cover of episode 93. All the Feels: The Personal and Professional Power of Emotional Awareness

93. All the Feels: The Personal and Professional Power of Emotional Awareness

2023/6/6
logo of podcast Think Fast, Talk Smart: Communication Techniques

Think Fast, Talk Smart: Communication Techniques

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Celine Teoh discusses the importance of emotional awareness and how it can be developed through introspection and feedback, using the example of her experience in the 'Touchy Feely' course at Stanford GSB.

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To truly hone and develop your communication, you have to introspect, reflect, seek feedback, and integrate all of that information to improve. I'm Matt Abrahams, and I teach strategic communication at Stanford Graduate School of Business. Welcome to Think Fast, Talk Smart, the podcast.

Today, I am super excited to chat with Celine Teo. Celine is a facilitator of the GSB's famous interpersonal dynamics course. She's a CEO coach and a GSB graduate. Welcome, Celine. I so look forward to our conversation. I'm looking forward to this as well, Matt. I'm excited. Excellent. Well, let's go ahead and get started.

I'd like to start with the interpersonal dynamics course that you help facilitate. It's also known as Touchy Feely, and you and others help run that course. Can you remind our listeners what the course is about, how it works, and share maybe two key takeaways from it? Of course. Interpersonal dynamics is the most popular elective at the Stanford GSB. It's really about teaching people how to be effective interpersonal communicators and

and how to do so both at work as well as in their personal lives.

How it works? Well, one example I can bring to you is when I was a student, an MBA at the GSB, one exercise that we ran in touchy feely is notorious. It's known as the influence line where other students have to rank you according to how influential you are to them. And consistently, I wound up in the bottom half of everyone's influence line.

And I was devastated. Here I was, a new immigrant to the United States, female, Asian, and I couldn't understand why I was at the bottom of the influence line. So I felt sad. I felt disappointed in myself. I felt hard done by, resentful. And normally what I would do would be to disengage and say, you know what? You don't think I'm influential? I'm stepping out.

But what's great about this course is it encourages you to re-engage. And so I dug into the feedback, got insights from other people as to why I was coming across that way. And as a result, changed the way I behave when I'm in American contexts.

What's great about that is that I diversified the range of behaviors that I bring to bear. So when I'm in the States, I come across with a little bit more emotion and more animation. And when I'm in Asia, I can come across with like less amplitude. And I have this range of behaviors now I can pick and choose from. And I have agency. So that's what interpersonal dynamics does.

It's a phenomenal course. And one of the strengths, I think, of the course is that it really helps people, as you shared in your story, to really learn about themselves and to learn about themselves in a very direct way. Not mean, but to learn about themselves. And then, as you said, to develop a sense of agency to make those changes that are needed. And thank you for sharing that. In all of our interactions, you are certainly influential in my book. You would be at the top of my line. So thank you for that. Thank you, Matt.

I'd love for you to share how all of us can be a little bit more touchy-feely, if you will, when we work in organizations or corporate cultures that emphasize logic and action. What can we do to be more empathetic and connected to those environments?

One of the things I will say is I'll repeat advice that David Bradford, one of the key developers of the Touchy Feely course, told me when I was actually chair of the Stanford alumni consulting team. I asked him, David, how do you bring Touchy Feely to organizations? And he said, stealth it in with a check-in. And this is how you do it. You go around the room in any meeting and everybody says one feeling word,

how you're feeling today, and one sentence as to why. The reason why you do that is because it creates the space for someone to say, here's what's going on with me outside work. Now, what happens is you no longer have the sales team talking to the marketing team. No, you have a parent talking to another parent, or you have a caregiver talking to another caregiver. You have more hooks, more chances for people to connect with each other.

When I do my work as a CEO coach with startups, a lot of the CEOs tell me, Celine, that'll take too long. But honestly, it's not.

Five minutes, I guarantee you, five minutes is all it takes. And then on top of that, many of them will tell me, Celine, I can't say the word feelings in my organization. We're a bunch of coders. That word is not okay. And what I tell them is, okay, don't say feelings. Instead, use a prompt like, what was one good thing that happened to you today?

What was one bad thing that happened to you today? What's keeping you up at night? And then over time, you can slowly, slowly increase the vulnerability and the range of emotions that you're allowing people to bring in.

I love the advice and thank you again for the specific examples about how we can start with something as simple as just begin by checking in with each other. And in fact, doing so can warm people up and get the conversation going. And it doesn't always have to be about an emotion. And I loved what you said about how it changes our relationship. So I'm no longer my functional role talking to your functional role. We're two people communicating and that immediacy and connection I can see brings a lot of value.

Are there other bits of advice that you have or experiences you have as a facilitator of interpersonal dynamics or in your own private practice that can really help connect people together? Are there things we can do or say that can help with that? I think there are two things I would recommend. One is to be very clear about what you're feeling because feelings are data.

And in the rest of our logical lives, we would never make decisions on bad or highly abstract data.

But we'll do that with feelings. We'll just say, I'm feeling sad, mad or glad. But that's not detailed enough. So what I like to recommend is for people to actually take a page from Carol Robbins' book, Connect. In the back of that appendix, you'll actually see a feelings chart. Carry that feelings chart around and check in at the beginning of meetings, at the end of meetings, etc.

and say, how am I feeling right now at a granular level? As an example, before our chat today, I've listened to this podcast since the very beginning. I love it. And so as a result, before I came in today, I was excited. I was glad. I was anticipatory. But I was also nervous.

And so what did I do with that? I decided I would go for a walk, get some of those nerves out. I would practice my vocal exercises. And then I decided to reframe. You and I will have a wonderful conversation. And I think it makes for just a much more fun interaction than if I were just, I'm just nervous.

Absolutely. So certainly no need to be nervous here. And I, too, was very much looking forward to this. So, again, I hear the advice, much like you give to our students, is you really have to reflect on yourself, where you're at, and take that as information input and data from which you can then act.

And I think you're exactly right. In thinking about my own life, when I look at my emotional state, I'll just label it. I won't actually go much deeper. And I think that's really important because then you can take action. If I just say I'm nervous, but if I think more about that nervousness and how I can address it, then I can do something about it. So I like how the reflection leads to data that can lead to action. Exactly. Very helpful. Very helpful.

I'd love to get your thoughts and advice on how do you manage challenges and issues and disagreement at work when you're confrontational rather than collaborative? I would say it's all about empathy.

Conflict is magnetic. It draws attention. And whenever we encounter conflict, our attention tends to go to this narrow focus point. That is the conflict alone. I like to encourage my clients to expand their perspective and think about the relationship as a whole as a container. And then go to Gottman's research.

that we also reference in interpersonal dynamics. Gottman found out that there's a five to one magic ratio of positive interactions to negative interactions in successful relationships. So my advice is build your emotional piggy bank by depositing those five good interactions in before you have the conflict. Build that and then even in the conflict, continue depositing those positive interactions in

as a way of making sure that your conflicts go well, because you're demonstrating good intent. You're demonstrating that the relationship's important to you. And these positive interactions can be really small. They could be a smile, an eye meet. They could be a pat on the shoulder. They could be a nod of the head. It's easy, but we forget. I forget. Yes, I certainly am familiar with Gottman's work in this notion of storing up

positive interaction. And I see this in my interactions with my kids.

there's a lot that I try to actively acknowledge the successes. As a parent, it can be very easy to focus on the things you'd like to change or advice you'd like to give. So I consciously try when positive accolades or praise are appropriate to give that knowing not only that that will help in the moment, but it might help me in those times where I have to give negative feedback or have a conflictual situation.

That's huge, Matt. I love that you're doing this with your family. And even at work, we have Slack channels called Celebration, where people are encouraged to drop in and just celebrate somebody else for something they did.

or at the end of meetings, we'll actually have breakout rooms where we'll put two people in together and celebrate each other. That's really fabulous how that can help people. And I begin to think back to when you talked about ways to bring empathy and feeling into organizations with a check-in at the beginning. Some kind of gratitude or celebration at the ending might be a really nice way to round out an interaction or meeting. They're nice bookends. That's right.

That's perfect. For those of our listeners who are looking to enhance or hone their empathy, feedback and communication skills, what advice and guidance would you give them based on your experience? I would recommend asking. So the reason why I say that is all of us here sitting in Silicon Valley, business types, we tend to have advice monsters. We like to give advice. Mm-hmm.

And what I'd encourage people to do instead is to ask, do you need support or advice right now? And you'd be surprised the number of times people say, I actually know what I need to do. I don't need your advice. I just want someone to commiserate with me. So do that. Ask first. We assume people need advice, but that's not necessarily always the case. And the support component gives us a chance to connect with the other person. Yeah, totally get it. My wife and I have a lot of...

conversations around this issue as a professor, as somebody giving advice is something that I do as a reflex and listening and understanding if support is needed is really important. I actually think, and this is a little bit true for myself, that giving advice is a way to hide behind, you hide behind the advice so you don't actually have to connect

And I'm wondering if you find that to be true and have any advice on how to have that confidence to be vulnerable to, I'm here to support you, but I don't quite know how to do that or what's needed in the moment. It's much easier for me to say, oh, just go do this. Yes, of course. Before I answer that question, I'll actually agree with you on that and also say that advice giving is,

is distancing because it puts us in a position of superiority. It assumes that we know the answer and, hey, Matt, I can fix you. Just do this. You know, it's distancing. And so my recommendation is actually to tiptoe into it by sometimes even just knowing that phrase, do you want support or advice right now? Just practicing that. Because once you can say that,

The response, your response depends on what the other person says and they will guide you as to what they need. So just ask. I think putting yourself in a place where you can just be receptive is hard, but very useful and have seen that play out very successfully many times in my life. So thank you for that.

So, Celine, before we end, I'd like to ask you the same three questions I ask everyone who joins me. Are you up for that? Yes. All right. Excellent. So question number one, if you were to capture the best communication advice you have ever received as a five to seven word presentation slide title, what would it be?

It would be, people will remember how you made them feel. That's by Maya Angelou. Absolutely. Tell me more about why that's so important for you. Because it's not about the words. It's about how people feel inside. That's how you persuade. That's how you connect.

That's who we are. We're emotional beings. I think that's exactly right. And we need to think about how we impact people on an emotional level. I think we do a disservice when we think about our communication is only information transfer. It is clearly emotion transfer as well. And we need to bring those two into balance. And that quote is very helpful to remind us of that. I love that phrase, emotional transfer. There you go.

Question number two, who is a communicator that you admire and why? I think Steve Jobs comes to mind. He used passion, simplicity, storytelling to be memorable and so much emotion. Absolutely. And the thing I like about Steve Jobs in terms of his communication is he worked really hard on it. You know, he was very good at it, had lots of natural talent, but he worked hard tirelessly to...

improve and hone. And he also made sure to focus the message in a very concise, clear, audience-centric way. So I agree. Lots of good things to learn there. So much hard work on depending what looked effortless. Isn't that amazing? And I think that's a great lesson for all of us to remember is that practice and preparation can make things easier and look easier. Question number three. What are the first three ingredients that go into a successful communication recipe?

I think listening to understand, finding commonality and connecting through feelings. So connecting through feelings, I see absolutely from what we've talked about. Talk to me about listening to understand. I think that's bound up with empathy, right? You can't really communicate if you don't understand what it is your audience is looking for, your counterpart is looking for, what they care about.

We focus too much on ourselves. Yeah, and I feel like people and myself included when I listen, I'm listening for the hooks that give me what I want to say next or help me get to the next place and not necessarily reflecting on what this means for the other person and potentially for this relationship, interaction, etc. So I like that idea of listening to understand. It ties back to what you said about practice.

Conceptually, it's an easy concept, but it's really hard to do because you have to let go so much of your own agenda. Yeah, you have to quiet your mind and really be present. And for a lot of us, that's hard. Celine, thank you so much. This was a true pleasure to chat with you. This notion of really respecting our feelings and embracing them and looking at ways to

really understand ourselves so that we can bring our more whole self and emotional self to our interactions. Our communication is absolutely important. So thank you for the lessons. Thank you for your time. And thank you for sharing important information with all of us. Thank you, Matt. Pleasure was all mine.

Thanks for joining us for another episode of Think Fast, Talk Smart, the podcast from Stanford Graduate School of Business. This episode was produced by Jenny Luna, Ryan Campos, and me, Matt Abrahams. Our music was provided by Floyd Wonder. For more information and episodes, find us on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you, and please make sure to subscribe and follow us on LinkedIn.

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