyramid.
What about in a digital age, do we need to start communicating differently?
Yeah.
There's clear things that we should do to make our text-based communication better.
and we'll go through all of them.
And you said you've done an interesting study recently
about male friendship.
Yes, and it's quite troubling.
So how can I make more friends as a man?
Yeah, let's talk about that.
Just give me 30 seconds of your time.
Two things I wanted to say.
The first thing is a huge thank you
for listening and tuning into the show
week after week.
It means the world to all of us,
and this really is a dream that we absolutely never had
and couldn't have imagined getting to this place.
But secondly, it's a dream
where we feel like we're only just getting started.
And if you enjoy what we do here,
please join the 24% of people
that listen to this podcast regularly
and follow us on this app.
Here's a promise I'm going to make to you.
I'm going to do everything in my power
to make this show as good as I can
now and into the future.
We're going to deliver the guests
that you want me to speak to
and we're going to continue to keep doing
all of the things you love about this show.
Thank you.
Professor Alison Wood Brooks, what is it that you do, and why do you think it matters so much to the world?
I am a professor at Harvard, and I'm a behavioral scientist. I study how people talk to each other and how they can do it better.
I teach a course that I created there called Talk. I wrote a book about it, also called Talk, the Science of Conversation and the Art of Being Ourselves.
And if someone's chosen to listen to this conversation now, they've just clicked on it and they're thinking, you know, should I stay or should I go?
What promise can we give them if they stay and listen to this conversation that is based on the work you've done in your book and all the research you've done?
What is it that you think the average person can come away with that will have a meaningful impact on their day-to-day life?
All of life is about relationships and relationships are about talking.
So if they can learn even one strategy that helps them in their conversations, it will massively improve their lives.
If you think of everything from work to romantic relationships, friendships, productivity, all of it hinges on having excellent conversations.
But conversations are easy, right?
Like, you just talk.
We all feel that way.
We all get to adulthood and we feel like conversation should be easy because we started learning how to do it.
when we were one and a half years old as toddlers, and we practiced doing it with an enormous
number of partners, conversation partners, every day of our lives. So by the time we become adults,
it feels like we should be experts, like we should be great at it. But as a scientist, when you look
under the hood and you see, oh, my goodness, all of the complexity that's happening under the hood,
you realize, oh, this is why we have so many awkward moments, why we say things that we shouldn't,
why we don't say things that we should, why we hurt each other, why we get defensive,
why we are boring, why we get angry and hostile, and there are very clear strategies to help
us with all of that. As you were saying that, I was thinking, do you think there's a lot of people
that are going through life giving off the wrong impression because they don't know how to talk?
Maybe they are disliked, maybe they are misunderstood because they haven't mastered the science
of how to have a great conversation. On my worst days, I worry that everybody,
is walking around being misunderstood.
When you think about talking, even as I'm talking right now, there's no way to take the
entire contents of your mind and all of your personality and say it out loud.
And so we're always curating.
We're always choosing some subset of stuff to share with other people through conversation.
And no one is doing that perfectly.
And I fear that many people are really struggling with it.
If you had to pinpoint just a few things that people want when they think about becoming a great conversationist,
like what is it that we actually are aiming at? Is it to be, you know, what is that?
Yeah. Usually people want to be liked, even loved. Usually we want to enjoy our conversations to not have them be miserable.
We want to feel safe and protected and not have it be dreadful and time consuming. And we want to achieve professional goals. So advancing and achieving and
making great decisions. So already the very basic drives of what people are trying to achieve
in conversation are actually a little bit more complicated than just like, oh, we're looking for
connection. And then when you really dig into it within all of the goals that people want in
those categories, it's like a vast constellation of motives. I would like you to teach me how to
talk really, really well. I don't know if you need my help that much, Stephen, but I'd love to,
even the best communicators have room for improvement.
I think I do. I think I do. Because I was thinking about this last week and all the conversations I've
had, the different types of conversations. I had one conversation where I met someone's family for the
first time who works with me. And it was, you know, it was a little bit nerve-wracking because
that contact, you know, people have these moments where they meet the in-laws or whatever
or they meet. For me, it's often meeting someone who works with me's family. I find quite
nerve-wracking because they're like, I think they're kind of probably judging me. I've also had
difficult business conversations.
Because they are judging you.
Yeah, they are judging you.
And I can feel it.
And as I go towards those conversations, I'm like, I'm going to go.
And then I end up just like freezing or being a little bit paralyzed.
And you'd think as someone like me who does this for a living, living finds conversations
easy, I absolutely do not.
I actually, the more, you know, I talk to very high level C-suite, very successful people.
And in fact, the higher and more successful people are, the more likely they are to be aware
that this is really important and that they have room for improvement. It's almost like you're
aware that this skill is probably what helped you get where you are, and therefore you want to get
even better at it. And you're keenly aware of when you have awkward moments or make mistakes or
missteps, and you're like, I would really like to get that out of my life, please.
Amen. I like ruminate on an awkward encounter I had like two and a half weeks ago. Of course.
I was like, I should have just da-da-da-da. But actually in reading some of your work, I thought about what I could have done.
And we'll get to this, this idea of preparing for those moments, which I typically don't, because I assume I should be a natural.
Can I ask you, as you were talking about these different examples of things that you're ruminating about, do you feel like you have a weakness or like a recurring thing that you suspect you need to get better at?
I think one of them is I am a bit of an introvert in my sort of self-classification.
And as people know who I am more in the world, I think I've become more introverted.
So, and sometimes that can be perceived in the wrong way. So my like happy state is kind of being
alone or around people that I'm extremely familiar with. If I leave the house and I go say to a gym
or something, I have a little bit of paranoia. Yeah. So I'm always kind of on edge, which means
that this kind of shuts me down more. So when I do have conversations, I can sometimes
appear to be a bit more shut down. Yeah. And I don't want to carry that into moments where I need
to be a bit more open. And then I would say, generally I just like hate small talk. Yeah. You're
alone there. And I just say it's like a point, this is why I think I podcast, because you can just
skip straight into the deep stuff, and I can ask people about their trauma, I guess. You can do that
in normal conversations, too, actually. Do you find that you get stuck in small talk? Yes.
A good bit? I just try and avoid it. So I've got this funny story. One of the most prestigious
people on planet Earth invited me to come to a thing. And I said no, because there would be a hundred
other people there. And I just didn't want to be in a room for four hours with a bunch of other people.
Like, it just, for me, it's so exhausting. Yeah. And if I told you what this
context was you burst out laughing. My team were like, you go to that fucking move. And you go.
And you enjoy it. And I'm like, no, I'm not going. There's too many people there. But that's,
that's kind of what I'm like. I love this environment, but I hate small talk and I hate.
I don't know is that's a weakness as much as it is you learning your preferences.
Hmm. I think it's okay. Maybe we'll get there, but large groups are very stressful.
Group conversation and figuring out the structure of like who should be talking to whom, when and about
what is very overwhelming for the human mind. It's quite different than one on intimate one-on-one
conversation, which is much more within your control, and it's much clearer what the purpose is.
So we should think about, it maybe not a, we can reframe it and it's not a weakness, but thinking
about your social portfolio. Who are you talking to? Is it the right people and is it in the right
arrangements, in the right group size? So what we're doing right now, one-on-one, is a
categorically different task than going to a party with a hundred people.
So I'm going to help you reframe that later on.
Why did you choose to do this?
All the things you could have done with your life?
Yeah.
Isn't it life so fascinating?
I often think about the paths not taken, but I'm very happy to be on this path.
I grew up in upstate New York on a small lake in a small town.
I was a late girl, just gorgeous place.
And I love playing sports, team sports in particular.
I love female friendship from an early age, and probably most formatively, I'm an identical twin.
And all of the things I just described, I think, are either indicators of how much I love conversation or formed my love of conversation.
But either way, I arrived at college deeply interested in understanding humans and their behavior.
And by the time I got to Harvard, I realized, wow, there are a whole,
fields like social psychology and communication that are purportedly about communication, but
nobody's bothered to actually transcribe real conversations and study them at very large scale.
And so that's what I've been up to for the last 15 years.
How has being an identical twin been formative in this regard?
So my twin's name is Sarah.
Being an identical twin, there are many things that are similar to being a close sibling,
I'm sure, but an identical twin, it's like you have another version of you in the world.
We share a bedroom. We were on the same sports teams. We played in band together. And so it's sort of like watching a version of yourself up close. And I got to see how she failed and thought, oh, well, I'm going to avoid that. And I would see how she succeed. She hits an amazing joke. She answers an amazing question. I know that I'm able to do that because we have the same DNA, the same abilities. In a sort of subconscious way, I think I've just been chasing.
trying to help other people find that in their relationships, in their friendships and their
romantic relationships and their work collaborations. Because I've gotten to see how amazing that can
be for two human beings, how close you can be and how much you can actually understand each other
when you communicate well. And what research have you done? Like, what are the reference points
you're pulling on? Yeah. Do you do your own research? So much. And give me a flavor of the volume
Much probably. It's almost like I'm a recovering academic. I've been working in academia doing
behavioral science research for 20 years. I know I look impossibly young. I started in graduate
school studying emotions, especially anxiety, and not the kind of anxiety that requires
medication or therapy necessarily, but the types of social anxiety that people feel constantly
all day long. And figuring out, okay, how does it affect different behaviors like how we negotiate
or how we take advice from each other or how we perform when we're public speaking,
these types of things, and then figuring out strategies and tips to help people manage that
anxiety more effectively.
And one of my biggest findings was how we reframe anxiety as excitement.
It's a very easy flip to move from, it's essentially they're the same emotion because
they're both high arousal, high energy, high cortisol, stress hormone, high heart rate, sweaty
palms. You just change how you think about it in your mind. So literally saying things out loud like
I'm excited, change how your appraisal of it. So you actually experience excitement. It helps you
perform a lot better in a lot of different ways. So you did a study in 2011. Yes, yes. The nervous
and early negotiation study. So that one was about negotiation specifically. This excitement reappraisal,
the paper is called Get Excited. And that paper actually ended up being featured in Inside Out, the movie.
one. Yeah, there's a great scene where the main character is about to have a panic attack.
And Joy sneaks into the little cubicle farm of minions and says,
stop drawing all of these projections about how things are going to go badly and instead
draw how things could go well. It's so great. I was sitting in the movie theater with my kids
and my husband kind of looked down the way and he was like, is that your thing? And I was like,
yeah, yeah, yeah, it's my thing. So what did that study show those two studies? The nervous
and early one, but also the lot of excitement. When we feel anxious,
as most people do in negotiations because it's an intense environment, filled with uncertainty
and a lack of control, which is the recipe for anxiety, we want to escape. We either want to
relieve that feeling by making concessions or get out of there, right? Just exit the interaction.
That was the main finding of the Nervis Nelly Anxiety and Negotiation paper.
The reframing anxiety as excitement paper is lots of different ways to convince yourself that you're
feeling excited just by saying I'm excited out loud. And in doing so, that makes you focus on
opportunities rather than threats, how things could go well rather than poorly. And it has
incredible downstream consequences. It helps you sing better. Helps you do public speaking better.
It helps you collaborate more effectively. So it's just a very, it's a very powerful
intervention. And what was the sort of mechanics of the study? So we would bring people in.
You tell them, hey, Stephen, you're going to be singing karaoke in front of an audience. People start
to feel quite nervous about this naturally. Then, right before they're going to get up and sing this
song, we say, okay, an experimenter is going to ask you how you're feeling. Some of you, we want you to say
you're feeling excited, and some of you want you to say you're feeling anxious. And that alone,
when I say, Stephen, how are you feeling right now? And you say, anxious. Great. Okay, let's go sing
the song. You go, people who said, I'm anxious, sing worse, compared to people who say, I'm excited.
They get out there, they're more in tempo, more on pitch.
They have better rhythm.
And we measure it with a software when they're actually singing in front of the experimenters.
Just by me saying, I am excited.
Yeah.
So the other day, when I met my team members' family, I should have been saying to myself,
I'm so excited to meet them.
Among other things.
So this, and this is important, it doesn't always work, right?
If you're terrified and it's really something dreadful, like you're terrified that you're
terrified that your mother's going to die. And it turns out it's going to be hard to get excited
about that if she has a terminal illness. But on the margin, if you're sort of torn between
feeling nervous or excited, in your mind, if you can really convince yourself that you actually
are excited and that things could go well, I'm going to crush this exam, I'm going to tear it up
on the basketball court, that flip, if repeated enough, actually becomes more likely to come
true. And certainly before a high-stakes conversation like meeting your colleague's family.
So interesting. I really have this behind the scenes channel called Behind a Diary on YouTube and the other day when I did Jimmy Fallon because it's kind of outside of my wheelhouse to go on like late night TV in America and like seven minutes to be funny or whatever. So I was shitting myself because I'm a very serious guy.
yeah so before I went out there's a video of me and I said to my team what I said to myself before
the little cut had opened was this is going to be amazing can't wait you've you've like prepared for
this that I said all this nonsense in my head thinking that it was nonsense and I walked out had the best
time of my life it went so great great and I made a video about that how you know I'm not one
to believe in things that without like rigor and evidence and I didn't have it now you do now I do
now I have a study that proves that it's not.
This one is interesting.
I think this was the beginning of my scientific journey,
realizing that the way we talk to other people
and the way we talk to ourselves,
especially in a repeated sense,
if you think about, okay, you did that before Jimmy Fallon,
now what if you do it before the next time you meet a colleague's family,
now what if you do it before you do it before you do it?
If you then get in the habit of telling yourself you're excited,
and that becomes effective for you,
it's incredibly meaningful in accumulation over time, right?
So just focusing on one time, yes, it's helpful, but if you can make it habitual,
it has this sort of upward spiral effect on people.
It was the beginning of my scientific journey thinking, oh, well, if we can study one phrase,
like get excited or I'm excited, what if we start studying the cascading unfolding ways that
people talk to each other, and not just one line, but like every turn of a conversation,
no one had done that before.
And this negotiation study you did, what was the mechanism for that?
Yeah, that was a more class of the literature.
People have been studying negotiations for decades now, and there's a really great negotiation
course at almost every business school and law school that's based in all of this rigorous
work.
What had not been studied in terms of negotiating are people's emotions.
It was about 15 years ago that people, including scholars, came to the point where we were
like, oh, people's feelings matter when they feel nervous or when they feel angry.
angry. That's actually an important distinction, how you feel on the inside versus what you're
expressing to your counterpart. So in this paper, what we found is as a base rate, most people feel
anxious before and during a negotiation because it is an intense environment. It's probably one of
the greatest benefits of taking a negotiation course is that you just get reps, and so you get
more comfortable with the process of doing it. That might be the biggest takeaway from doing a
training course like that. And so in this paper, we had that sort of base rate look. Everybody's
feeling anxious? And then what are the downstream consequences of feeling anxious? And what we find,
we had people doing negotiations, playing these negotiation games. What we find is that people are
much more likely to sort of leave prematurely or make more concessions to relieve the feelings of anxiety.
Make bad offers. Yeah. Or it depends on your goals, right? If you, if your goal is to claim a lot
of value, then making concessions and giving money away is not going to help you with that.
So if I'm asking my boss for a pay rise, for example, and I'm very, very nervous, I'm much more likely to lower my expectations, accept a bad offer, and leave the situation prematurely.
Absolutely.
So what do I do about that?
Oh, so many things. If we're talking about asking for a raise, what you want is to go in there with as much sort of personal power as you can.
One way to do that is to get another job offer somewhere else first.
So, will you talk about this as the best alternative to a negotiated agreement, a batna?
You want to strengthen your battena.
So if your boss says, no, I'm not giving you a raise, you can legitimately say, I'm going to go take this other job offer because I just got a better offer from the guy down the street.
What if you don't want to take the other offer?
Then you need to be honest with yourself about how much power you have in the negotiation.
You also probably, a lot of people make the mistake of going in sort of hands on hips, like I deserve more money.
there are lots of questions that you should ask first to know, am I negotiating with the right
person? Does my company have the funds to actually give me more money? Why, how can I justify
this in a way that's compelling to them, right? It's not up to you. It's that they need to want
to keep you and to feel like you are being fairly and generously rewarded. And all of that requires
asking a lot of questions before you go in and start making demands.
In that context, how would you try and persuade me if you work for me?
So what would you say?
Because I do think, you know, it's very easy to get someone's backup when you walk in and ask them for money.
Yeah.
If you do it.
100%.
I, it's hard for me to answer this because maybe this is sort of my personal values.
It's almost like I'm taking off my expert hat for a moment.
I think the best way to get a raise is to be awesome.
Do things that are valuable.
and your company is going to give you more money
without even having to ask for it.
So in my heart, this question of
how do we have a conversation
where I ask for more money,
it's almost like I would hope
that you don't even get to that point.
If you are truly making yourself
almost irreplaceable
and incredibly valuable,
your boss is going to be coming to you
and saying, I have to keep you around.
You're amazing. You're so incredible.
That's a much easier conversation to have
than walking in and saying, it's not fair. I don't make enough.
I do think that holds it to be true. I think that generally, if people's first priority
is what they want, then they often don't tend to get what they want. But people who have
the priority, their first priority is what I can give, tend to get what they want. That's right.
It's so, it's a bit of a sort of like a mindset shift. If you prioritize other people's needs,
If you're thinking about what your boss finds valuable, what the organization finds valuable, and you rise to meet those needs, you make yourself valuable, which is going to come back to you.
Hopefully, that's the hope.
And I think often that is the case, almost always that is the case.
In the talk framework, and we'll get there, the K is for kindness.
And it's not kindness in the sense of altruism because I'm going to help my boss and do everything he wants because I care so deeply.
That can be part of it.
but also it's this sort of loop of like, well, if you give him everything, if you give the organization
what it needs, that's going to come back to you. You will actually become valuable and get what you want
as well. That's how relationships work. Usually when I interview people, I lead the way. Today,
I'm going to follow. Because you know the outcome, me and the audience want to get to. So I have all this
stuff here. I love it. Props. All these props. Fabulous. I have these blocks that, for anyone that can't see the
conversation, say T-A-L-K on them, talk. Fabulous. And you tell me the best place to start.
You know the outcome. You know where I want to get to. I want to be the best conversationalist, the best
talker, the most persuasive, influential, likable talker in the world. So I shall follow your
lead. Oh my gosh. It's a lot of power. I love it. I love it so much. Let's start with this.
I want you to think of a conversation that you had recently.
It has to be more than five minutes long.
More than five.
Yes, I can think of one immediately.
It was a conversation I had with my girlfriend
where I just wanted her to know that I accept the fact that I fucked up.
Like I accept the fact that I should have been more present
in a particular moment and I wasn't.
And I just wanted to like...
Own it.
Own it.
And convey that to her.
And convey that I'm sorry and I get it.
Yeah.
And this is not one where I'm going to...
try and justify my whatever. No, actually, objectively, I should have been more attentive and
present. I just wanted her to know that. Yep. So you're sort of an admission of blameworthiness.
Why? Why did you want to do that? Because I felt that she was right and I regretted my behavior.
Yeah. So sometimes I don't feel like she's right. Sometimes I'm here to, you know, respond. In this
particular scenario, I thought, you know, actually, on balance, I should have been more present.
this was an important time for her. And in hindsight, that's not how I wish I'd behaved.
Okay. How did you want her to feel during and at the end of this conversation?
Understood. And that was really it. It's like I wanted her to feel understood and I guess like connected to me. But it's more, it's really more I just wanted her to,
not worry that I didn't understand.
So she didn't have to say it again.
Like, I just wanted her to know that I get it.
And that in future, I wish I'd behave differently.
How did you want to feel during and after this conversation?
I guess I wanted to offload the guilt.
Aha.
Uh-huh.
Good.
Yeah, because I felt bad.
I felt like, no, actually.
And it was weighing on your conscience.
You were like, I got to say that.
I got to own this because it's making me feel like a shithead.
Yeah.
Okay.
Fabulous.
Okay.
when we look back on our conversations and try and describe what our goals were very quickly you start to realize that our goals are very complicated that we want a lot of things i'm also guessing there may have been a time component can you talk a little bit about that like how much time did you have to achieve these goals i mean i never seemed to have enough time so it was like it was yeah so i i i had about probably about 20 minutes great hey that's pretty good i wish i had 20
and it's with my husband. Okay. So I have a framework that helps us think about conversational goals.
And I call it the conversational compass. Okay? And like a compass that you might use to find your way
out of the desert or the forest, the compass helps you decide which way, not to walk, but to talk. Okay.
So the X-axis. I'll put this on the screen for anyone. That can see the video.
Great. The X-axis, which runs horizontally, is about your relationship. Also, I'll link it below.
So this relational axis, high relational goals are things that you care about that are serving the other person or your relationship.
This conversation sounded very high-relational. You're truly like, I just really want her to know that I feel like a shithead and that I'm owning it and like I care and I maybe won't do it again, something like that.
low relational goals are things we care about that serve us. So in this case, you said something like, I want to offload, get rid of my guilt. I wasn't, I was feeling bad. The Y access is about information exchange. High informational goals are hinge on exchanging accurate information. It's sort of the reason human beings develop the ability to communicate at all, right, way back when, is to take what's in my brain, communicate it to you accurately. But we care about tons of stuff that is low information.
So it's not about exchanging information. And sometimes it's about concealing it. In this case, you had a high informational goal. You wanted to sort of persuade her, prove to her that you're a good guy and that she should stay with you, essentially, trust you. But you also had low informational goals like you didn't want it to be emotionally unpleasant to have this conversation. You also had low informational goals like a time constraint. You needed to protect your time and her time. And so we're always limited by time.
and cognitive resources. So the point of this is to help us plot all of those goals in a logical way.
Each quadrant is good. We live in all four quadrants. We're not trying to get to one or another.
It's just to help us describe all of the many things that we actually care about, almost to validate them and say, listen, it's legit that you wanted to relieve your guilt.
It's super admirable that you wanted to signal to her that, like, you're owning this mistake. It's legit.
that you have time constraints. It's legit that you don't want your conversations to be unpleasant.
So each of the quadrants gets a positive name. High informational, high relational is about
connection. Often you'll hear communications experts just talk about connection, which is
too narrow. It's not the only thing that we care about. Down here, low informational,
high relational is about savoring. What does informational mean in this context?
Like how much accurate information you are trying to, you need to exchange with each other.
If we just sat here kind of quietly and I hummed a song because we, and I said something like,
I love your shirt, we're not exchanging a lot of information, but we might be having a very
lovely interaction with each other.
So not every conversation is about high information exchange, though many people think that it is.
you know these people. They're very transactional. They feel like a conversation is where you just
say things you know at other people and that they're going to say things they know back at you.
That's a big mistake. So having fun, I can see is in the bottom right quadrant.
Having fun, yes. Because it's not about huge information on exchange.
Yes, right. But it is about connections. That's right. Okay.
Oh, and it's really important. Many of my students at Harvard almost forget about this quadrant.
They're like, if we're not persuading and making decisions, we're not living, right? Like, this is really important.
especially over time. If we're not enjoying being with each other, I'm not going to look forward to talking to you again. That's true at work and outside of work. Lower left is essentially discernment. We call it protection. It's protecting your time, protecting your reputation, protecting information. So concealing, keeping secrets, moving quickly. We can't sit here for hours and hours and hours. And then protecting your reputation, like you care about making a positive impression on other people. I want you to see me as smart.
and warm and calm and trustworthy. These are self-serving low informational, or low informational
goals. And then we get up to upper left, which is low relational. They're self-serving,
high informational. This is a lot of work-related goal, persuasion, making decisions,
brainstorming, et cetera. So if I want to be liked and have great relationships, I need to be
on the right side of this. Is that accurate? So what happens if someone who trusts you and loves you
tells you something in confidence, and then you go tell everybody else.
You lose trust?
Yeah.
So it's not that you can only live on this side of the compass, because discernment matters
for relationships.
Okay.
Right?
So, and here, you are going to be in a relationship where hopefully you're going to be
like brainstorming things together, making decisions together.
Even with a friend, you're like, oh, where should we go to dinner tonight?
You need to make that, coordinate that choice well together.
So I think one aspiration is to try and be over on the right side as much as you can.
And in fact, having the mindset of pushing yourself to try and think about your goals that are more pro-social, more often, is a virtuous goal.
But, like, listen, we all have actual needs.
So, like, you can't only live on the right side of the compass.
It's about moving around in a way that is savvy and actually serves what you care about.
Got you.
Do you have a sense of where your goals from that conversation that you described would be?
Apologize, which is high relational and not very high on informational.
Because I didn't have a bunch, I didn't have a lot to say.
It was just very simply about letting I know that I was sorry.
And I didn't have a big explanation or a bunch of excuses or justifications.
It was just, listen, I fucked up.
Yeah, I get it.
Can we talk about apologies for a second?
Sure.
I love that you chose this as your example, because.
and the way you're describing it. I love how you're saying, I didn't go into a huge explanation of why I did it or anything. More people should apologize that way. A lot of people, their instinct when they're apologizing, is to revisit the problem and sort of make excuses or explain why they did the thing wrong. It's not effective. What is more effective is what you're describing, taking ownership and saying, look, I just messed up and I'm so sorry and I feel awful about it.
and the most effective component of an apology is actually making a promise to change.
If you say to your girlfriend, I've realized I messed up here, I'm not going to do it again.
Here's how I'm going to be different in the future, like a concrete plan.
It's so compelling to hear that you've thought about that.
And then it's measurable because she can see in the future, do you actually live up to that promise?
Do you follow through on this promise to never make the mistake again?
Is there a point where you can apologize too much?
We studied this. I ran some studies on this. We started by looking at frequency of apologies
made during normal conversations. It's quite rare for someone to over-apologize, but it does
seem like within one conversation, if you apologize more than twice, it starts to be more
of a reminder of the bad thing that happened. Like you just keep revisiting it, and it brings
you back to the negativity rather than moving forward. We also studied apologies.
in a really large data set of parole hearings, like among people who had committed really
serious crimes, and we looked at the types of apologies that they made during their parole hearings.
And there, it seems like you actually can't over-apologize.
Like, more is better.
And again, the most effective component is making a promise to change in the future.
I'm going to go, when I get out, I'm going to be an AA.
I'm going to live with my grandmother.
Here's the job I'm going to do.
whatever the plan is, you're actually more likely to get out of jail.
And going into those difficult conversations, is there anything one needs to do to
prepare? Because our lives are full of difficult conversations, and actually it's the
avoidance of them that ends up messing up our lives the most. So when you think about
difficult conversations that we all have to have with difficult people, do I have to
prepare for that? So this is very natural. Almost every person that you hear talk about
communication tends to focus on difficult conversations. I'm going to suggest
to you that that is a very narrow view of the conversational world, actually. And in fact,
thinking about difficult conversations is a little bit of a misnomer. It's not like there are
some conversations that are difficult and some that are easy. It's that in every conversation
there can be moments of difference where we use different language to mean the same thing,
where we have an incongruence in our emotions, where we have a difference in motives. I want to
give you advice, but you don't want to take it, or something dips down to a difference in our
identities. I'm American and you're a Brit. So anytime you encounter these little fleeting moments
of difference in all of these different ways, and maybe there was an image here. Let me see.
No, it's not here. It looks like layers. We talk about it like layers of the earth. And above the
surface are the words and sounds that you hear while people are talking. Right at the surface are
people's emotions. So I feel excited, but you feel tired and bored. That's going to be tough.
Right below that are people's motives. What I want to, it gets back to the compass. What I want to
achieve is different than what you want to achieve. We're all walking around with a compass in our
mind, and they're different from each other. Right below that are our beliefs, right? I believe
that immigration is a problem, and you believe that AI is a way bigger problem than human
immigration. How do we talk about that in a way? And then all of it dips down to the sort of hot
magma in these layers of the earth model of our identities. So even an easy conversation,
we're on a date, or two spouses are driving in a car, where friends are hanging out watching a
movie, like you can stumble upon these little moments of difficulty any time for any reason,
and you need to have the skill set to be able to make sure the temperature doesn't get too hot.
What is that skill set? There's a fabulous research.
on this. I have found it incredibly helpful in my life. Research by Julia Minson, Mike Yomans,
Hannah Collins, called receptiveness. So it's receptiveness to opposing viewpoints. And it's both the
mindset. When someone comes to you with something that seems crazy, you don't judge it negatively.
You have to fight the human instinct to think of it as like, that's crazy. That's wrong.
And now I'm going to win. And now I'm going to be right.
prove you wrong, because all of those instincts ruin our conversations and our relationships.
Why?
It makes us defensive on the receiving end. It makes us sort of accusatory and hostile on the attack
end. Once we get into an accusation and defense mode, the conversation is broken down.
It's no longer about connection, savoring, protecting, and advancing. We're now in this new
world that is not achieving any of our goals.
She says someone comes to me and comes to you and says something's crazy.
They say, you know, the sky is purple.
Yeah.
It's actually, it's not blue, it's purple.
Here's a magical phrase that you can say in that moment.
It makes sense that you feel that the sky is purple.
It makes sense that you feel excited to tell me that the sky is purple.
It makes sense that you feel X about Y.
It makes sense that you feel skeptical about podcasts.
It makes sense that you feel excited to feel.
annoyed that I speak quickly. It makes sense that you are worried about AI. Whatever people are
feeling, whatever they express to you, we can validate that feeling because whatever's going on in
their mind is their reality. And we have to say that out loud before we go on to do anything
else, even if we're about to disagree with them vehemently. But we have to say the validation
piece first, just like therapists do all the time, in order for them to feel heard and like,
oh yeah, I'm safe here so that I can join you on your side of the table and now we're going
to untangle this weird problem together. You say the sky is purple. Tell me more. Like what,
how did you come to feel like the sky is purple? Are you, are you colorblind? Are you,
do you see everything in purple? Like, now I can ask you questions about how you came to that
perspective and we can learn, I can learn about it. I guess the risk is you don't want to
validate something wrong. Yeah. Why not? You don't want to appear to be
saying, because if I say it makes sense that you think the sky is purple, but it's actually
blue. The word thinks is important. It's, it makes sense that you feel X about Y, not it makes
sense that you think X about Y. Thinking is like a cognition. Is there risk of it sounding patronizing?
Maybe, but in practice, it feels really, really good. When I run this, so I run an exercise in my
class where we go around, let's say there's a group of five students, and you have to share
something. We start easy, like share one song you love. And then the next person has to validate
that before they share their for a favorite next song. And you go around and around very quickly.
And so it feels very contrived to say, okay, you have to say, I love that you love that Taylor Swift song.
That's so interesting. I actually don't like Taylor Swift. It feels very contrived. But when you
talk to the students after it, they say, yes, I knew what we were doing. It did feel over the top to
say that about people's song preferences, and still, it felt amazing to have the person next to me
say, I love that you love that Taylor Swift song. Validation, we are all so hungry for validation
that even ridiculous validation feels amazing. So then, when you get to round two and everybody's
sharing something that they're really struggling with, and the person next to them says,
wow, I'm so sorry, that sounds really, really hard. It makes sense that you feel upset about your mom.
now you've got that habit and you're making them feel quite good about something that actually
does deserve that validation. So it's all about like developing these habits no matter where
the difference or disagreement is coming from. What's the opposite of that?
The opposite is how people naturally respond, tend to naturally respond, which is by trying
to win and prove them wrong and prove that they're right. So you say the sky is purple and I say
let's crazy, sky's blue.
And then where does our conversation go?
It feels terrible for you.
It's so interesting.
I learned this, because I employed this person once, and this person, when we'd talk about ideas, the first word out of their mouth was always, I disagree, and then they'd make their point.
That's right.
And I don't know what it was about it, but I noticed that it would, like, get my back up.
Of course.
And so I'd say, I don't know, I'd say, I think we should do it like this.
I disagree.
Yeah.
And then they'd make their point.
And I remember thinking, gosh, that's such a...
And it's so ironic because their goal is to persuade you.
At the end of it, they want you to agree with their position.
That's not at all how persuasion works.
The only way that we change our beliefs is usually across many conversations,
and we're around someone we like talking to and respect and have admiration for.
And then over time, we sort of bend to the gentle pressure of their differing viewpoint.
If I say, I disagree, now let's fight about it, you get your backup and you're not having,
you're not enjoying talking to me, even if you're right and, right, like it's not about being
right or wrong in that moment.
The goal here is to keep the conversation in an emotional place where it can continue,
so you can continue to engage.
And that's what these researchers find in this receptiveness research is if you qualify your
statement saying, like, I wonder if this guy could be a different.
color rather than the sky is blue with certainty. There are all of these sort of hedging language.
You can divide yourself into multiple parts. So if you said to me the sky is purple, I would say,
oh my gosh, as your friend and as a painter, that is so intriguing to me. As a biologist or as a
meteorologist, maybe we should investigate that, literally dividing yourself into two disagreeing
parts. It's usually how we actually feel. So if your mother says something crazy to you, that seems
crazy to you. You could say, as your daughter, I'm so intrigued that you've come to hold that
perspective. I'd love to hear more. You know, as a representative of Gen Z, I know my friends would
want me to say this. It means that you can hold two perspectives at once, and it is very helpful
to the other person to keep the conversation going. But all of the elements of this receptiveness
recipe have this flavor. It's a little surprising. I think often people think of these
types of things as weakness because it's like our instinct is to try to win and be right.
And instead, what I'm saying is, no, hedge your claims, show that you're uncertain about
stuff, validate their feelings, divide yourself into disagreeing parts because you're not
certain about anything in order to keep the conversation going so that you have any shred
of hope of persuading them over the longer term.
I remember Tally Sharrock telling me about study.
Either she told me, she was a neuroscientist in London, and she told me they put two
people in a brain imaging scanner and got them to, like, look at photos and come to agreement
on the price of something.
Yes.
And then eventually in these studies, I'm super paraphrasing here.
She's probably like cringing.
I think I know what study you're talking about.
Oh, do you?
Could you explain it?
Yeah.
So they studied what lights up in your brain when you're in a situation of disagreement versus
agreement.
And it is actually more taxing to your mind when someone is disagreeing with you.
It's like these neurological alarm bells.
go off. And all of a sudden, like you describe, what was your friend? My back goes up.
Yeah, my back goes up. I get my back up. Yeah. That's it. It's actually in your brain.
Your brain goes up. And it's hard. It's very hard to continue to engage once that process
is underway. Right? Some people call it amygdil hijacking, which is not quite right.
But your brain does look different when you're in a situation of disagreement. So whatever we can
do conversationally to sort of tamp that down so that your back doesn't go up is going to be quite
helpful. She showed pictures of the brain in these scans when someone disagrees with you. And I think,
and I might be getting this inverted, that it was almost like the brain had shut down to receptiveness
in that moment. It was like, so I always, when I wrote this chapter in my book called Do Not Disagree,
it's an intentionally provocative chapter because people think, would you mean never disagree with anybody?
No, that's right. Yeah. Don't make the first thing you say, I disagree. That's right. It can come
later. A hundred percent. It can come later, but first has to come like, oh, it's so intriguing that.
You said that. I'm so fascinated. And it makes sense.
that you might feel that way. I wonder if, and then you can go on instead of, I disagree.
I met a girl called Anne who always said yes and instead of but.
Good. And it shocked me because it was so different. I, having a conversation with how you say
something to her and you go, I think this. And she goes, yes, and then she would make her point.
And it could be a complete disagreement. But I noticed she was doing it and I loved it.
Oh, yeah. And we often think of the yes and as part of sort of improv, comedy, humor, etc.
they were, the comedians are really on to something much more profound about conversation broadly.
If you can come from a sort of mindset or like a spiritual place of yes and, essentially you're saying,
I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt here, even though what you're saying seems a little crazy.
That's what is required to have great relationships.
It's like we're all going to have these moments where someone feels something or says something that seems crazy.
and if you react to it in an invalidating way, that's how we kill our relationships.
Do we need to kill the word but?
Because what ends up happening is someone will say, the thing you just said about validating
relationships, yes, I completely understand.
I think you made a great point, Alison, but.
And the minute I say but, it's kind of like I've just taken an eraser to everything you just said.
I would love to get rid of the word but.
Not but with two T's, but but with one T.
Yes.
Yeah, you never need it.
You can make the same point and say and.
But it just completely, it just immediately says.
It also reveals that you're sitting there in a state of I can't wait.
I'm like on the tip of my tongue is something I can't wait to say that's opposite of what you're saying.
And it's the spirit of it is antagonistic.
One of the things we notice when we have conversations on this show about conversation is people really care about likeability.
Yes.
Like they really want to know what's making them disliked and they really want to know how to be liked.
Good.
So being liked is a huge drive, but it's just one of many things that we care about in terms of gaining status.
So status is respect, admiration, liking in the eyes of other people.
Liking is usually comes from sort of warmth and charm.
Admiration often comes from like perceptions of competence.
So we want warmth and competence at once, ideally.
Okay, let's go back in time.
Should we talk about the talk framework?
Because there are going to be little clues about how to be better liked across the whole framework.
Okay.
Okay.
Let's start with T.
I'm going to push these to the side.
T is, first I just want to say as a whole framework, T-A-L-L-K, is the most.
most comprehensive, teachable, practical, scientifically rigorous framework in the world for communication.
Did you invent it?
I did.
So you would say that.
But I didn't, when I first wrote the book, I didn't say it strongly enough.
And in the last almost year, I've come to realize why.
One part is because most people focus only on difficult conversations, and here we are
focusing on all conversations, even the ones that seem like they should be easy and fun.
It's all conversations everywhere, personal and professional.
The other piece is that I didn't even really intend this as a scientist, but the way we do research is essentially natural language processing machine learning fits into this new world of AI.
So the framework can be used by humans or machines to coach people to be better conversationalists and use as a rubric after the fact of saying, okay, how did this go?
Did you do well?
Let's look at T-A-L-L-K and evaluate.
Okay. It's the best in the world ever.
Thank you, Stephen.
Okay. Thank you for recognizing.
Okay. T is for topics.
Topics.
Topics are the building blocks of conversation.
It is what we choose to talk about.
Very simple. We all have an intuitive understanding that we sort of work through different chunks.
First, we're going to talk about your conversation with your girlfriend, then we're going to talk about the talk framework, then we're talking about the compass, whatever.
We're working through topics.
What I think most people don't realize is that we're choosing topics every time we talk.
It's not just at the beginning of a conversation, like an opener, like, hey, what do you think of this, you know, the diplomat?
No, every time you're talking, we're making moves to gently stay on topic or switch to something else.
What's so beautiful about that is it means we all have power.
We all have control to nudge the conversation one way or another.
and we can all do a better job with it.
So what's the game here to pick better topics,
to know what topic we're aiming at?
There's a lot of goals.
It's both about choosing better topics.
It's also about how can we make any topic better.
Okay?
One huge piece of advice that when you start to realize
how much your mind is doing during a live conversation
is to offload some of that cognitive work to beforehand.
Okay.
Okay, so prepping topics.
ahead of time. This does not mean writing out an agenda before you call your parents or before you
call your girlfriend. What it does mean is spending even 30 seconds, maybe even 10 seconds before you're
in the chaos of a conversation to think about what you could talk about or what might be
important for you to remember to talk about. Did you do that today? Always. Sometimes you don't
have to, right? Like you did it today. You did extensive prep. You even have things printed on cards
here. And in a way, I've been prepping for this conversation for 20 years. I've been studying
these things. I designed the framework myself. I've gone on 80 other, you know, podcasts. That's all
prep for this moment. What about in your personal life? Yeah. Can you give an example of where
you prepared topics? Every conversation that I know is coming. Give me an example. So with Kasi
before I got here. Which is a member of our team. Yes, thank you. I thought about, I wanted to ask her what
it's like to be moving from London to L.A. I wanted to ask her what it's like to work with you.
She said all good things. All good things. Next question. What does A. I'm joking. I'm joking.
It's so funny. I often will, so you can, it's not rocket science. It's literally just a little
bit of forethought. What kinds of questions or topics could I ask you that will make our conversation
feel a little bit better than just like winging it in the moment?
and talking about some random thing I see in the room.
I try to do this before every conversation
because now I know how powerful it is and how kind it is.
If you are calling somebody and you're like,
oh, yeah, their kid was going to take guitar lessons,
I should remember to ask about that.
Or, oh, my friend had this big presentation at work,
I should remember to ask how that went.
That means you're going to remember to ask them,
and that's super kind, and they're excited to talk about it too.
It makes everything better.
So topic prep is a huge deal.
In our research, what we find when you randomly assign people to prep topics or not, the conversations
where people have thought ahead even for 30 seconds, they feel less anxious, they're much smoother.
There are fewer disfluencies, so ums, us stutters between topics.
They cover more topics, which is usually a good thing, more likely to land on good topics.
You're less likely to blurt, so you're less likely to share things that you don't want to share
with people.
It's just an incredibly powerful strategy.
And it doesn't need to be complicated.
I've gotten in the habit of putting like two or three bullet points for people in my Google calendar notes when you know you have a meeting coming up.
And you don't even have to do it right before.
Like, oh, a week ahead of time, if it pops in my head that I want to ask Stephen about, do you want to have children, I might write that as a little bullet point in my calendar note for the time that I'm going to be here with you.
And then I'll be more likely to remember it.
Do you feel skeptical about this?
No.
I was just thinking it probably makes you more.
Going back to the point about likeability, it probably makes you a more likable person.
Much more likable, yeah. In fact, if you can achieve more of your goals,
whether they're high informational, low informational, high relational, low relational,
all of that makes you more likable. You seem more competent. You seem more warm,
especially when you lean towards those pro-social high relational goals.
Because everyone talks about how if you're interested in someone else,
like you were interested in COSI. Yes.
That must have felt good for her, which must make her like you more.
We should go ask her.
That's a good point.
I ask them, I have my students sometimes do a reflection task where I say, if you had to walk into a room and your job was to make people like you a one out of ten, a five out of ten, or a ten out of ten, what are the behaviors that you would do to try and pursue those three worlds?
Okay, so if I wanted people to like me one out of ten, what would you do?
You tell me.
You're the expert.
I want to hear your guesses.
My guess is. I would walk in quiet on my phone and I would ignore them.
Yeah.
And maybe I'd look up and make some kind of snide comment. I definitely wouldn't notice that they were there.
Yep.
And I wouldn't make high contact with them. I would maybe be really like, maybe like take a phone call.
I was going to say, you can get one's really low. See, probably insults, probably.
Oh, yeah, I'd offend them.
Yeah, offend them.
Yeah. Maybe take a phone call and then while you're on the phone call, talk about how great you are or something, right? Like some sort of arrogance, et cetera. Yeah. Maybe if they try and talk to you, interrupt them. Yeah. Be like not now.
Or look at my phone midway through what they're saying.
Uh-huh. Yeah. Okay. So there's lots of things you can imagine there. Okay.
Already we've touched on topics, though, right? When you think about, okay, I'm talking on the phone in front of them and what am I going to be talking about that reduces my likeability, even for,
someone who's like just observing you talking.
I'd get the name wrong.
That's great. Yep.
Yep, yep, yep.
That's a good way to say you don't matter to me.
Yeah, yeah.
Five out of ten is an interesting one.
You want to do, probably more blaze, like you engage with them, but not very well.
Talk about small talk topics, like you were saying, things that you could talk about with
anyone that are not personalized at all, seem a bit disinterested, but not offensive, just bland.
Okay.
Okay.
Then we get to 10 out of 10.
world. Ten app ten likeability. Yeah. What are you doing if you're trying to get ten out of ten?
I'm completely focused on them. Good. I'm attentive. I'm complimentary. I'm going to flatter them.
Yep. Do you think it will seem obsequious? I don't know if I get it right. Okay.
Because I'm going to mean it. Yeah, because it's going to be sincere. It's going to be really sincere.
Yeah. I'm going to crack a great joke. Yes. Knock knock. Yeah. Who's there?
I don't know. I don't know. You're like, I don't know. You laughed, didn't you?
Exactly. So yeah, I'm going to flatter them, crack jokes, be very attentive, get their name right, ask them about their grandchild.
Good. Okay, let's pause. I want to, in that description, already you're moving quite quickly through topics as you're interacting with them.
You know that you can't be circling the drain talking about the weather for long periods of time. So just briefly, let me say, we don't need to avoid small talk. In fact, it's a very important social ritual for people who are strangers.
to each other, people who haven't seen each other in a long time. It's where we land and say,
oh, we're doing conversation now. The mistake that people make is they stay there too long,
way too long, any more than like one beat of, oh my goodness, the weather's really warm. It's
like summer in California. Then you need to make it more personal and move up this topic
pyramid towards medium talk, deep talk quickly, right? So small talk is at the bottom. These are
topics anybody can talk about. Tailored talk is more exciting, more personalized, more relevant
to your interests. Deep talk is the peak of this pyramid. Only we can talk about this thing in this
special way. Not every conversation is bound to get to the deep talk, but when it does,
we should feel very appreciative. It's one of the most magical things about being humans.
So we don't need to get to deep talk with like the barista at Starbucks or with your neighbor
when they're taking out their trash. But it does happen sometimes, and it's quite lovely.
I think I used to put girls off when I was 11 because I used to ask them like the meaning of life too quickly on my mother stole a Nokia phone.
Yeah.
And so they would stop texting back.
Yeah.
So I think I learned early that like some people just don't.
Well, the joke's on them now.
Now you get to do it for your life's work.
No, but I think you were on to something there.
It's not that you ask them about the meaning of life at all.
You asked it too quickly.
So getting, it's about the pacing as we move up here.
Most people stay too long at the bottom, but we also cannot jump to the top.
You kind of have to do the ritual of climbing to feel like you get there in a natural way.
And is that where relationships are built, deep ones?
For sure.
At the top.
Moments at the top, probably, right?
This is where vulnerability takes you.
Often asking lots of questions, especially follow-up questions, gets you up the pyramid more quickly.
So shall we shift to the A of the talk framework?
Sure.
Because A is for asking.
Topics and asking are intimately tied to each.
other. The most common way that people switch topics is by asking a question. So you can use
questions like, what are you excited about recently? Or what has been your favorite guest to talk to?
Or what have you and your girlfriend done together recently? You can do that to switch topics.
Once you're on a topic, we use follow-up questions to kind of dive deeply and move up the topic
pyramid. So are you saying I should ask more questions? Yes. Okay. Well, ask more than they're
asking me. Maybe not you because you spend a lot of time asking questions, but most people,
the top line advice to make their conversations better is to ask many more questions. Asking,
it sounds so simple, and it's almost like everybody already knows that, but doing it in practice
is quite hard, and it's a skill. And people who do it well are more successful on romantic dates.
They're more successful in work meetings. They're more successful as collaborators. They're more
successful as entrepreneurs in getting funding, all of it hinges on question asking.
So the top line advice just ask more questions. At the very least, don't be a zero question
asker. What happens to the fate of zero question askers?
They're not getting a second date. They're not going to get that funding. They're not learning
enough about their partner to enable them to succeed. If you go on a first date and you're asking
zero questions, which, like, imagine that.
We've all sort of been on that date, probably.
You want to leave within 10 minutes.
When you're in a first date, you have so much to learn about each other.
You have everything to learn about each other.
So if someone's not asking, it's a real, real, real problem, especially, I think this
is a very especially good hack for men on heterosexual dates.
Often, what they're getting wrong is that they're not asking enough questions.
How'd you know this?
From data.
From data.
Yeah, yeah.
So we have a thousand speed dates, and the outcome is, does the other person want to go on a second date with you?
And we have transcripts.
It was an amazing study run by this incredible research group at Stanford about 10 years ago.
And you can just measure it, measure how many questions they asked on each date.
People who ask more questions are enormously more likely to get asked on a second date.
So much so.
imagine you go on 20 first dates. And I say, okay, Stephen, you just have to ask one extra question
on those 20 dates. If you do, you'll convert another date into a second date from just one
question per date. According to the data. Yes. It's true for both men and women,
but it's particularly helpful for men because they ask fewer questions on average than women do.
Really? Yeah. Significantly less. Yes. And the other funny
gender effect in the data is that men are just more likely to agree to go on second dates.
They're less discerning in general.
But if men want to get asked on the second date, just ask more questions.
What is me asking more questions doing to the other person?
It makes them feel heard and like you want to know their answer that you're interested in them.
So it signals your interest, but also you learn what's in their mind and what their experience is,
which arms you with more information to then ask more better questions.
So it's not just about asking more, although that's a good start.
It's about asking great follow-up questions.
The benefits of question-asking are almost entirely driven by the power of follow-up questions.
So give me an example of asking a great follow-up question.
We're on a date.
There's food.
It's going really well.
I've just shared with you that I went on an amazing walk down the sunset strip this morning.
And then I would say, really, oh my God, I've always wanted to go.
Tell me about it.
Oh, incredible.
So I got to this point.
I had never been there before.
There was, I had to decide, was I going to veer off and go see the Maryland Monroe apartment,
which, by the way, is right next to the Frank Lloyd Wright house.
Oh, my God.
Or was I going to go a few blocks away was the Menendez Brothers house?
Who's that?
The two brothers who killed their parents.
Oh, shit?
On Netflix?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
So I would literally right in between, and I was at this crossroads, do I choose
cultured, do I choose morbid curiosity?
And which one did you choose?
I went with cultured.
I was too afraid by myself.
You're so cute.
So, okay, so we're off our date now.
That was so fun.
You were asking such lovely questions, and it really helped to, like, cheer me on,
like, you actually wanted to hear this story, even though it might, like, someone else
might have been, like, not that interested, and then you feel embarrassed, like, oh, I just
shared a bunch of vulnerable.
stuff. I was walking alone in L.A. I had morbid curiosity about these two brothers of the story.
It's very easy to make someone feel invalidated in that moment, but follow-up questions make
me feel like, oh, he wants to know more. He's coming with me on this journey.
So did I do the right thing then? Yeah, you were doing great. Okay. Yeah. And what's the wrong
thing to have done for me to just, just... Oh, imagine if I had been like, oh, I went this on an amazing walk
down the Sunset Strip, and you said, oh, my favorite restaurant on the strip is a sushi place.
Oh, shit.
I went to this amazing restaurant, and I went to this amazing store.
Yeah, they carried our mez.
I bought an amazing pair of boots.
People do that all the time.
Constantly.
So this is called boomer asking.
Boomer asking?
Not because of boomers.
We love it.
What are you saying about boos?
It's for people of all ages.
Commit boomer ass.
It's a boomerang.
Oh, okay.
So I say to you.
I thought I lost subscribers.
No, no, we love boomers.
So I say to you, like,
Stephen, what's your favorite restaurant?
Mr. Chow's.
Oh, I've been to Mr. Chow's.
Last time I went to Mr. Chow's, I went with a whole bunch of friends, and I had a friend who was really...
People do that all the time.
So I've asked a question, you've shared something with me.
That is such a gift.
Any sort of self-disclosure is such a gift.
And instead of saying, oh, who did you go with?
Or what did you order?
Or what is it like inside?
How did you like it?
I bring it the focus of the conversation right back to myself.
People that do that don't know they do it.
Correct. Correct. Because I will, obviously, you know, I will go for dinner or we'll have, I don't know, 10 of my colleagues there. And then sometimes I'll have one particular colleague who is doing exactly that. Yes. And they have no idea. Don't you want to be like, stop? Yes. Stop. Just like ask them about their thing. They're new here. We're trying to make them feel comfortable. Even one follow-up question might be enough. And so if you use this mindset of like, ask the next question before you pull it back to yourself, it sometimes
can be enough. Probably many more. Follow-up questions is better. But even just one where I was like,
oh, who did you go to Mr. Chow's with? And I let you answer. Then I say, oh, I've been there too.
You can see it happening in their head because you say the word Mr. Chowse is your favorite restaurant
and they immediately go, boom, I've got a brilliant story about Mr. Chowell's that I need to
tell everybody. It makes sense that people do this. Our brains are incredibly, are wired to be
egocentric. We know all of our lived experiences, our own, with 100% accuracy. We lived it. It's all
up here. So anything that we see or here in our conversations is of course going to trigger all of
these memories and associations in your mind about your lived experience. And it's such an enemy
of good conversation because it constantly tugs you away from being interested in the other person
first. The other thing I've seen in meetings, which I've had to have a couple of conversations
about historically, is when someone will be talking and then someone's listening going, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I know, I'm like, oh my God, they've got something to say. And they're like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. They're yaring them out.
Yes.
They're trying to year them into silence so that they can get their point across.
Yes, right. Yes.
And I've had to send messages in the past. I say, by the way, you were saying, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It made it seem to an objective observer. Like, you weren't listening and actually you were just trying to say something.
So I said, just in the interest of you're like, you know, maybe.
Maybe don't.
Just don't say, like.
How do they respond to that people?
Well, because I didn't, I constructed it more tactfully.
Tactfully than I just described.
But I thought about it a lot and I just wanted to, because I'd seen them doing.
this 30, 40 times in these things. And I don't think they realize how it's perceived.
Now you know how I feel during so many conversations for so many different reasons.
There are so many things like that where you see other people doing the dastardly conversational
thing. And it's totally understandable why. They're excited. They have a thing they want to say
and it's preventing them from actually engaging with the person who's talking and what they're saying.
all of these things are understandable.
It's important to come from a place of non-judgment.
It's because our brains were built to wander,
not focus on another person,
because we're deeply egocentric beings
and we focus on our own perspective.
Both of those things hold us back
from really being able to engage with someone else.
I want to go back to your thing of like a 10 out of 10 likeability.
Those are the little things,
the little death by a thousand cuts to your likability
are these things where it's like you're not able to actually really focus on someone else
and really engage with what they're saying and ask follow-up questions.
And then later in the conversation, call back to something they said earlier
because you're just that clever.
There's so much stands in the way of doing that.
In that particular example I'm thinking about,
I started to get negative feedback from people that worked with this person.
And I noticed one day the negative feedback,
was I don't think they're even listening to me.
Because they're not.
Because they weren't really listening.
And so the minute I got the feedback was the minute I thought,
you know what, Stephen, you've watched this happen.
You know it's objectively true.
You owe it because you're this person's report
to have a conversation with them about it
because it's getting in the way of their success.
The fascinating thing for me is if I plot everybody I know and work with
on an axis of self-awareness as I relate to their communication,
some people are just, they kind of just got to have it.
And then some people are on the other end of this spectrum where there's, like, no apparent self-awareness of, like, how they're coming across.
And they're so talented and so hardworking, but this one thing of, like, their communication self-awareness is, honestly, in some cases, the single thing, the single gravitational force on their career trajectory.
Yes.
And, like, can people change?
Or is it just like a genetic thing?
They can.
First, let me address.
There are pros and cons to being at both.
ends of that spectrum. If you are too hypervigilant and too self-aware, it can be distracting.
It might mean that you're sort of people-pleasing, too, which can lead to burnout and exhaustion.
If you're at this lack of self-awareness end, of course, it's going to be a real problem.
And so I love teaching and coaching people at that end because you can become more self-aware.
So many of my students at Harvard come into the course, and that's how they are.
What do you mean?
They are not aware of what their strengths and weaknesses are.
They don't know what they're doing right and wrong.
They just know they either hate conversation or aren't good at it.
And so just by going through this talk course, they become much more sort of clear-eyed
and open to the fact that conversation is a skill that matters profoundly, not in a sort of soft-skill, fuzzy way,
but in a quantifiable way that impacts everything that matters to them.
like a bottom line almost as like an economic value to them.
And so just having their eyes open to the fact that like this is a skill and a skill they need
to get better at, even if I don't see them getting massively better in the course of three
months, it means that they are likely to get better at it over the longer term because now they
know, now they get it, and now they know that they aren't great at it yet.
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Bartlett. Are there anything else that, you know, we talked about death by a thousand cuts as
it relates to being a 10 out of 10 conversation list and likable person? Are there any of these other
the small things that we do, which are harming us but a tiny that most people don't know
they're doing.
Let's move to K, as I'm moving along in this framework.
I'm skipping L for now, which we would never skip L forever.
K is for kindness.
Often, we're all taught this virtue of kindness when we're children and spend the rest of
our lives sort of falling short of actually doing it in practice.
I've forever been obsessed with this idea of what are like people.
who are actually kind, what are they thinking about and how are they interacting with other people?
What kinds of choices are they making? How do they talk to other people? And so when you say
death by a thousand cuts, there are these sort of mistakes that we make in the respectfulness
of our language that undermine our actual kindness to other people. Making sure you use someone's
name, you gave this example, and the one out of ten is like use the wrong name. That is really
meaningful. You need to know people's names and use them correctly. And with appropriate formality,
Right? Sometimes it's wonderful to say like, hey, honey, and sometimes you need to say, it's nice to meet you, Dr. Brooks, right? Like, you need to be able to read that. There is this paper where they studied conversations between police officers and citizens in Oakland, actually close to here, in normal traffic stops. So when police pulled over citizens and walked up to the car and said, you were speeding, you know, and they used body cam footage and got all the transcripts from these interactions.
and then measured the respectfulness of the language that the police officers were using.
There are some really, you know, not surprising but terrible findings that police officers were using
less respectful language towards black citizens compared to white citizens.
But sort of more broadly speaking, the interactions where they were using more respectful language went better.
There were less conflicts.
There were, they drive away without further infractions.
So the tiny choices we make in our language, and the language of respect varies along like hundreds of features of language and it's a very gradient concept, but they have a real impact on how these interactions go.
When we think about sort of like things like systemic racial bias, it comes from that kind of stuff.
That's where it leaks out, is in the language we use with each other.
so we can all learn to use more respectful language.
Do you think much about how our emotional state is impacting our ability to accomplish any of these things?
Because I think the days where I'm least likely to be kind are the days where I haven't slept.
Yeah.
I should probably be avoiding all conversations that day.
It's really, I think one of the biggest things I've learned from all of this work is that conversation is remarkably effortful.
And it requires quite a bit of energy.
Even if you know how to be a good conversationalist, often we don't have the energy to actually do it.
Oh, I don't have the energy to brainstorm topics. I don't have the energy to continue asking follow-up questions.
I'm going to let my egocentrism take over and boomer ask till the sun comes down, goes down.
Like boomers.
Not boomers.
I'm going to accidentally use disrespectful language and not repair that, not correct it.
That's kind of what keeps me up at night is that human beings do have limited.
We are limited in time. We're limited in energy. Our brains are not super computers. And so
in practice, people who are great communicators will often fall short of their own hopes because
they don't have the energy to do it. I think Brunet Brown said to me that when she comes home and
she's out of energy, she'll just say to her partner, listen, I'm on 10% today so I can't deal with
this now. And talk about self-awareness. Boy, if you can do that, if you can say, and you have
sturdy enough relationships at work and at home that you could say, dude, I'm like a two out of ten.
You've got to cut me a break today.
It would be tremendously helpful.
It requires quite a bit of self-awareness to recognize that you're at a two out of ten.
And a lot of grace from the people around you, which means that you're going to have to give them grace in response at some point.
That's what good relationships are.
And the L.
Shall we put them in the correct order?
F-A-L-K. L is for levity. So we've talked a bit about difficult conversations and how they can so easily get overheated. When you think about chats that go off the rails, it's quite easy to think of hostile conflict, difficult conversations, because they're very salient, they're very memorable. There might be shouting, there's going to be hurt feelings, defensiveness. The more common enemy of conversation is actually boredom and disengagement. So yes, do we get annoyed with it?
each other, absolutely, but almost every conversation has stints of disengagement where people
aren't interested. And so levity is humor and warmth to help us avoid disinterest and boredom.
And levity is important for sort of happiness and engagement's sake itself. You know,
it matters that we're enjoying our time together. But maybe even more profoundly,
if we are not leaning towards each other and interested in what the other person is saying,
we can't achieve any of our other goals.
Good conversation requires mutual engagement.
So if I'm bored and my mind is wandering, which happens a lot because I have attentional issues.
It happens to a lot of people a lot.
The human mind wanders 25% of the time during conversation.
So it's quite common.
If your mind is wandering and you're not engaged with each other, then you can't do anything
else either. Persuasion, making decisions together, brainstorming, connecting, none of it.
So the L is very important because it makes things fun and enjoyable, but it's also important
because we need to stay here with each other and not disengage.
What if you're not a warm person?
It's so fun.
I've been accused of being very serious.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. People say to me, people say to me a lot, like, you're very serious.
I'm like, really? I think I come across this series sometimes.
I think you may come across as serious. I think, but you do come across as very warm. And so that's an important distinction.
You're using flattery. I've seen that on your compass. I'm not. I'm giving very direct feedback. I've got your compass here. So it's flattery. Flattery. High relational. I'm on to you.
So there's levity is two parts. It's humor and warmth. And I always start this part of my class at Harvard by saying to my students, if you're not funny and you think you never will be, it's okay.
Because I don't think I'm going to be the one to make you funny within the span of two months.
If you are a deeply serious, unfunny person, other people believe that you can get funnier over time.
We can talk about that in a moment.
What I do deeply believe is that anyone can be more warm.
So warmth moves include anything, expressing gratitude.
I'm so grateful for your time today.
I'm so grateful for you engaging with the content of my work.
Flattery, giving compliments.
just shifting topic. So if you can get better at sensing when people are getting bored with a topic and getting more courageous and assertive about switching more frequently can be very, very helpful for keeping the conversation sort of bubbling along. Callbacks. Callbacks are any reference back to something that you've talked about previously. They're total magic. It shows that you were listening to someone earlier in the conversation, maybe even earlier in your relationship,
like a month ago, if I can call back to something we talked about, it shows, I heard you,
I was thinking about what you said, I was able to retain it in my mind, and I'm clever enough
to reference back to it now. And often it has this really amazing quality where if I bring
it up again, it's funny, because you're like, oh, shit, that's super clever.
Often a lot of people ask me, how do we end conversations well? And I have two pieces of advice
there. I'm going to bring this back to callbacks. One is nobody knows when to end conversations.
It's the final topic switch. It's the final coordination choice. There's no way to know there is
no right answer. So it's better to just end it. Like be assertive, walk away rather than
hemming and hawing and feeling bad and embarrassed about it. The second piece of advice is that
it's a great time to try a callback. The very last beat of the conversation, you can say,
and I hope you have a great time with your girlfriend this weekend, right? Like whatever you
They had mentioned, oh, I'm going to go, we're going to go to see this movie.
I hope you have a great time at the movie this weekend, right?
Showing that, like, oh, I heard you 30 minutes ago when you told me this thing.
That can help to smooth the exit ramp away.
I find it really useful to give people my email address to end the conversation.
That's so interesting.
It just ends the conversation immediately.
Yeah.
Someone will come up to me and say, hey, I've got this business idea I want to pitch, and then they'll start pitching.
And if I could, you know, send me, here's my email.
And I shake the hand, the conversation ends immediately.
Do you feel it is dismissive?
Maybe, however, in the context of, like, being in the gym, and I'm, like, mid-set,
and someone comes over and says, and I go, oh, here's my email, here's, if you want to, it seems to end the conversation.
And it feels to be, like, please help me here.
What would be a better way to...
I know, I think that's quite good, because it could be perceived as a little dismissive,
but that person in the gym is going to be like, yeah, he probably doesn't want to talk about my business while he's, you know,
you know, lifting. And you're opening the door to them. You're saying, I really would love to
receive an email from you. It is my real email as well. I'm not giving it a fake one.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, you should feel like a jerk if you were giving out a fake game. And I do read
them. Yeah, exactly. Depending on your tolerant. I also don't, I think most people wouldn't
be excited about having a deep conversation with a stranger at the gym. And I think giving yourself
grace for that is also helpful. Like, it doesn't make.
you a bad person. I think of an important thing that we take from the book in this course is like
talking more is not always the answer. Often it's not. Often it's important. It's these low
informational goals, right? Like protecting your time, protecting your mental health.
Some people, most people are under social. Loneliness is a real problem. They don't have enough
friends. They're not connected enough. But some people probably are overconnected. And your social
is too large and there's too many people who need too many things from you. And so thinking
carefully about what are your strategies to sort of stave off over conversation is quite worthwhile.
And is this introvert, ambivert, extrovert stuff real?
That's a great question. People have preferences about what makes them feel connected to other
people. Some people would love to go to that party with 100 famous people.
Tell me about Zara and my team said that the thing she wants to do on a Friday after really,
really, really, really, really busy week is she wants to go to a busy coffee shop and be around
loads of people. And I was like, what? She goes, yeah, it recharges me. I'm like, what are you
like a psychopath? And then there's me who, after the same week, all I want to do is be in a dark,
cold room on my own. Yep. Totally. And both of those are fair and fine. And knowing that about
yourself is really helpful. I don't know as that relates to introversion and extroversion as much as like
where, what are your preferences for conversation?
It's both about how frequently, who do you want to be interacting with, and what topics are
exciting? Is she going to that coffee shop and talking about work still? Or is she like,
no, I can't wait to talk about this weird other stuff to try and get work off my mind?
But there's those people, though, in society. We all know them that are like, around people,
they just become like a social butterfly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They like talk loads. They're really engaged. They're energized by it.
Sure.
And then there's us lot who are just drained by that stuff.
And I look at these people and go, I'm almost jealous of them.
I go, I don't know how you do that.
Sometimes, for sure, whether you, when you get excited around lots of people can be a huge advantage because we need to do that sometimes.
I actually think possibly a better indicator of introversion might be if you went into a party or you were in a group conversation and it was super awkward, nobody's talking.
Do you feel like it's your job to fix it?
extroverts would be like
that's my number one job in life
I am the one
don't worry I'm here
I'm here to save the awkwardness
introverts are often like
I'm going to go loiter by the guacamole
this is not my problem
and I don't want no part of it
so sometimes it's not even about
the number of people that are around
but how you're managing conversation
I just put a new quiz on my website
that helps people figure out
what are your preferences
what are your natural habits in tricky situations like that?
And it gives you a sort of type type type are you.
Do you tend to sort of be avoidant?
Do you tend to approach and try and fix things?
And then strategies to use?
And what do you see in terms of percentages there and different types?
We're going to find out it's new.
It's new.
Yeah, yeah.
We're just launching it.
So I'm going to find out.
And does it have classifications in terms of like how many classifications?
Yeah.
So it's only three types that you could be with this quiz.
And then sort of like strategies that whatever.
your type is, this is going to help you in terms of topics asking levity and kindness.
And what are the three categories? One could be.
So one person could be sort of an approach person who's like, and I guess probably correlated
with extroversion, we'll find out. If it's awkward and quiet, you're the one that wants to
jump in and fix it. There are pros and cons to this, too. If you jump in and you might say things
and do things that you don't actually aren't very proud of. And might lower your value.
Correct. There are avoiders who are like, no, thank you. I'm just going to, I'm going to stay here, but I'm going to not say anything. And then there are people who are like, I'm out of here, this party sucks, right? Like, they're the exit, the exit people. I feel attacked.
No, but I, you know, this is interesting? Because is it true that some people who overtalk are less respected? Can you overtalk? I had this, um, this thought many years ago, based on, again, observations I'd seen in boardrooms that I'd been in. And I'd see,
12 of my team members in a boardroom, trying to come to an idea for a campaign we were doing.
Yeah.
And I noticed that one particular person who I shan't name, many years ago in our New York office, would talk so much and I would say too much to the extent that the next time they spoke, I could see everybody in the room, not paying attention and discounting it before it would come.
So I came up with this idea.
I was like, I think we all have a contribution score.
Yeah.
Like a credit score.
Love that.
And it's based on how thoughtful and valuable our previous contributions have been.
Yeah.
And what I would see is with this particular person, I should call her Katie.
The minute she spoke, halfway through her first sentence, I could see the person sat next to her, basically just pre-rebuttling it.
Yeah.
Like pre-dismissing it.
Yeah.
And then on the contrary, there's another particular person in our Manchester office back in the day who spoke so little that the minute they spoke, it was like the room fell silent.
and we all just swung our heads over to them
because we're like, here comes a really good take.
So I thought everybody has a contribution that's called Protect Chores.
Yes, so group conversation is incredibly complicated.
And one of the most difficult things is so obvious
is just how do we share airtime?
There are always going to be people who have high power
tend to take up more airtime just naturally.
It's something that high power people need to fight against
because it's not productive.
And it makes lower power people feel like they're not welcome to join.
But then if you just look at airtime,
airtime balance, the person who's dominating the airtime, that is not productive, right?
Like, especially if they're not the expert, okay, that's where things get problematic.
You can imagine a balance where, okay, there might be a group where we are all dying to hear.
We need to talk about aerospace engineering, and only one out of the ten of us is an aerospace
engineer.
I want to hear that guy talk for 45 minutes, and I want to learn everything I possibly can
in that time.
It becomes problematic when the person dominating the airtime is not the sole expert, or maybe not an expert at all.
There's another piece to this, and I love your idea of a contribution score, where talking is not the only way to add value to a group.
There are so many roles that people play.
There are timekeepers.
There's someone who's writing on the board at the same time.
Often the person holding the pen ends up being the most powerful person because they're making diagrams and taking notes, and they decide what.
is worthy of being up on the board, there are people who keep the agenda. So we're saying,
okay, here are the topics we want to talk about here, the goals we came in with, we want to
make this decision. I'd like to note that we haven't moved to the pasture where we're going
to make the decision, right? The person who is sort of facilitating the meeting becomes very
valuable. So there's all kinds of, so there's goals, there's roles in a group, and then
there's the soul, the warmth of it all. The other thing in line with,
that that I've noticed from people with a low contribution score in businesses that I've
put, whatever, is they're bad switches.
Mm-hmm.
And it appears to be linked.
What I mean by a bad switcher is the group will be talking about...
I see, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
They're unwilling to go where the group wants to go, and they keep coming back to their
thing or they're like...
Yeah, or something completely unrelated, as if they just needed to say something.
Yeah.
And it just veers the group off the subject.
So the group are talking about, let's just say we're talking about a campaign we're doing for Starbucks.
And we're saying, do you think we should do an event in Manhattan?
And because it almost seems like they can't not talk, they'll say, I went on a holiday to Manhattan once.
And it was voted in the top 15 on the Forbes list of best places to go.
And you just go, and you just look and go, well, that's not one.
What if that person, let me play Devils Adam for a second.
What if they made a joke about New York that was actually funny, slightly off topic, but actually funny? And then you get right back into it's great. So it's not about, in that case, it's not about bad switching. It's about egocentrism. You're not reading the room well. You're not serving the goals of the group. Yeah. Right. Levity, moments of levity often are about briefly switching to an adjacent topic and then switching back. Yeah. And it's actually worth that.
sidebar because it's fun and everybody's like oh thank god we don't have to like circle the drain
on new york for a million more minutes um the problem is this guy's chiming in being like let me
tell you about the time i went to new york yeah and and the collective are trying to go in one
direction i actually think this about this a lot in the context of podcasting
i would hate to have a co-host and it would be very hard it would be so hard because in my mind
there's a particular direction i'm going in yes and if they were
aligned with the direction I'm going in, it's rough.
I mean, you see it sometimes on podcast with a co-host where they're going in a direction
talking about immigration.
And they say like, but wait, wait, wait, just one thing.
One quick thing before we move on and then you go back.
They go to a different direction.
And you're like, oh, my gosh.
And as a viewer, you're like, oh, you were making progress towards the crux of the issue.
But I think that's what I'm talking about.
Like, how do you make sure you're moving in the right direction as the group?
And it's, and this is a great example because we often think of one-on-one conversation
is the same task as a three-person group, as soon as a third person pulls up a chair,
whether it's a podcast, co-host, or a friend at a bar, that task, it's a categorically
different task now. Because that third person has the power to take you on sidebars,
it's no longer being co-created intimately between two minds. All of a sudden, we get into this
coordination kerfuffle that can be very, very frustrating. I suspect that's part of why you don't
like groups, actually, is that you, like, so strongly prefer one-on-one.
Yeah, I think that's true.
I think that's true.
I prefer one-on-one.
I prefer the depth.
Yeah.
Small talk feels are, like, really disingenuous sometimes.
Can I push you?
Do you think it's about control?
Because, like, imagine you had a co-host, the problem that, the reason you'd feel so
frustrated with that, yes, it's about the flow of the conversation getting to a magical moment.
It's also, like, oh, you have to, like, relinquency.
control to someone else in that moment.
It's interesting because I was with a colleague of mine the other day, and we were interviewing
some people.
So we're just saying we're interviewing three people.
Yeah.
The first interview, I told her to lead the interview.
And I enjoyed the interview because I could watch her go in her direction, felt very like
a straight line.
The second interview, I didn't say anything.
And what happened is I started asking them a question.
Now, I'm sat there asking this guy a question because I'm trying to figure out this particular
answer. So I'm kind of like circling this issue, not kind of giving it away. And I'm getting
one step closer and another step closer. And then my colleague comes in and asks a completely
different question. And you're like, oh. And I'm like, oh, no, I was like so close to figuring out
this thing about them that I suspect is a red flag. So like, and then she came and asked a question.
And then I'm saying, oh, my God, no, now I have to go right back to this completely different
subject and stuff. And you're never going to get your answer. So anyway, afterwards, I had a
conversation with her and I said, listen, when we do interviews, I think we need to
clarify who's leading. That's right. I'll sit and listen when you do it. Then when I do it,
you sit and, you know. And so I think that's part of it. That's part of the roles thing I was
talking about before too, right? Like there's this roles of like you're scribing, you're keeping time
or whatever, but also having clarity about like who's the topic leader here. Yeah. And clarity,
especially in a group of three, can be incredibly helpful. And lack of it is chaotic. A nightmare.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. What is the most important thing we haven't talked about as it relates to
likability and having great conversations and dislikability, if that's a word.
I want to distance ourselves from likability.
I think likeability is one very narrow goal of good conversation.
What other things do people care about?
Do you know why I use certain words?
Tell me.
It's because the audience have told me.
Should I tell what they care about?
Please.
They care about dealing with narcissists.
Good.
They care about how to have difficult.
Because they struggle with it?
I guess so, yeah.
Yeah.
It's an interesting label.
It's very accusatory of other people.
Because I think everybody thinks the person they disagree with is a narcissist.
It's like a nice way to like just...
So a reframe of it is they struggle with disagreement.
Yeah.
Okay.
The other thing is they care a lot about difficult conversations.
It's the bane of their life.
They struggle with them.
They avoid them.
They think if they could only get good at it, then they'd be everything they want to be.
Yeah.
They care about being liked.
Yep.
They care about avoiding things that make them disliked that they're unaware of that they're doing.
I would say, and I guess the fifth one is they care a lot about persuasion.
Remarkably, and Julian Treasier, who did that TED talk about speaking, told me this.
People don't really care much about listening.
He told me he did two.
Because they don't know.
It's funny.
It's so interesting to hear you say those things.
To me, those are all very related to each other and revealing that people don't have great instincts about.
their strengths and weaknesses. And what's hard and easy about conversation? Persuasion,
difficult conversations, thinking other people are narcissists, and being liked, they're all
related to mismanaging conflict and disagreement and struggling to manage moments of difficulty
well. The social landscape of all conversation is so much broader than people realize, I think.
because they were so narrowly focused on these very noticeable, memorable, salient moments
of disagreement that we're like, oh, shit, that's hard, and we got mad, and it ruined, and we broke up.
Of course.
But you're also super boring, like 80% of the time.
And also, you're not really listening to other people.
You're missing so many opportunities to actually learn from people because you're not listening.
You're not asking enough follow-up questions.
you're not asking enough questions at all.
You're spending too much time talking about yourself.
Like, obviously this is what people, like, because the thing that I will remember the most
is the conflict, the issue, the problem, the emotional situation.
Yeah.
People don't think they're boring.
Like, on generally.
It's hard to, it's such a, it's a much harder thing to notice.
Yeah.
And it's a much harder thing to get feedback about because no one's going to be like,
hey, bro, you're boring.
Yeah.
And if the things I'm interested in, by way of me being interested,
I think they're interesting.
Yeah.
So I think that, I don't know, I'm just making stuff about Pokemon.
I think that's the most important, interesting thing in the world.
And let me now tell you everything I know about Pokemon.
Yeah.
It's like this misunderstanding of what the purpose of conversation is not to say things we know at other people.
It's about finding things we're both interested in and then learning everything that you know about that.
Like now I'm just going to like take a journey through your brain of everything that you think and feel about this thing that we're.
both interested in. And on that journey, we might land in this magical place where I'm learning
stuff from you. You find me quite charming. We're laughing together, and we feel seen and known and
understood. But it's definitely not going to be me telling you about Pokemon if you're deeply
disinterested in it. And there's just the difference between being interesting and interested.
We think that... Yes.
Like, I think that the game of being interesting is to show you...
Life is not about walking through life giving like many speeches or like many
TED Talks, right? It's about conversation is interactive. It's co-created with two independent
minds. Entrepreneurs make this mistake a lot, too. They may be driven by, you know,
Dragon's Den and Shark Tank. You feel like it's not your fault. You feel like you need to stand up
there and like pitch your idea. And in order to be successful, you give the most compelling
public speech about it. Most entrepreneurs or business owners actually
are talking to investors and colleagues and potential strategic partners in conversation.
And so before you get to the point where you're like, let me tell you about my amazing company,
you need to ask them a million questions and get to know them and understand what their pain points are
and how many kids they have and what they actually care about.
So if you're lucky, the thing that and product or service you have actually fills that need
and be like, guess what? I have this amazing thing for you. Wouldn't you love to invest in it?
Andrew Bustamante said something to me about this.
He said he's a spy for the CIA for about 10 years.
And he said one of the things you have to train yourself to understand as a spy is that there's a difference between your perspective, which is like what I see right now.
Yes.
And in my perspective, I see a mirror over there and there's an award and I see some things behind you.
I see two cameras over your shoulder.
I see that.
There's a wooden beam over there behind you, by the way.
And there's like some green tape above there.
And then there's your perception.
Yes.
Your perception is all this shit.
Like, I couldn't see any of this stuff behind me.
That's right.
And he said, like, as a spy, they train you to sit in the other person's perception.
Because if you can't do that, you're never going to be able to persuade them.
Like, you have to realize that actually you sat in front of me have a different brain.
And the only way, I can guess what's in your brain.
I can guess maybe there's a mirror behind me.
Maybe there's art.
Maybe there's just a wall.
I can guess, based on what I see, based on what I've experienced, we're in a room.
So I'm going to guess there's some sort of wall behind me and not out into the
the street, but we're really bad at guessing. Tons of psychological research suggests that human
beings are terrible at using our own experiences to guess other people's perceptual realities.
Guess your perspective. So instead of guessing, I need to ask you, hey, Stephen, what do you
see behind me? I need to ask you directly. How does that make you feel? Why do you think it was
built that way? What do you feel when you're sitting here? Why do you think it's asymmetrical?
Why do I see books, but you don't? The only way to truly
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So when I go into a business meeting, or I'm trying to persuade someone to, I don't know,
join our company, whatever, at the beginning of that conversation, are there key questions
that I should be using to understand their ideology, like understand the hero's journey that
they have in their head of them?
You should ask more and listen to their answers and then ask the next question.
What kind of questions?
A good one that I like to start with is, what are you excited about lately?
Okay.
Right?
It's very revealing of what is top of mind.
You asked me that question today.
I loved it.
It also implies that you knew what they were excited about previously, so it can help you kind
of revisit that a bit over time.
Whatever, everyone has an answer to that question, even if they're terribly depressed.
they're excited about something, maybe the prospect of making a friend.
And anything that someone is excited about means you can stay on that topic and ask more.
Oh, well, what could I do to help you do that?
Right?
Like we can just carry on down that path.
When I asked you that question three hours ago, you said two things.
You said about putting this curriculum into schools, but you also talked about men and their conversations.
And you said you had done a study recently about men.
This is me remembering what you said.
Callback.
Loving it.
Loving it.
Thank you for that.
But men in their conversations,
you said you've done
an interesting study recently,
which you can't go into the details about,
but it was revealing about male friendship.
Yes.
Are men bad at communication?
If so, why are we bad at communication?
Conversation's hard.
When you look under the hood,
it looks more like a train wreck.
You're being diplomatic.
Than I will be less diplomatic in a moment.
It looks more like a train wreck
than a sort of tidy script
that you would see on a TV show.
It's messy.
We make mistakes.
We have to repair.
We need to check our understanding.
We need to make apologies constantly.
So perfection is not the goal for anyone in conversation.
When you look at gender differences, there are real gender differences.
We know that in friendship, women tend to actually face each other and talk to each other.
Men tend to do activities, right?
Shoulder to shoulder.
We're fishing.
We're playing basketball.
We're in fantasy sports on our computers.
This project that I did recently, I always spend.
Lots of time analyzing transcripts at very large scale. This project, though, I was observing conversations live. And for whatever reason, that was much more visceral than what I usually do as a scientist. And it was all men, meeting other men for the first time and sort of trying to forge friendships. And what was so hard to watch is that they don't, they really struggled with vulnerability. Vulnerability is such a key component of friendship. We,
friendship experts say you need consistency, so interacting repeatedly, positivity,
having fun together, but maybe most importantly, vulnerability, like sharing not only
your feelings with each other, but like what are you struggling with? What are your hopes
and dreams? What are your goals? What do you want to get out of this? It was so maddening to watch
these men have hundreds of conversations and like none of them asked those questions or talked
about those things with each other. As a woman, it was almost shocking because it's sort of like
what women would probably talk about within the first three minutes of the conversation. And I
couldn't believe, I was like, wow, this is really, this really seems like a massive difference.
And I worry that large scale, the leap from being basketball buddies or fantasy sports
buddies into vulnerable conversation feels so scary and risky that men are unable to make the
leap. And that's a huge part of what's holding back men from having meaningful friendships.
And we know that loneliness is so much worse for men than for women.
And they have way less friends.
Yes, yes. A ridiculous proportion of men say report having zero close friends.
40% potentially.
Wow.
It's quite troubling.
And I think the conversation skills and courage, listen, everything that we've talked about, choosing
good topics, shifting to new topics when they get boring, asking good questions, asking
follow-up questions, finding moments of levity, apologizing, listening, all of these things
take a surprising amount of courage and confidence, and it feels like this thing for men who
have been socialized to believe that vulnerability is a sign of weakness, it feels like it's like
almost takes too much courage for them to make that leap in their relationships. And it's
quite problematic. Men are 400% more likely to say they have no one to turn to in a time of
crisis. Half of men say they are unsatisfied with their friendships. Men's number of close friends
has dropped by 30 to 40% since 1990.
Men come to rely on their, in heterosexual relationships,
come to rely on their partner for emotional fulfillment and support.
Women do not.
So when, you know, a woman, the female spouse dies,
men have to remarry to fill that void.
They don't have that friendship.
When a husband dies, the woman has her friends to support her.
So how can I make more friends as a man?
I think it's really one conversation at a time, the power you have as an individual is signaling to other men, hey, let's take this courageous leap.
Like, here's a question you can ask. What have you been struggling with recently?
What do you hope to achieve? But what have you, but what kind of thing have you been thinking about that you haven't shared with anyone before?
And in the study you did, what kind, give me a flavor of how the conversation sounded.
Hey man, you want to get, oh, this hot dog is gross.
Yeah, it's really gross
Yeah, this is
Yeah, I don't like the food
I'm going to go take a nap
It's like narrating what's happening around you
Sometimes they'd be like
Where are you from
Or
And then that would turn into a narration
Yeah
I love Chicago, it has that front team
I hate the Chicago Bears
Oh, yeah, I remember when so-and-so played there.
Then you devolve into this sports talk, which can be important, but can you move a step
beyond and be like, did you ever feel vulnerable when you played football in high school,
right?
Or like, what did you struggle with in terms of sports?
Why didn't you play college sports?
Whatever.
Whatever the topic is, you can take that next step to make it actually personal and vulnerable
and interesting so that you walk away.
way one step closer to having an actual friend and not just someone you say things you know
to. I did a talk in Canary Wharf or a couple of weeks, maybe a year ago and a kid stood up
in the front row. You've got to bear in mind there's 500 young, I say young, I mean probably 21.
They're all working at this part of London called Canary Warth where you kind of, your first job
after university. 500 people in this room, kid stands up front row says, hi, my question is I
want to know how to make friends.
And it was shocking to me because I could see
499 of his peers stood next to him.
But he had the guts to stand up in front of all these people
and say, hi, Stephen, my question is, how do you make friends?
That's a fabulous question, isn't it?
If he had asked you that question,
he might be listening now.
Hello, friend.
It starts with hello.
And the number of times that I have run
conversation exercises as part of my class
And the students at the end of that very first session say, this is the first time I've turned to the person next to me and actually talk to them.
It's like every time I do that for a session.
Thank you.
Thank you for the opportunity to turn, giving us a reason to turn to each other and actually talk, get to know my classmates.
Even that takes tremendous courage, especially if there are norms of not doing, of coming in, sitting down at a desk or in an auditorium and being on your phone.
So literally turning to someone next to you and saying like,
Hey, I'm Allison. What's your name? Where are you from? Starting, right?
God, we don't do that in the UK. It's like creepy behavior.
It's okay. And that's, you do need to read the room, right? Like, it's maybe not appropriate in all situations. It can be ashamed. It depends on the norms.
Once you are engaged with people, it's all of the talk things. What topics will they actually find helpful to them?
Are you asking questions? Are you listening and asking follow-up questions? Are you moving beyond just trading things you know?
are you learning about each other in a way that feels revealing?
That's where real relationships come from.
What are these here?
Yeah, let's find out.
This list of questions here.
Oh, this is an exercise that I do.
This is based on a very well-known exercise called 36 questions to fall in love.
Oh, I heard about that.
Yeah, Arthur Aaron.
It was in the New York Times many years ago.
It's based on some academic research.
This is a subset of 10 of those 36 questions.
An exercise I do in my class called 10 questions to fall and like instead of love.
So if I ask someone those 10 questions, they're going to like me?
Probably, yeah, more than if you didn't ask the questions.
What you want to do is you actually go back and forth and ask each other these questions.
So the first one is what are you excited about lately?
Next is what is something you're good at but don't like doing?
What's something you're bad at but love to do?
Is there something you'd like to learn more about?
Is there something you'd like to learn how to do?
what can we celebrate about you? Has someone made you laugh recently? What's something cute your
kid, friend, pet, or partner has been doing? Did you grow up in a city? And have you fallen in love with
any new music, books, movies, shows lately? It's just 10 questions that are of this flavor that
many people, but I suspect lots of men, don't ask that are a great starting point. It's just the
first turn, right? You have to actually listen to what the person says and ask follow-up questions to really
deepen the conversation and move up that topic pyramid. But these are good questions. You could
prep just one or two of them. You could carry two of them in your back pocket all the time
as go-to topics for people. So when this opportunity arises, you could ask them. I like the one,
what are you excited about lately? That's my go-to with a lot of people. Also, like, have you,
are you obsessed with any shows right now? It's a pretty good one, too. But the key is not just asking that
question, but actually asking follow-up questions about, like, why do you connect with that
show? What do you see in the main character? Do you see anything from the main character that you see
in yourself? You know, you've got to get more, got to get deeper into it. The original research
with the 36 questions to fall in love suggests that going through these 36 questions
makes you like each other a lot. And certainly these 10 questions would help you start.
If you need the excuse, I would love for your listeners to blame me. If you're feeling
if they feel nervous to ask questions like this, especially boys or men, say, like, I saw this
crazy lady on Diary of a CEO, and she said, I should try asking this question, so I'm going to try.
Even my students at Harvard find that quite helpful to have a scapegoat to point at me and say,
my professor made me do this.
It doesn't matter who makes you do it, whether it's yourself or someone else.
The fact is that you're doing it, and they're going to answer this question, and then you can ask a follow-up.
and it's the beginning of a friendship.
I did that when I was younger to a girl I was interested in.
I'd seen that TED talk about 36 questions, whatever.
And I said to her over text message, I was like,
I want to play a game with you, something that I've just watched.
Are you willing to play it with me?
She said, yes, I asked her these 36 questions.
And at the end of it, I told her about the research and whatever in a non-creep way.
You're a real dork, yeah.
But it did, it did exactly that.
It taught me that vulnerability is the doorway to connection.
It's right. It's the doorway to connection. It's what makes relationships real. Without it, you don't have real friendship. Right? It's, again, it's consistency of interaction, positivity. So you can't be plagued by negativity and fighting and anger. But positively, fun, being relaxed around each other, having positive experiences. But then vulnerability. You have to learn these things about each other so that you feel known to each other and feel like they're uniquely sharing stuff with you.
what about persuasion? Have you got any useful, actionable advice for me on how to be a better salesperson? And when I say salesperson, I don't mean I'm trying to sell someone a car. I mean trying to convince other people of my ideas. So that when I do talks in companies, oftentimes someone will stand up and say, I'm trying to persuade my boss to do X innovative thing. They won't listen to me. Have you got any tips for me to persuade them? But also persuasion is at all levels, right? Up down, left, right?
in organizations in the world.
We are persuaded by people we trust and like and admire, right?
It's people we interact with, and over time we bend to their view or we are compelled
by what they're sharing with us because we know that they are smart and trustworthy and
we like them.
Persuasion doesn't often happen within the bounds of one conversation.
It could if you are asking lots of questions and able to sort of sit on the same side of a
table together and say, hey, let's learn.
as much as we can about this complicated tangle of yarn, whatever that topic is. Let's see if we can
pull threads together and figure this out. We were talking earlier about receptiveness to opposing
viewpoints. Ironically, if you push yourself to learn as much as you can about the other person
and validate their views however you view those views, over the longer term, you are more
likely to be persuasive because they're willing to stay engaged with you and listen to
to what you have to say in return.
Because they feel heard and understood.
Yeah.
And they trust that you're not a jerk
and that you're reasonable
and that you're open,
even to their crazy viewpoints.
I have learned that, actually,
in my relationships that if I make
the other person feel heard and understood,
they validate.
You validate.
If I validate, that's a good word.
Validate.
And validation is not equivalent to agreement.
You can validate, validate, validate, validate,
and then go on to vehemently disagree.
Yeah.
And probably that disagreement is going to go,
a lot better after you validated them quite a bit.
Like the mistakes I made and maybe past relationships were when I didn't validate,
it was kind of like a broken record.
The person continued to make the same point because they didn't feel heard and understood.
That's right.
But if I validate, remarkable thing happens where the kind of record player stops
and then you can make your case.
It's like a magic trick.
There's really beautiful research recently that people conflate agreement with listening.
I only think you're listening
when you're agreeing with me
and when you disagree with me
I feel like you're not hearing me
you're not listening
because obviously what I'm saying
is so sensical and so compelling
that if you're disagreeing with it
you're literally not hearing me
agreement and listening
are not the same thing
but in our minds
we get mixed up about it
okay so I should start every sentence
with I agree
even if I don't interesting I agree
I think you should start with
tell me more, it makes sense that you feel this way and I'd like to understand how you came
to hold this viewpoint. I think you should start with validation before you do anything else.
Yeah, Julian Treasure, what he said to me was that he did two TED talks, one of them about speaking,
one of them about listening. Rough numbers, he said the one about speaking did 40 million views.
The one about listening did like a fraction of that.
Yeah. Listening is a, it's a weird concept to
codify, and most people don't realize that it's a very, very high-level skill.
It's interesting as to why they don't think it's important. I think we think of things,
active things. That's right. And speaking, in particular, public speaking, is very nerve-wracking.
It's like an activity that makes people incredibly nervous. So any little thing that you could
toss my way that might reduce even a sliver of that anxiety and make me better at it,
people are so hungry for. It's sort of like more obvious.
Right? It's more salient. It's more active, like you're saying.
Listening is easy. Just say nothing.
Literally. Oh, listen. People think that listening is like, oh, just sit there.
Yeah. When in fact, it's incredibly effortful. It's incredibly hard because our minds are built to wander, right? Our minds are wandering at least a 25% of the time, probably a lot more than that.
And people who are good at it, when we think of people who are charismatic, likable, smart, savvy, it's not because of what they're saying. It's because of how they're listening and reacting to what.
what they've heard.
Mike Baker, who's another spy, who was a spy for 20 years, I think, with his CIA in America,
said to me that much of the job of being a spy and persuading and manipulating a target in a foreign
land to give over secrets, he said to me that he would, for example, let's just say it was
in Afghanistan. He had land in Afghanistan. He would find the taxi driver that was driving
the government official who he wanted secrets from. And he said to me, he might spend
seven weeks in that taxi doing nothing but listening to this guy.
Yes.
Listening to the taxi driver.
Yes.
Because he said most people in their life have not had someone listen to them uninterrupted
for like 10 minutes.
And when you listen to someone, they will offload about themselves.
Especially if you ask follow-up questions.
Exactly.
And he asked, so what are you doing?
And when you're listening, he was just asking them and just, you know, asking a follow-up
question and they would take me down the path they wanted to take me.
And by week seven of the eight weeks, I would understand.
understand what motivates them.
That's right.
And I would have heard in week seven that their son has a knee injury and they're very
worried about their son's health.
And then in week eight, when I got in the taxi, I'd make a proposition to them.
I'd say, I know your son has a bad knee.
We can take care of him.
This is exactly the same thing that I was saying about entrepreneurs, right?
You got to have a relationship, ask questions, questions, questions, questions, questions,
before you finally get to the thing where you're like, I have a proposition for you.
Yeah.
Right?
two things about listening. First, I'm not surprised to hear that. A taxi driver is a very simple
relationship. They're serving one very clear purpose in that person's life. Interacting with
someone like a romantic partner or a work colleague, it's called multiplexity. They're serving
many more roles. Your girlfriend is lover, friend, co-chef, you keep a home together. You're
coordinating domestic tasks. So she's serving all of these persons.
that's much more complicated to sort through, and there will be conflicts of interest between
those roles that she plays in your life. A way that you would talk to the future mother of your
children is quite different than how you would talk to your chef. And yet she is both of
those things to you, right? So a taxi driver is easier to talk to in a way, because it's simpler.
Okay, that's one thing. The next thing is about listening as a skill, like the spy is saying.
I'm not surprised to hear that he's asking follow-up questions. Often people think of listening
is something that happens silently. You're just sitting there absorbing. And that is part of it.
But listening is actually three parts. The first is perception. I'm seeing you. I'm observing everything
that's happening about you during our conversation and everything in your environment.
And then there's auditory cues. I'm hearing your voice. I'm hearing these acoustic things like,
mm-hmm, yeah, mm-hmm. And the tone of your voice and how quickly you speak. So we take in all this stuff.
Then we process some of it.
We elaborate on some of the things that you've said, and I think more deeply.
I can't process all of it because it's a lot of information.
What's so unique about conversation is there's a third step where I can reflect back to you what I've heard.
I can say, oh, that's so interesting that you met this guy who was a spy who wrote in the taxi.
Can you tell me more about that?
I've now indicated to you that I was listening, that I'm curious, that I want to know more.
So our instincts are to think about nonverbal cues, like smiling and nodding quietly, leaning forward.
Advanced listening, people who really develop the skill of listening, actually use their words to show people that they've heard them.
By validating, affirming, asking follow-up questions.
In a group, you can paraphrase and say, like, oh, Stephen, Stephen said this, Kasi said this, then he said this.
I think together what we're really talking about is status.
You know that nodding and that, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, stuff? Is that good or bad?
It's useful. That's what we think of as active listening, which has been studied for decades.
It doesn't indicate that someone is hearing you at all. They could be thinking about their grocery list and smiling and nod at the same time.
It is useful, though, to convince your partner that you're listening to them, and that matters, even if it's not connected to what you're thinking about at all.
If you were to not smile and nod, the omission of it would be jarring.
So in that sense, it's like normative.
You have to do it.
It's sort of like listening 101.
But listening to a one, 301, 301 is using these verbal cues to show someone you've heard them.
You understood the objective when we sat down.
I want to become the best talker conversation list, the most persuasive, most like personal
that was the objective that I gave you the brief.
Is there anything that we haven't talked about, that we should have talked about?
We haven't talked about silence, wrote a chapter about silence that I dropped because I think
it's an entirely separate book.
It's kind of ironic that this book is called Talk because we do so much communicating
between the lines.
There's so much information exchanged in just a shared glance.
When people don't know each other well, long pauses are a sign that the conversation's
not going well.
So if you're on a first date and you feel like the conversation is dying and you're in, have
that panicky feeling of what do we talk about next, that's.
legit. You should not let that happen. You should go in with topics prepped or this list of
lovely questions and ask those questions. Later in a relationship, after you've known someone a long
time, longer pauses are a sign that you're comfortable with each other, that you could sit in
total silence and companionable silence and that it's comfortable and nice. So it means different
things as relationships evolve. There's so much we can do in our conversations that
are not about the words we say to each other, too.
There's another chapter I dropped.
Do you want to hear about it, Stephen?
Of course I want to hear about it.
It's about talking in the digital age.
So this is what I was going to ask you about as well as.
Now we have large language models which are writing lots of AI slot for us.
Yes.
And if you log into social media, even email, Slack channels, sometimes in WhatsApp,
I look at the messages that I'll take responsibility as well.
Sometimes that I'm sending.
sometimes that I'm receiving.
And because of AI,
they're getting increasingly less soulful.
When I scroll certain social media platforms,
which I shan't name,
I feel disconnected from people now.
Yes.
Because my comments are all like AI slop stuff
with a big M-Dash and,
oh my God, this is so amazing, Stephen.
And you know that no human rights like that.
Yeah.
In a digital age, in an AI world, do we need to start communicating differently?
So that people...
Do you know what?
I've started doing intentional spelling mistakes.
I love that.
If you go on my LinkedIn, you'll notice that I have totally disregarded grammar.
Okay.
Let me start by telling you about an exercise that I do in my class.
I think it'll be thought-provoking for you.
So your question is about the content of what we type.
to each other. So text-based communication, whether it's on social media or over text or
over-email. And there are clear things that we should do to make our text-based communication
better, mostly make it shorter, emails, shorter, use headings, use bullet points, get to the
point, think about what other people need, only give them that, okay? But I think more broadly,
what is quite thought-provoking is to think about how your life proceeds these days.
your conversational life unfolds.
So in my class, I ask my students to do a communication audit of like 20 to 30 minutes in their life
where you transcribe every incoming and outgoing message across all digital and face-to-face
modalities.
So your DMs, your emails, your texts, your phone calls, your Zoom calls, your face-to-face interactions, all of it.
Can you imagine?
No.
It's quite hard.
it's the sort of top line thing you notice is that it's so much it's just a crazy amount
of communication that's happening in our lives now when only maybe 20 years ago it was like
10% of what it is now i think we all feel that sort of overwhelm not only is it a lot
it's a we're constantly sort of toggling and adjusting from one mode of communication to the next
So I'm, like, talking to you while I'm, like, texting under the table while I hear my emails going and knowing that my DMs are blowing up, that mental adjustment is really exhausting.
And across each of those modes, we're, like, engaging in different ideas and different threads, different topics with different people.
And so you start to realize how braided and overlapping all of these things are.
And it's quite hard to keep it all straight and to make all of these decisions.
about like, well, who does, who should I be responding to? We then default to the people who
are right in front of us. But any other mode of communication, we're like, well, who should come
first? Who gets my attention first? And attention is love, right? Like, who gets my love,
essentially? The thing that my students note about this exercise, which is completely
mind-blowing, and I would recommend that anybody try it, is that only face-to-face conversations
feel real in retrospect and while they're happening.
Yeah.
Now, that doesn't mean that the other ones aren't important.
Of course, email is so important for a transactional information exchange, but it's not real.
It's not what the human brain was built to do.
Our brains evolved to do this.
It's why I prefer doing an interview like this in person than on Zoom.
Because it's real.
And we're going to have – it's so engaging and we're going to have a real memory of it later.
And that memory might be sort of vague.
You'll be like, oh, I knew this, like, you know, middle-aged white woman with brown hair.
She had a lot of energy, right?
Like, that might be the extent of what you remember.
But it was real, and we can hold that memory.
And I think what I find so troubling, there's a lot I find troubling, but this, our conversational lives have become very unreal.
And that's why we feel so disconnected and lonely, and that loneliness is just outrageously high.
We're not having real interactions and real relationships.
Even having this device here, by the way, is it is a portal to another place.
So devices replace our conversations because we're on here instead of,
engaging, they also disrupt. So if it's on a table in front of you or you hear it buzzing
or dinging in the background, it distracts your attention away from having a real engaged
interaction. Do you have any advice for anybody in a world of AI where it's going to be really
easy to make our communications generatively using chat GPT or whatever else?
I just have noticed that what I started, what I've started to discount and there's certain
there were certain team members that I have
that have really lent
into the use of AI for all of their comms
and I noticed myself ignoring them
because when they sent me an email report
of something that happened
in one particular scenario,
every email report I knew was written by AI
so I didn't think it was worth reading
because I actually want to hear from them.
Yeah.
I trust them in their opinion
my relationship is to their experience
and their knowledge.
And when I realized that it was all just AI
because of the formatting of it,
I started ignoring it that three or four weeks goes past
and I thought, you know, I should tell them.
Yeah, they should know.
So I went and had a conversation with them.
I said, this is just a perception thing,
but I've noticed myself now not paying the same attention I used to
because I want to know what you think.
And because it feels like I'm speaking to chat, GPT.
What's their comeback to that?
They were really thankful and they completely changed
and it completely immediately.
Even though I now know they're still using,
it's so crazy because I know they're still using it.
They've built this bot basically for this particular part
of feedback, which they're using, all they've done is change the prompt into their bot to make
it sound a little bit more human. Yeah, yeah. And I'm now reading it again, because I can't tell
the difference. Oh my goodness. That's so thought-provoking. I think there's two things going on there.
One, you are invested in people. That's what we get invested in. We care about people and relationships.
As soon as you feel like you're not getting them and you're getting some weird proxy of them,
we're less motivated to engage with it. That's going to be, that's totally normal.
I'll tell you the context.
It was a, it's interview feedback.
So they're interviewing someone, and then the feedback they're sending me was written by
AI.
Yeah.
I trust their experience and their intuition and their ability just to feel someone.
I don't know if I trust ChatGBT to interview my candidates.
Yeah.
So I just wanted to feel like I was getting it from that person.
So there's this relational replacement thing where you're like, oh, and you just want to
disengage.
There's this other piece that's sort of more meta, which is that LLM sort of push.
us our communications reversion to the mean, like a right to the middle. So it literally is taking
the personality and weirdness and creativity out of it. Can I tell you, I did an experiment this
semester in my class. I had my students do office hours with an AI version of me. Okay. Okay.
And they preferred it? Well, that's a risky experiment. That's a risky. The reason,
I actually think she is better than me in some ways. I want to preface this by saying,
I think chatbots are, most chatbots are deeply problematic. But this one, its goal is not to convince users to talk more with her. It's to sort of coach them on their questions related to conversation so that they can prep and perform better in their real conversations with humans. Okay. I do think she's better than me in many ways. Most importantly, she's available. She's available all the time whenever they need her and I'm a nightmare to schedule with. Number two, she's not grading them. So anytime a student comes to me,
and has office hours, there's this conflict of interest where they're worried.
They should be. I am grading them. Like, I do care about them as people. And also, I am going to
grade them at the end of the semester. That's a weird, that makes a relationship quite weird.
So they don't want to ask dumb questions? And I have to question their motives because I'm like,
are you here because you're actually interested in what you're asking me or because you're
trying to impress me and get a better grade? Right? That's a weird context. So she's less judgmental
in a way, I guess. The other thing that she can do is what you were saying, which is
after they talk with her and get advice about their conversations, she gives them feedback
about how the conversation went. She says, here are the topics we covered, here's how many
questions you asked, here were the moments of levity, here's how while you were listening
and doing kindness. Even if I as a human can think those things, I do not have the bandwidth
that there are time to craft the feedback to the students, to 200 students at once.
So I, in short, I feel incredibly torn about all things AI.
I think there are use cases like this that are really amazing and intriguing and make things
easier and more efficient.
And as a manager, policymaker, that's why it's so troubling.
because as long as things continue to,
AI continues to make individuals' lives easier and more convenient,
I don't know how we can stop and regulate it.
I think as well that in a world of AI and robots,
it's going to be very tempting to overlook the most human skills.
Yes.
And those that don't, those that fight against the ease of allowing
a chatbot to speak for you will develop a superpower, one that's going to be even more scarce
in the future, which is all the things you've said in this framework.
Yeah.
Like really understanding how to be with a person, IRL, and have great conversations, I think,
is going to be such a superpower.
It is talk is the advantage that humans have over AI.
It has always been true that conversation is the skill that we, that matters most for achieving
everything you want in life.
but it just seems more obvious now that we need to lean into that even more.
The irreplaceably human stuff.
Correct.
And some of it, I don't even know if irreplaceable is the right word.
It's like the things that no matter what the future holds for us,
the things that are still going to matter,
I'll put all my chips on a bet when I think about what I need to be teaching my kids.
I can imagine worlds where work is no longer a thing
and innovation is no longer a thing.
But I cannot imagine a world where they're not going to need to connect with other human beings
and talk to them well and joyfully and with respect.
In real life.
In real life.
Yeah.
I think you were talking about boomers earlier on.
I think boomers are much better conversation lists than Gen Zias.
Because they have more reps.
They have more repetitions and they grew up in the real world where they were forced to develop the skills.
That's right.
It's part of the reason that I think we see a lot of.
sort of like misunderstanding and judgment between the generations is that right now the people
who are alive have experienced very, very different realities. And the skills that you have developed
in those different realities are quite different. And it means that we're, we actually are more
different from each other across the generations. On the front of your book, talk, it says the
science of conversation and the art of being ourselves, do you think we should shut to work as
our authentic selves.
There's a great phrase.
What a great question.
There's a great phrase by a scholar named Juliana Pilemer, who's at NYU, called
strategic authenticity.
Okay.
If you were to bring your full self to work, it would be a nightmare for you and everyone
around you.
Tell me about it.
At the beginning of my class, I have people do this thing that's like, okay, identify.
your conversation types. And there's like 13 good types and 13 bad types. You know,
there's like the asker and the curious cat and the chatterbox and whatever. The whole thing is a straw man
because we're all, all of those things. We all have habits that are good sometimes and habits
that are bad sometimes. And our behavior shifts radically from one situation to the next. I'm not
going to behave the same way at a
Bachelorette party in Vegas as I do when
I'm doing bath time with my children.
If you did, it would
be insane and it wouldn't serve anybody's
goals.
What happens in Vegas?
Hot pink wigs, apparently, and
Chippendale's dancers.
The point is that
our behavior shifts from
one conversation to the next,
even from one moment to the next in every
conversation, and it should. That's what it
means to read the room and read the context in a gym. My husband has a saying,
athletes adjust. And it's exactly right. Good conversationalists adjust. So if you in your mind are like,
this is who I am and I'm going to bring that whole self to every space that I inhabit,
it's not going to go well. Strategic authenticity. Yeah. Bring the things that make,
the values that make you, you, bring them to work. It's the things that you care about and are
uncompromising about, but you can adjust your behavior to fit the needs of the situation.
Do you pretend and act?
No, this is a great question.
We like to debate this in my class about authenticity, manipulation, what is real, what's
sincere.
I guess sincerity might be the right word to use.
Let's use question asking it as an example.
Imagine that we get to a point in the interview where you're like, oh, I think I need
to ask a question right now.
You might not be dying to hear the answer to it, but you know as a good interviewer that you need to ask that question in that moment.
That doesn't mean that you are evil, unkind, insincere, manipulative.
It means that you're trying to live up to the goal of the conversation and trying to live up to the goal of, hey, we're going to learn as much as we can from each other.
I want to show you respect and interest in your perspective.
I want to have a good conversation.
That itself lives up to who you are.
Like, that's the whole point of being here.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, of course, yeah.
So these pleading moments of, like, insincerity,
I think people overfocus on that as a signal of inauthenticity.
Okay, fine.
If it's tied to an more overarching goal of, like,
I want to be a good human being and a good conversationalist,
often because I want to serve the needs of others.
So you can be slightly insincere in the pursuit of sincerity.
And those moments of insincerity are gone in an instant.
As soon as I ask this question that maybe I'm not dying to hear, how was your weekend?
You're going to give me an answer, and I'm sincerely going to search for something in there that I am interested in.
And I'm going to ask a follow-up question and make it better.
Okay.
So when I met you, you did ask me how I was doing was that?
The question I've been dying to ask you is about children.
Me and my girlfriend are trying at the moment.
So hopefully.
Steven, I'm so excited for you.
What are you excited about?
I just think it's one of the most miraculous things that you can experience as a human being.
And I'm hopeful for you.
Yeah.
Good luck.
Yeah.
I hope you get to experience that.
It's a very different experience to add to your resume.
I know.
I think that's why I'm excited by it, because it is the great unknown.
And in some respects in my head, this might be the wrong framing, but it feels like the great sacrifice.
Yeah. It's both. And you know what I always say? It's like the most self-interested and
least self-interested thing you can do. Self-interested, you're like making a copy of
yourself. Okay? Like talk about narcissism. But it's just really, life is no longer about you.
That's terrifying to hear. It is terrifying to hear objectively. Like I understand what you're
saying and I agree. But it's also as a statement for anybody to know that they're kind of giving up
your current self sense of self for someone else you've never met oh you're giving it up not
you're giving giving up might not be the right phrase your chain you're evolving into a different
version of you for them the more freedom and like resources you have before kids means it's
you may experience that as a more as a loss oh that's good but you also have more to gain it really is
it's um really incredible it's easy to focus on like
fertility and having children and to ask prying questions about, you know, how many do you want
and whatever. But I think it's easy to focus on like the birth process and overlook how long
childhood is. It's 18 years and I think the major project of it is helping kids learn to talk to
other people. And how do you do that? I'm sure there's loads of parents screaming right now. Like how
do I how do I set my kid up so that they can talk well? Yeah. I think it's what we're doing
every moment of every day, you're interacting with them directly and sort of role modeling
what you think that looks like, helping them through difficult moments, helping them both
fail and succeed. It's very important. And we're hoping to adapt the talk course for high
schoolers and younger children quite soon. Do I need to get them off YouTube and all that stuff?
Yes. And screens? Yes. Is a little bit of YouTube okay? A little bit of anything might be
okay. Digital stuff is hard though because you give them an inch, they take a mile and it becomes
habitual. So what do you do with your kids? It's a constant evolution and learning and we give them
20 minutes. A day? Yeah. On a computer that doesn't move and nothing moves. They can't carry it
with them. And what age does that change? To be determined. They know that they're not getting a phone,
like a phone phone.
Now, I'm getting more and more extreme.
I feel like maybe never.
But certainly not until ninth grade.
And then social media much later than that.
It's an interest.
We'll see how it goes.
But it's just such a slippery slope, but it's so bad for them.
Jonathan Heights done a wonderful job.
Angela Duckworth is doing great work.
Matt Gensko at Stanford, trying to help schools sort this out.
I have that to look forward to.
More problems.
Alison, we have a closing tradition where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest not knowing who they're leaving it for.
And the question left for you is, if your life was a movie and the audience were watching up to this point, what would they be screaming at the screen telling you to do right now?
What a fabulous question.
Thank you, previous guest.
Leave Harvard, save the children with talk.
Devote all of your time and resources to helping every high schooler in the world learn to do this better.
Why?
I think it's the ultimate human skill, and everyone has the potential to do it well.
And it's not a zero-sum game.
The more people who do it well, the better off will all be.
You said save.
Why did you use the word save?
I think we're in a period where we actually are needing to save them from digital addiction and loneliness.
We've gotten to a place that we need to roll back and it's really scary.
And I think one first step is let's get the devices out of schools, ideally out of families in their hands.
But then the next step is like what rises to replace it.
and I think it could be this talk curriculum.
So are you going to do that?
You're going to leave Harvard?
TBT.
So is that an announcement?
Are they aware?
It's an exclusive?
Is that the thumbnail?
Alison, thank you so much.
Thank you for the work that you do because it's very important work and it's very timely work,
considering everything that's going on in the world at this moment in time.
And this book is the definitive book on the art of, you said it yourself,
the framework that you've built here is one that's deeply based on science and research.
and oftentimes we'll have conversations about communication.
It's full of platitudes and opinions
and a lot of generic things that aren't supported by scientific rigour,
but you've done the research.
You've committed so much of your life to this subject
and you've managed to write it all in a way
that's truly accessible to people like me
who are simply, you know, muggles
and don't understand big words sometimes.
So it's a wonderful entry but also
a sort of an expansive look into the science of great talk.
We've touched on several things in this book
where there's so much more we could have gone through.
So I'm going to leave that to the audience.
I'm going to link it below for anyone that wants to read it.
But also thank you because I think of these issues
as being issues that are really foundational
to the most important things in our lives like family,
like friendships, like relationships,
like the success and the pursuit of our goals.
And what you're giving people here is a roadmap
to reach their highest potential.
Yeah.
Thank you.
thing called talk and that's a really wonderful thing. So if anyone wants this book, it's linked
below. Highly recommend. Is there anywhere else one should go to get more of your work? Is there a
place? Sure. Allison Woodbrooks.com has this new quiz that's so fun. Find out your conversation
type. Get really clear advice, little tips about how to navigate things and all the science
that's underlying those tips. Very, very soon you can go to talk studios.com and find out more
about this curriculum we're developing for high schoolers.
both of them below.
Dr. Allison Wood Briggs.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much, Stephen.
Thank you for amplifying my work.
And I just think what you're doing here is fabulous.
So thank you.
Thank you.
Make sure you keep what I'm about to say to yourself.
I'm inviting 10,000 of you to come even deeper into the diary of a CEO.
Welcome to my inner circle.
This is a brand new private community that I'm launching to the world.
We have so many incredible things that have.
happen that you are never shown. We have the briefs that are on my iPad when I'm recording the
conversation. We have clips we've never released. We have behind the scenes conversations with
the guests and also the episodes that we've never ever released and so much more. In the
circle you'll have direct access to me. You can tell us what you want this show to be, who you
want us to interview and the types of conversations you would love us to have. But remember for now,
we're only inviting the first 10,000 people that join before it closes. So if you want to join our
private closed community, head to the link in the description below or go to doac circle.com.
I will speak to you there.
I've just got back from a few weeks away on my speaking tour in Asia with my team,
and it was absolutely incredible.
Thank you to everybody that came.
We travelled to new cities.
We did live shows and places I'd never been to before.
During our downtime, talking about what's coming for each of us.
And now that we're back, my team has started planning their time off over the holiday period.
Some are heading home, some are going traveling, and one or two of them have decided to host their places through our sponsor, Airbnb, while they're away.
I hadn't really considered this until Will, in my team, mentioned that his entire flat, all of his roommates were doing this too.
And it got me thinking about how smart this is for many of you that are looking for some extra money.
Because so many of you spend this time of the year traveling or visiting family away from your homes,
and your homes just sit there empty.
So why not let your house work for you while you're off somewhere else?
Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at Airbnb.ca.ca slash host.
That's Airbnb.ca slash host.
