Monday, May 18, 2020
There Are No Difficult People - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
There Are No Difficult People - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Last week I received a call from a business prospect asking me if I offered seminars and workshops on âdealing with difficult people.â I told them I didnât offer a specific program on that topic and concept, but if they told me more about what specifically was going on Iâm certain I had a program that would help them achieve their desired outcomes. As we explored the situation and discussed their desired outcomes I explained that the reason I donât have a program titled or framed around âdealing with difficult people,â is because I donât believe there are âdifficult people.â After mentioning my belief the phone conversation went cold. It seemed as if we were disconnected. I had to ask if the person was still on the line. I could tell I had touched a nerve, so I explained a little further, telling them that as soon as we label the person in front of us âdifficult,â it immediately shifts how we view them and the energy, the focus, the communication style and the words we will choose in that moment of interaction. Therefore, in all my trainings I focus on the belief that there are no difficult people and that everyone is communicating with one purpose in mind and itâs the same purpose for which we are communicating. The purpose of communication is to âinfluence and control the experiences, circumstances and results in our life.â From that perspective, the wall that goes up causing us to believe the person in front of us is a âdifficultâ person, then we too must be a difficult person because in that interaction we both are trying to get the same outcome, to influence and control the result(s) from it. Additionally, another key belief to bring to the interaction with another whom we may jump to label them as âdifficultâ is to realize that this person is communicating with positive intent. Now, that positive intent is for them to influence and control the results of the interaction, just as we are. And, finally, to take this to an even deeper level, the specific thing that drives how we will specifically communicate to influence and control the results from the interaction, is directly based on that individual attempting to fulfill one of their six basic human needs, same as us. The Six Basic Human Needs* everyone is trying to meet are: Certainty Uncertainty Significance Love Connection Growth Contribution The behaviors we choose to engage in to move towards achieving one or more of our basic needs may be what comes across as being âdifficultâ in the moment. So, the best strategy when you come across someone you may have labeled as a âdifficultâ person in the past, is to just get curious and listen intently to the other person. As Stephen Covey wrote in his classic book âThe 7 Habits of Highly Successful Peopleâ we should seek first to understand. Get curious and seek to understand where they are coming from, what specific result(s) theyâre looking for and which of their six basic needs they are trying to meet. I encourage you to remember this strategy the next time you come across someone you may deem âdifficult.â Give it a try. *based on the work of Anthony Robbins
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