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Influencing and Communicating With Leaders and Peers

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Title: Influencing and Communicating With Leaders and Peers


1
Influencing and Communicating With Leaders and
Peers
2
Our Objectives
  • Building Relationships
  • Outlining the Levers of Influence
  • Preparing Your Pitch

3
Building Relationships
4
Building Relationships
  • Know Your Manager and Peers
  • Spend time learning their interests and
    priorities
  • Learn their pet peeves and avoid them
  • Dont talk negatively about your colleagues
  • Understand and support their
  • Strengths
  • Weaknesses
  • Priorities and Goals
  • Work style (e.g., Is your manager a reader or a
    listener?)
  • Managing your Boss, by John J. Gabarro and John
    P. Kotter, Harvard Business Review
  • The 360 Degree Leader Developing your Influence
    from Anywhere within the Organization, by John C.
    Maxwell

5
Levers of Influence
6
Influencer
  • The true measure of leadership is influence
    nothing more, nothing less.
  • - John Maxwell

7
Levers of Influence
  • People will attempt to change their behavior if
  • They believe it will be worth it (motivation)
  • They can do what is required (ability)
  • You can influence motivation and ability through
    personal, social and structural sources

8
Six Sources of Influence
Motivation Ability
Structural Social Personal
9
Personal Motivation
  • Help people find intrinsic satisfaction
  • Immersing them in the activity
  • Tapping into peoples sense of pride and
    competition
  • Linking new behaviors to their values

10
Personal Ability
  • Ensure that people have the ability to change
  • Breaking behaviors into clear, specific and
    repeatable actions
  • Creating time and space to practice new skills
  1. Providing immediate feedback against clear
    standards

11
Social Motivation
  • Use peer pressure
  • Cultivating the support of opinion leaders
  • Surfacing undiscussables through public discourse
  1. Removing people from existing networks and
    placing them in a new, supportive network

12
Social Ability
  • When individuals need the support of those around
    them to change
  • Getting entire groups to change behavior together
  • Co-opting others by turning your problem into
    their own
  1. Having participants teach one another new
    behaviors

13
Structural Motivation
  • Extrinsic rewards should compliment other
    strategies
  • Linking rewards to specific actions (not
    outcomes)
  • Using small, heartfelt tokens of appreciation
  • Using punishment judiciously start with a
    warning but never bluff

14
Structural Ability
  • Shape the environment to make change easier
  • Changing the physical environment
  • Making a small amount of important data visible
    to reinforce behaviors
  • Eliminating choice altogether

15
Applying the Influencer
  • In small groups, pick one of the challenges you
    shared at the beginning. Work together to
    determine how you might apply this model to that
    case.

16
Preparing Your Pitch
17
Communication Discussion
  • How do communication skills affect your ability
    to have an impact?
  • Why is it difficult to communicate effectively?
  • Executive vs. peer audiences?

18
Focus on the Audience
  • Are you communicating up, down or across?
  • Are they
  • Experts?
  • Educated decision-makers?
  • Customers?
  • Collaborators?
  • Frame your case tell them why they should care

19
Characteristics of Executive Audiences
  • Busy
  • Distracted
  • Impatient
  • Thinking about something else
  • Prone to tangents
  • Have multiple agendas (some open, some hidden)

20
Conveying Your Message Make It Stick
  • Keep it simple and brief
  • Lead with results/impact
  • Use stories to support findings and
    recommendations
  • Make the ask clear
  • Deliver the unexpected (w/o being gimmicky)
  • Use alternative media as appropriate

21
How Do You Fail?
  • No explanation of significance
  • No roadmap
  • Not knowing your stuff
  • Gaps in logic
  • Excessive detail
  • Gimmicky

22
How Do You Succeed?
  • Do not share everything you know but be ready
    to provide depth and complexity when asked
  • Answer questions efficiently if you dont know
    the answer, do NOT make one up
  • Be prepared NOT to get through everything
  • You will be interrupted
  • The audience may focus on one issue and never let
    go
  • Make your most important points early

23
Examples of Effective Communications
  • Jared Fogle Subway Celebrity
  • Derek Sivers Starting a Movement
  • Alexis Ohanian How to Make a Splash in Social
    Media
  • Others?

24
Effective Communications Strategies
  • For communications to be successful, you must
    move beyond one-time communications
  • Repeat, repeat, repeat
  • Explore different mediums of communication
  • Meet people where they are
  • Do not assume that hearing equates with
    understanding or action
  • Communicate throughout any initiative, not just
    at the beginning

25
Next Steps
26
Action Planning
  • What is one action you will take upon returning
    to work?
  • What support will you need to accomplish this
    goal?

27
Stay Engaged!
  • Center for Government Leadership
  • Annenberg Leadership Seminars
  • Excellence in Government Fellows program
  • Fed Coach
  • Daily Pipeline
  • Service to America Medals

28
  • ourpublicservice.org
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