Friday, May 22, 2020
Is Your Message More Negative than You Think
Is Your Message More Negative than You Think Embed from Getty Imageswindow.gie=window.gie||function(c){(gie.q=gie.q||[]).push(c)};gie(function(){gie.widgets.load({id:'RJFgFhkFTEdfKd4Id8lTMA',sig:'ByjlxUOaTY2DLmP8Im7VVguTWlPBhSEK90UAgpmdRUI=',w:'508px',h:'339px',items:'578999811',caption: false ,tld:'com',is360: false })}); Mark Murphy of Leadership IQ is a New York Times bestselling author, weekly contributor to Forbes, ranked as a Top 30 Leadership Guru and the Founder of Leadership IQ. Heâs trained leaders at the United Nations, Harvard Business School, the Clinton Foundation, Microsoft, MasterCard, SHRM, and hundreds more organizations. Leadership IQ recently launched a free product that looks for potential negative messages in your communication. Murphy says âwhen youâre about to have a difficult conversation, or deliver some constructive feedback or even send an email when youâre slightly irritated, itâs really important to PAUSE and ANALYZE the words youâre going to say.â Negative words can inflame already tough situations. So the company created an app called the Negative Word Analyzer to help you flag and remove any negative words that could make your difficult situation even tougher to handle. Just type or copy/paste your email or speech or script or whatever into the app. It will match your text against the 2,000+ words that researchers have identified as ânegative.â Then you can take your email, script, etc. and rewrite it to make your upcoming communication a lot less negative (and thus heated and difficult). Try the Negative Word Analyzer I pasted a recent message I sent to a job seeker who was having trouble with her job search. I had intentionally written with a âtough loveâ attitude, so I thought it was the perfect message to put through the Negative Word Analyzer. Hereâs what the Negative Word Analyzer returned to me by email just a few seconds later: Your message had 11 negative words. What follows is some tips on avoiding negative words and after that is your message text with the negative words in BOLD. This doesnât necessarily mean that your message is bad, but changing a few words could make your audience more receptive. Research has identified more than 2,000 words that are considered ânegative.â These range from serious ones like abhorrent and abysmal to more mild ones like blunder and complain. And in many workplace settings, these words have the potential to derail your message. Hereâs a tip: For every negative word that was flagged, ask yourself whether youâre stating a fact or youâre making an interpretation or communicating an emotion. Maybe there really isnât another way to say what youâre trying to say, but remember, people generally react poorly to interpretations and emotions, while facts typically elicit much more calm and rational responses. For example, a clear sign that weâve left the world of facts and entered the realm of interpretations is the use of words like âalwaysâ, âneverâ, âforeverâ, âimpossibleâ, and âconstantlyâ. We hear this in phrases including âyouâre always late,â âyou never get your work done on time,â or âyouâre constantly on the phone.â For something to be âalways the caseâ means there is not one single instance where it was otherwise. Arriving on schedule to even one meeting every three years makes the statement âyouâre always lateâ false, and so itâs not a fact. Saying that someone is âalways lateâ is not a fact; itâs an interpretation, and a negative one at that. But being specific, by referencing the time, date, and location of specific moments, events, situations, actions, etc., restricts you to only the facts. By keeping your thoughts and words factual, youâre keeping yourself relatively calm, which means thereâs a good chance your words will be heard. And it also means youâre less likely to have your words thrown back at you. Also, why is the word âyouâ flagged as negative? While not negative on its own, the word âYouâ often elicits a bad reaction. In conversation, especially feedback conversations, the word âYouâ is pretty commonly followed by something like â¦âneed to stop doing XYZâ or ââ¦be better at ABC.â Basically, attacks and criticism so commonly follow the word âyouâ that people just naturally tense-up when they hear it. Your message was: Hi Candidate â" you obviously have plenty of qualifications. I suspect the problem is you yourself donât know what you want to do next. Your cover letter, while well-written, is generic and vague â" youâre asking a recruiter to do the work for you; please look at this list of things Iâve done and try to find a good fit for me in your organization. They donât have the time or energy for that, and itâs frankly not their job â" itâs yours. Would you be open to a brief meeting where we can discuss how you can take charge of your direction and next steps? Without a clear fit for specific openings, youâll be turning in circles for a while. Let me know if youâd like to meet me at one of our career centers to discuss strategy. Good stuff. Worth a try if youâre having communication challenges. Find the tool here.
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