Making Connections

Making Connections

I’ve become a recent fan of playing the New York Times’ daily puzzles online, and one of my favorites is Connections. Sixteen words are provided, and the goal is to form four groups of four words that are in some way connected. You have to figure out what the connection is, and you get four mistakes, after which the game ends and the correct answers pop up. For example, on the day that I’m writing this, four connected words are bar, dinner, liberty, and tinker. They’re all “words before ‘bell’”.

When I first started playing, I would find two or three words that appeared to be obviously connected. But finding the last one or two for a group proved elusive. My initial thoughts about the connections were generally wrong. Then, I would look up definitions to refresh my memory on how they were used. I’d think about informal uses of words, and different ways of how they might be linked. The good news is, once I got the first three groups, the last one was obvious (there were only four words left!), even if I didn’t understand why they were connected.

Connecting

One of the reasons I keep playing the game each day is because it reminds me that my initial incorrect assumptions about how the words are connected, are a bit like life. We see things and presume we know what they are, what’s happening, or how they work. We interact with people and surmise that they think the same way we do. Sometimes we’re right, but often we’re a little off base, or just plain wrong. Because in interacting with others, we typically…

  1. Move forward based on our unconscious assumptions.
  2. Then hit a brick wall as we recognize we’re not making progress.
  3. And we blame them for it.

It’s a pivotal moment where we can get stuck in our own needs or way of thinking. This is where people say….

Certainly, they see this the same way I do.

Surely, they understand what I mean.

Of course, we’re focused on the same objectives.

Why are they exhibiting such poor leadership behaviors?

Why won’t my team follow my lead?

Why don’t they respect my opinion or experience?

Instead, we should pause and think about other possibilities and ways of viewing a situation and relating to others. Then reapproach with a broader mindset, a sense of curiosity.

?Because to truly connect with people, we need to put aside our own assumptions, and learn to effectively communicate with them. We need to understand their perspective.

Failure to do so can result in missteps, creating offenses, which will create barriers on the road to connections.

?Rather than focus on who’s right or wrong, left or right, recognize that the best solution is somewhere in the middle. Focus on trying to understand what experiences have shaped people, their values and priorities, and their needs.

?Finding new points of connection can add significant value to a relationship. While the process of developing areas of common interest can sometimes be difficult and time consuming, the end result can provide greater benefits.

The Responsibility of Leaders

Great leaders understand the value of connections; with other leaders, within their teams, across teams, with organizational stakeholders (customers, suppliers, investors, communities), and others. Great leaders are proactive in finding points of connection. They look for areas of common interest or need, approach differing opinions with curiosity instead of being defensive, and encourage their teams to build relationships. They set a tone for building value for the future.

What connections do you need to make? And how hard are you willing to work to find the point of connection?

?

Copyright 2024 Priscilla Archangel.

Photo from iContact.

Doug Hart, CCWP

Dynamic people and operations leader, change agent, and growth facilitator

4 个月

I agree, Priscilla. I try to be curious rather than judgmental and ask questions before jumping to conclusions.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Priscilla Archangel, Ph.D.的更多文章

  • Leading in the Midst of Differences

    Leading in the Midst of Differences

    These days, leaders are increasingly facing expectations to respond to circumstances and situations occurring outside…

  • Leadership Improvisation and Preparation

    Leadership Improvisation and Preparation

    Think of being in one of the following situations. How will you respond to it? Or if you’ve already been there, how did…

  • Lift, Lower, or Cut Anchor

    Lift, Lower, or Cut Anchor

    An anchor serves a common purpose on a ship or boat…to stop it from moving. Lower the anchor and it engages and…

    1 条评论
  • One Step Back, Two Steps Forward

    One Step Back, Two Steps Forward

    As I sit here writing, I’m staring at my left foot. Several months ago, I injured the tendons in the ball of it.

    2 条评论
  • Making Tough Decisions

    Making Tough Decisions

    One of the most important roles of leaders is making the tough decisions. The ones no one else wants to make… But…

  • Hiring the Right Players

    Hiring the Right Players

    Last weekend my hometown of Detroit had the honor of hosting the NFL Draft. I subsequently learned that this is really…

  • Leaders are Bakers! It’s All About the Yeast.

    Leaders are Bakers! It’s All About the Yeast.

    My baking skills are marginal at best. I can follow a recipe to bake a loaf of bread, but if it doesn't rise properly…

    3 条评论
  • Orchestras and Teams: Playing in Tune

    Orchestras and Teams: Playing in Tune

    Many years ago, when I was newly appointed as the leader of a large team, I met with them to introduce myself and to…

    2 条评论
  • Winning Teams: When “The Whole is Greater than the Sum of its Parts”

    Winning Teams: When “The Whole is Greater than the Sum of its Parts”

    This ancient quote, attributed to Aristotle, speaks to the importance of synergy between components of a system. As…

    2 条评论
  • AI Needs EI: It's About the People

    AI Needs EI: It's About the People

    In November of 2022 when OpenAI launched ChatGPT (Chat Generative Pre-Trained Transformer), a technology that lets…

    13 条评论

社区洞察