Podcast

Unlearning Silence Strategies with Elaine Lin Hering

Sam Jayanti sits down with the dynamic coach and author Elaine Lin Hering to unravel the impact of silence in both personal and professional spheres. Dive into their conversation about unintentional self-silencing and discover practical strategies outlined in Elaine’s upcoming book, “Unlearning Silence.” The episode sparks a powerful dialogue on fostering a culture that celebrates every voice.

 

Episode Transcript:

Sam Jayanti [00:00:03] Welcome to ideamix– Performance and Wellness. Where world leading coaches and scientists explain how their research can help you achieve your personal and professional goals faster. Hi, it’s Sam Jayanti, co-founder and CEO of ideamix coaching. Coaching has played an important role in my life. It’s helped me through my journey to become a powerful leader, mother and wife. ideamix coaches, help you increase your self-awareness, improve your problem solving skills and evolve your habits to achieve your goals– all things I’m grateful to have learned and done through my own coaching journey. Our easy one minute assessment matches you with an ideamix coach that best fits your needs and values. Each ideamix coach is vetted and experienced and helps clients map and achieve their wellness professional and business goals. If you or someone you know could benefit from coaching, visit our website at www.theideamix.com. We also know that not everyone can invest in coaching right now and that’s why we provide free coaching in our coach shorts episodes. If you think someone you know would benefit from it, please share our podcast with them. Thanks for listening. And see you next time. Hi everyone. Welcome to Coaching, Performance, and Wellness by ideamix Coaching. I’m your host today Samhita Jayanti. Joining us on our show today is coach and author Elaine Lin Hering. She’s a reformed lawyer who works with individuals and organizations from a variety of backgrounds across a range of industries to help them enhance their communication, collaboration and conflict management skills. Her upcoming book called “Unlearning Silence,” is being called an essential read because of its actionable practical strategies. Elaine has a track record of coaching professionals globally and is really all about breaking down barriers to give everyone a voice– essential for anyone leading a small or large team. Today we’re going to dive into the why and how of why we silence ourselves and how to break that silence both for ourselves, our colleagues, our families and friends. Elaine, welcome to the show.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:02:16] Thanks so much for having me.

Sam Jayanti [00:02:19] So, Elaine, I want to start by defining what we’re discussing today. In some ways, it’s very simple. We all know what silence is. We all engage in it regularly. We watch others do so, but we often don’t think about it at a deeper level in terms of how it impacts who we are and our behaviors, whether that’s in a personal or professional context. So I thought it would be useful for our listeners if I provide an example from my own life which might be relatable to many of our listeners. When I worked at Palantir, a technology company, the culture was very particular.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:03:01] Mm hmm.

Sam Jayanti [00:03:02] I’m not sure that that culture was by design. It was just sort of by default in many ways. But there was an environment of what I call sort of false transparency. And what do I mean by that, right? So you’d go to a meeting where you’d have an open discussion with a group, and as a group you’d come to some set of decisions on the best path forward and everyone would sort of leave that meeting feeling that they had clarity on that path forward. And then a few days later, one of the members of the team would be told to pursue a different path.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:03:41] Mm hmm.

Sam Jayanti [00:03:42] And that was clearly sort of pretty different from what had been agreed in the meeting. And that person may or may not convey the reason for the change, just that the change was necessary. And so now we were kind of on this new path, right. And after this happened a few times, you’d notice that many of the people in that group who had previously contributed would stop speaking because they would either feel that their voices weren’t being heard or weren’t being valued based on that previous pattern that they’d observed and the lack of communication around why a course of action had changed. Not just that it had changed. Right.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:04:31] Yeah.

Sam Jayanti [00:04:32] Some of our listeners might be wondering why that’s negative. So tell us why that’s negative. And so we can understand, I think, at a deeper level the problem that we’re really dealing with.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:04:43] Absolutely. The fact that midway through your story, I knew it wasn’t yet the end of the story started to signal that it was problematic. We got to the meeting, we had alignment, and then something changed. So, people often tout the benefits of silence, right? Meditative. You can think more clearly. There might even be regenerative brain cells, all of that. That is great. The silence we’re talking about is when there is not enough room for your perspectives. The silencING as a verb is when you share your thoughts in this meeting. But then there are signals and data points later on that tell you your perspective doesn’t actually matter.

Sam Jayanti [00:05:30] Right.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:05:30] And so in this case that you’ve set up, if I go to a meeting, I put my neck out. I am taking a stand. On the surface, we all agree, but then it has no impact, And in fact, things change in the meeting after the meeting. Why show up at all? Why not just sit there and nod? Because it’s useless to speak up anyways. So the silence that we’re talking about is the ways that we learn that our voices don’t matter, our opinions don’t matter, our insights don’t matter. And companies in this false transparency that you mentioned say all the right things. The values in the employee handbook say that we value collaboration and innovation, but it seems like only some people’s ideas matter or are celebrated.

Sam Jayanti [00:06:21] Hmm. That’s exactly right.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:06:22] Anshd so we’re left with what am I supposed to do? Because if I continue to push for my voice to be heard, I am labeled and branded as aggressive or a troublemaker or noncompliant or not a teammate or a team member, a team player. I have to stomach all of the costs. And each of us, particularly those of us with marginalized identities, whether there’s race, gender, class, education, able. All of it. There are disproportionate costs to continuing to push. And so when leaders say things like, I am inclusive, my door is always open, your voice really matters. All of those words are empty if your actions don’t back it up. And too often, even well-intentioned leaders, the way they behave, sends the message Your voice doesn’t matter. By the way, we just need to get it done. If I can even say shit. And. That has a silencing effect. Essentially, you’re building a culture of silence when you purport to have a culture of voice. And that disconnect is really jarring, disorienting and damaging.

Sam Jayanti [00:07:38] Yeah. That was so well put. I think so many companies suffer from this, right? And it’s… It’s often not a conscious tone that’s being set. Right. It’s not malicious or mal intended, but it’s sort of an atmosphere that has been created almost as some sort of default from a series of, as you said, behaviors that don’t mirror or aren’t consistent with the intentions. However well articulated, those may be.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:08:13] Completely I mean, we did hire a consulting firm to craft those intentions and values for us, so they must be well crafted.

Sam Jayanti [00:08:20] Right?

Elaine Lin Hering [00:08:20] What I love Samhita, about what you said is the difference between default and design. That in the workplace environment you were mentioning, it wasn’t that someone designed this lack of congruence between what you said and what you did, but it almost defaulted to that. And that’s one of the observations that I’ve had across industries and across leadership teams, is that when we do not actively design the culture, not just in aspirations and in named values, but in how we’re going to implement that, we default to the culture that serves the people who are already in power, you know, who tend to be the people who hold the dominant identities in the room. And so when when I think about design, it is thinking very tactically things like what communication mediums best support the voices of the people on my team. What time of day are they firing on all cylinders versus I’m firing on all cylinders. If I’m a morning person, I naturally default to thinking and scheduling high priority, high value conversations in the morning. Yeah, but if someone on my team is not wired that way, which typically they’re not because people are different, I am essentially inclining them towards silence even as they purport to invite them to the meeting. And you know, we’ve all got an equal say at the table.

Sam Jayanti [00:09:48] Yeah, absolutely. I think, you know, this is such an important point for anyone in any kind of leadership role. And I mean that really broadly, right? Whether you’re leading a tiny team to a big team to you’re the parent in your family, whatever that may be, because I think as a leader, your role in a sense, is to be part coach and part caregiver and part kind of moderator, right? Because you’re the only one empowered and positioned to think about each of the individuals on your team and what serves each of them to bring their voice and their best ideas to a gathering and gives them the space and kind of the psychological safety, right? We talked a lot about this on a previous podcast episode with Professor Amy Edmondson. To consistently bring their best ideas and their best selves to those interactions.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:11:01] And you can’t have psychological safety if you are unintentionally silencing people.

Sam Jayanti [00:11:06] Right. Absolutely. So in your experience and you’ve worked with individuals and with teams, how and when do you find people silence themselves most commonly or most frequently?

Elaine Lin Hering [00:11:23] When my calculation tells me that it’s not worth it for me to use my voice. And I’ll say that for me, defining voice because I am a recovered… did you call me a recovering lawyer? Recovered?

Sam Jayanti [00:11:34] Reformed.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:11:38] So I’ll go with that. I’m reformed. We still need to define our terms. Voice is not just the words that you say in a meeting, but voice is how you move through the world.

Sam Jayanti [00:11:50] Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:11:50] So. As a leader, how do I create the space for people to do that, knowing that each of our voices, how we move through the world, the gifts that we bring, the expertise that we have is going to be different. But part of the challenge is, as I’m doing this calculation of whether it’s safe and worth it for me to use my voice to move through the world the way that I want. I have all these data points from my past. So when I walk into a new team environment, I’m still thinking about and I have the data set of the last team I worked in and whether that was low power, high power differential, whether that was actually only the leader gets to speak. So part of the part of the…

Sam Jayanti [00:12:38] Defaulting to a set of learned behaviors, right, is what you’re saying?

Elaine Lin Hering [00:12:42] Yeah, completely and understandably so. Yeah. Because until I know differently, why would I test the waters to find out the hard way? This is how employee silence is created, because very few of us want to test it out for ourselves. So when we’re new to an environment, we’re looking around to see what other people do.

Sam Jayanti [00:13:02] Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:13:03] And if other people stay silent. Like I have intuited, I have observed what the culture is and I should probably play by those rules.

Sam Jayanti [00:13:12] Right. So I want to take your example from earlier, which is, you know, a leader who says, well, my door is always open. You know, everyone’s welcome into the tent. And sort of just think about the counter argument, right? Because those are often people who say, well, once they’ve conveyed that, it’s kind of everybody else to sort of pick up that gauntlet and go right and come in and talk to me or voice their opinion, whatever that is. And at the same time, so why isn’t that enough? First of all, right, because there is a school of thought that I think leaders often have, which is, hey, like, I’ve done all the right things for my part.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:14:02] Yes.

Sam Jayanti [00:14:02] And like, if it’s an all work, it’s not my problem or it’s not my fault. Right. Mm hmm.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:14:10] It takes me a little bit back to what you said earlier of as leaders, you are coach, you are caregiver, you play all these different roles and I can imagine some listeners bristling. I’m not a caregiver. I’m a parent at home. But at work we are all grown adults. So what is my role actually? I would argue that saying my door is always open and is insufficient for at least two reasons. One is it is only an expression of intent.

Sam Jayanti [00:14:37] Right.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:14:38] And we all know that there is a difference between intent and impact. So it is useful to articulate my door is always open or I am here. But it fundamentally underestimates how hard it is to walk into someone’s office. And if you don’t understand the challenge of walking into someone’s office. That is that to me is a blind spot that needs examination.

Sam Jayanti [00:15:04] Right.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:15:05] Because it suggests to me that you have always had the privilege and the welcome to walk in and have a positive experience, which takes us to our second reason, which is when someone comes into your metaphorical office, how do you react or respond when someone shares with you a question, a concern, a point of view? If your reaction in the moment is to debate to get defensive. You are not living up to this promise or this invitation of my door is always open. You are contributing to the case that it’s too costly for me to actually say what I think. Show up how I intend with you.

Sam Jayanti [00:15:46] Yeah, I mean, it’s really, you know, certainly I had to learn this in in kind of growing into successive leadership roles in the past where I think when you first become a leader, you’re sort of under stress to perform, right? There’s this kind of performative quality to it where you’re like, It means I have to know everything and it means I have, you know, there are all these kind of misconceptions, right, that are in your head, which you, I think, quickly learn are are totally ill conceived and are super counterproductive, right? And but then you sort of ask yourself the question of, okay, so how do I kind of evolve to be a different kind of leader? And, you know, some of that obviously can happen through coaching. And yet I think many people struggle to arrive at what you just articulated, which is– it’s not about you. It’s about what is the environment that you are seeking to create right? Like I think so many people, almost everyone has gone through this, where you go into meetings and there are always a couple or a few people who are the loudest voices in the room, and those are the voices that get heard. And the other ones just sort of start to fade farther and farther into the background over time. And I think as a leader. It is up to you to hear, to bring out every voice and hear every voice. Yes, you’re going to make a decision ultimately because somebody has to make a decision at the end of all this. Right. And I think people often are uncomfortable with the idea of hearing all those views and then coming to whatever decision they come to that obviously is in disagreement with some of those views right? Tell us a little bit about that and sort of getting comfortable with the idea of hearing lots of different points of view that may often be opposing to you and then getting comfortable with the idea of making a decision and standing by that.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:18:10] Mm hmm. Let’s break that down into two phases. One is, how do we even get differences of opinion? Because in that room, when you say, you know, in a six person meeting, typically two people do most of the talking. And it feeds into this babble hypothesis of leadership. That quantity of airtime signals leadership. And it is often perceived in that way. So how do we even break that down? This is our role as leaders, as facilitators, to invite in different perspectives. But how we do it also matters because just to say, Guys, tell me what you think. That seems like an open, again, magnanimous invitation. I’m saying I’m inviting you in, but if I’m on the receiving end of that statement, I’m thinking, Do you really want to know how honest should I be? The last time I was really candid, it did not go over so well. So what I would recommend and what I coach people to do is to use standard questions. It could be what are the pros of this idea? What are the cons of this idea? What about this works? What about this doesn’t from your perspective? What that does is invite in the dissenting perspective without people having to worry as much about being disagreeable. And also you train your team over time. Okay. I know that somebody is going to ask us what works, what doesn’t. Pros, cons, good, bad, ugly. So those of us who process differently and process better with time can sort of pre process and show up with more of our insights. So that’s one that which is how to even get those perspectives. The second is the construct I use most in coaching, which is three buckets. In any situation, there are people who are going to be informed about the decision. There are going to be people who are consulted about the decision. And then there are people who are actually going to make the decision, and that is just how things work. And we do a round robin of sometimes you are making the decision and I’m consulted or I’m informed and sometimes I’m making the decision. So as a matter of a leader. As a leader, if I can get clear, which decisions do I own? And let me be clear and transparent and everyone is aligned. You’re being consulted, and consulted means share your opinion and share your best take on it. And let’s be clear. At the end of the day, decisions are not made by consensus. They are made by this 1, 2 or 3 people. But allows us to show up fully and then to also own the decisions that we have and also to delegate the decisions that are not ours to make and to remember as a leader. If I have delegated the decision to someone else and I am only a consult or an inform, I need to back them up and not undercut them.

Sam Jayanti [00:21:05] Yeah, no, absolutely. I think that’s such a good point. I also think… clarity around who is making a decision is just as important, I think, is an evaluation of past decisions and some honesty and some honest discussion around, Hey, we got that right or I got that right, or you also got that wrong. Or we could have done a better job, whatever that is, because I think the lack of acknowledgment of the things that didn’t work almost seems to suggest that every decision has worked, and that’s never the case, as we know, for anybody, however bright or whatever they are. And it really saps the transparency and the openness in a group, right? to not have that acknowledgment because in the end, it’s a leader not displaying their vulnerability.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:22:00] Completely, and I would argue as a leader, if you’re not talking about those things, what message does your silence on that topic, on that failure, on what did not go as well or on what we learned from this? What does your silence communicate?

Sam Jayanti [00:22:17] Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:22:19] And is it communicating the message you actually want? If not, say something about it.

Sam Jayanti [00:22:24] Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:22:24] So you get to craft the narrative and influence the narrative rather than letting people fill in the narrative of what you meant by that silence. Because maybe you didn’t mean anything by the silence. Maybe you were too busy. But the message that’s out there is, I guess we don’t talk about how we messed up here. We just moved on. Or they’re just trying to cover their own.

Sam Jayanti [00:22:48] Yeah. So Elaine, as we’re talking, I’m struggling to reconcile something with the need and the work that you do to help individuals and teams unlearn silence. You know, we live in a world where opinions are constantly being expressed in every medium, even on matters that don’t necessarily pertain to the individual expressing their opinion.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:23:19] Mm hmm.

Sam Jayanti [00:23:19] And often with sort of a lack of knowledge and facts. Right. Like, we see this in the media where so much reporting has become a series of op ed pieces. We see it pervasively on every type of social media. And so people don’t have a problem expressing opinions clearly, often even not fact based ones. And yet, even though there’s no silencing of themselves there, there is often in a professional sphere. Help us understand that inconsistency.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:23:56] Well, I’d argue that there’s a couple more layers to it because we love complexity. One is not everybody is spewing opinions. And so there is a population that is very vocal, often not fact based. And then there’s another contingent of people who are like, I don’t want to say anything, and if I worry about saying anything, makes me look like them.

Sam Jayanti [00:24:17] Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:24:18] And I’d argue if you’re in that camp or have that proclivity of worrying about whether you are overbearing, taking up too much space, too opinionated, you’re not. You’re not. You can probably up that ante. But also thinking not just about how do I share my opinion, but why am I doing it? For what purpose, for what impact? And in what way can I communicate to have the impact that I actually want? Because it doesn’t mean tweeting everything.

Sam Jayanti [00:24:50] Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:24:50] It could mean the one on one conversation. It could mean, you know, think again about your voice is how you want to move through the world. So I see less of an inconsistency and I see more of the challenge of so many different voices, us getting tired of the noise. How do we cut through that noise? And also, how do we get different voices in the mix? Because we know that the systems around us let’s take corporate America, for example, tends to prioritize the ways that white cis men communicate. Emotions are really tricky territory. Vulnerability in and of itself. Authenticity in and of itself is really tricky territory for anyone who has subordinated identities because you are inherently othered or you stick out as a sore thumb or your credibility is already on the line.

Sam Jayanti [00:25:49] Mm hmm.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:25:50] So there’s just complexity to it, which to me leads to this question of what are the levers that we can pull and push if what we care about is actually belonging, dignity and justice for every human being, including in our workplaces? And my answer is one lever is let’s examine the ways that we silence ourselves, the ways that we have internalized the messages that people have sent us unintentionally or intentionally over time about our value, our worth, our perspective. The second lever is what impact are we having on the people around us? In what ways are we silencing them? Even as we talked about that well-intentioned leader whose door is always open, even when we don’t intend? And third, well, what is what ways do the policies and practices that we have in place silence certain people while celebrating others?

Sam Jayanti [00:26:44] Yeah. Totally makes sense.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:26:46] Yeah.

Sam Jayanti [00:26:47] Totally makes sense. So I want to shift gears a little bit. I think we’ve talked a lot about why people silence themselves and how environments matter, right? let’s talk a little bit about some of the practical tactical strategies to unlearn those behaviors. You know, I’m reminded of of a coaching client that we had who was, you know, super high performer kind of ascending the levels in the organization and one of the problems that she identified was that she doesn’t feel heard or and acknowledged that she doesn’t feel she can contribute to discussions in you know, kind of the broader team. And we talked about, you know, her coach worked with her on kind of all the reasons why, which goes to your point of like, what are the things in our background and experience that kind of lead us to that point? And I think developing self-awareness around what those are then helps us to think constructively about the path forward.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:27:58] Mm hmm.

Sam Jayanti [00:27:59] And then her coach gave her a really the practical tactical thing that the coach gave her to do was she said, you’re going to go back and from this day on and you’re going to write this down every day in an interaction of some kind that is more than one on one. It’s in some kind of group setting, you’re going to force yourself to say one thing. You’re not going to think about how intelligent it is, you know, whether it’s exactly right you’re not doing any of those things. You’re just going to force yourself to say one thing in each of those meetings and you’re going to write down that thing that you said. And it was such a powerful thing for her, you know, I mean, it was it really helped her stick her toe into a new behavior that was strange and alien at first, but then became more and more familiar as she went on. Mm hmm. And it launched her on this path to unlearning her own silence and and figuring out what her preferred mode was going to be of engaging with groups.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:29:10] Yeah.

Sam Jayanti [00:29:12] I only bring that up as an example that you’ve worked with so many people. Tell us about some of those practical tactical strategies.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:29:19] Yeah, I noticed my heart rate going up a little bit when the coach was saying you have to do this every day for the rest of your life.

Sam Jayanti [00:29:27] Oh no it was like tried every day for the next week. I was like, okay, good.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:29:32]  I would recommend a time bound experiment, right? Because we could do something for a week. We can do something for three weeks even. But for the rest of your life.

Sam Jayanti [00:29:42] No, no. That’s too infinite. Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:29:44] Yeah. Infinite. The other place I would start is why. Why do you want to speak up? Not speak up for the sake of speaking up or adding to the cacophony. But what is it you bring? What is the perspective or the value? Or what do you think is missing from the conversation? This is all of the change research. Whether we’re changing systems or behaviors, but having to have a bigger why to anchor to so that when the waves get rough, you can anchor back to well, this is why I’m doing it. On the personal front, this is because I want a different life for my kids. At work, because representation matters or in whatever it is. What is your bigger why that makes the ruffles if there are worth it. The second is something I find incredibly frustrating but necessary, which is how do you connect the dots between your pieces of data and your reasoning to get to the conclusions? And this is Chris Harkness and Dan Shawn, Right. But the rigor necessary because of how differently we see the world and the differences in our life experiences, especially in a global workforce. So that rigor of I think this is obvious, obviously, we should take this course of action. Where is that coming from? Because it’s not usually as obvious to others. The third, I would add, is what are you specifically asking of the other person? Are we clear what we’re asking of them? Because if we’re not even clear for ourselves, how will they understand what we’re asking? And this is the ubiquitous YouTube video of it’s not about the nail where it seems like a romantic partnership and they people should just Google. Not about the nail, but are we clear what we’re actually asking of the people? And the fourth that I would add and these four pieces are in chapter seven of the book. The fourth is Engage Resistance. In an ideal world, when we show up, we would be welcomed with warm embrace. And we don’t live in an ideal world. And so often when we’re met with someone’s defensiveness, someone’s pushback, someone’s silence, we get thrown off kilter. And that is often the end of our negotiation or of our conversation because we need recovery time. But going in with the mindset of, yeah, there’s going to be resistance means that we’re less surprised when it happens and we’re more able to see resistance, friction, frustration. Their concerns, their defensiveness actually as information.

Sam Jayanti [00:32:43] Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:32:45] And then a question of what do you do with that information, right? How do you have the patience and the wherewithal to come back? How many rounds do you go in? Those are all really important questions. But those four anchors tend to ground us in how do I actually show up?

Sam Jayanti [00:33:02] Those are great, practical, tactical things. I’m so glad that you articulated it that way. Last question. You know, each of us has some work to do on how to bring ourselves into spaces, groups, conversations. But equally, sometimes our own is inadvertently, as we were saying, right? Not consciously, the result of them is to silence others. How can we develop some consciousness around when we’re doing that? I think of it in my family with three children, you know, certainly one is kind of often the loudest voice in the room. And for me, I always tried to, you know, kind of encourage everyone to speak, right? And make sure that each person is heard and not interrupted and all those things.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:34:08] Mm hmm.

Sam Jayanti [00:34:09] So talk a little bit about that. How can we be conscious about that?

Elaine Lin Hering [00:34:14] Yeah, that to me actually goes back to design rather than defaults, which we started at earlier today. Also, knowing that voice doesn’t have to look like airtime.

Sam Jayanti [00:34:27] Right.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:34:28] It doesn’t…

Sam Jayanti [00:34:28] Those are two very different things.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:34:30] So part of the design is are there synchronous ways or written type text based ways that people can share their thoughts? Because we know essentially. The awareness is we’re all wired differently, which we know. Here are some ways that we’re wired differently. We’re wired differently in how we process in the ease of communication, in the way that we prefer to move through the world. And how do we optimize for voice? Meaning is there some combination of put things in slack or in email or you don’t have to speak in that meeting. And I can hear people’s resistance already happening. But that’s just the way things work around here. Think about whose voices come forward in those meetings and how can you lower the barriers to communication. And that may take some preplanning and some intentionality, but it’s really just forming different habits than the ones that we have defaulted to. So if we’re having the meeting, too, we leave the decision at the end of the meeting. Here’s here’s the placeholder. Here’s where we’re at. Everyone go home, sleep on it. For those of us who are post processors, you’ll probably figure out in 20 minutes after the meeting what you really wanted to say. And we want your genius to be in the mix to stave off the crisis down the line. Can we build that process in so that different voices come forward and their research and our experience shows that that actually is to everyone’s benefit. It’s take some of that work, but the awareness that we’re all different and that we can actually design differently rather than just defaulting is key.

Sam Jayanti [00:36:17] That’s yeah, I think that’s it’s so relevant and, and you know, many times you hear people say. All these different channels are a source of overwhelm for them, right? Because some people prefer to express themselves on Slack and other people do it on a Zoom call and somebody else goes into someone else’s office. And everyone’s modality is sort of slightly different.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:36:40] Yes.

Sam Jayanti [00:36:41] But, I think because of the differences among us and because of the different comfort levels that people have with the way that they want to communicate, and those can be different by individual too, right? Like, it’s not as though one person just uses one way all the time. It’s it’s sort of a reality, I think, of the workplace and I think it doesn’t need to lead to overwhelm. Like because someone slacks you doesn’t mean that you have to answer. That’s like at midnight, you know, you can process that the next morning and deal with it then. Right.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:37:13] Well, and what helps, though, is clarity as to the norms.

Sam Jayanti [00:37:18] Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:37:18] So one of my aims would be, can we actually just have a discussion? Right. What about the ways we’re communicating works and doesn’t work is optimal or suboptimal, And you may find that actually everybody in your team hates Slack.

Sam Jayanti [00:37:32] Right.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:37:33] Then why are we using it? Probably because we assumed that someone else preferred it. Right. Now, what are the norms around how quickly we need to reply what it actually means? All of those, if it is discussable, helps us optimize and also lowers again, lowers the barrier to entry for communication. Because one of the fundamental challenges about speaking up or using your voice is How am I supposed to get through to you? Reply to my emails. I get lost in it. You keep canceling our one on ones. Of texting you feel a little too personal. But have we had that 3o second conversation of, Hey, if I wanted to send you an urgent message.

Sam Jayanti [00:38:17] What’s the best? What’s the best thing?

Elaine Lin Hering [00:38:20] What’s the best way? Because we spend so much time Whac-A-Mole trying and not knowing.

Sam Jayanti [00:38:26] Yeah.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:38:26] I want to be more efficient.

Sam Jayanti [00:38:29] Totally. Well, Elaine, thank you so much for your thoughts, for your advice. And we look forward to your book.

Elaine Lin Hering [00:38:36] Thank you. Thanks for having me.

Sam Jayanti [00:38:38] Yeah.

Narrator [00:38:40] Thanks for listening. Please subscribe wherever you listen and leave us a review. Find your ideal coach at www.theideamix.com. Special thanks to our producer Martin Milewski and singer songwriter Doug Allen.

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