Radical Candor: What Is It? Does It Work? Is It Still Relevant? How Do you Do It?

Radical Candor: What Is It? Does It Work? Is It Still Relevant? How Do you Do It?

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Kim Scott is the New York Bestselling Author of the book, Radical Candor: Be a Kickass Boss without Losing Your Humanity. Kim is also the co-founder of Candor, Inc and co-host of the podcast Radical Candor. She led AdSense, YouTube, and Doubleclick Online Sales and Operations at Google and then joined Apple to develop and teach a leadership seminar. Kim has been a CEO coach at Dropbox, Qualtrics, Twitter, and several other tech companies

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Radical Candor is demonstrated when one cares personally for someone and also challenges them directly. Great bosses can be a source of growth and joy. It is evident that they care about you. They will also tell things that you need to hear. The framework consists of four points:

1. Radical Candor – praise and then criticize

2. Obnoxious Aggression – when you challenge but don’t care (praise that doesn’t seem sincere or criticism that isn’t delivered kindly)

3. Manipulative Insincerity – when you neither care nor challenge (non-specific praise or criticism that is not clear)

4. Ruinous Empathy – compassion without providing honest feedback

How does Radical Candor contribute to an employee experience? It will give you a witness to your life and it will help you grow in the way you want to grow. When you are doing great work, you want it recognized, when you mess up, someone will let you know.

Scott gives four steps on how to get to Radical Candor. First, come up with a go-to question. People don’t want to tell you so it’s difficult. Think of a question. For example: Is there anything I could do or stop doing that would make it easier to work with me? Whatever question works for you – figure out how to ask it.

Second, embrace the discomfort. The only way to get feedback is to make it more uncomfortable for them not to answer. So – after you ask the question – shut your mouth…count to 6…

Third, listen with the intent to understand – not to justify or respond. You cannot be defensive or you will not get any more feedback in the future from that person.

And finally, reward the candor. Give them a reward for telling you – if you agree with the feedback, fix the problem. And then tell the person and thank them for helping you. If you disagree, first of all focus on what you can agree with…then say I want to follow up in a few days. Then explain why you disagree. Sometimes the only reward is a fuller discussion of why you disagree.

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The #1 challenge for organizations right now is how to attract and retain talent. Organizations are stuck in old ways of thinking about work and they are struggling!?In my new PDF, I outline 7 ways the workforce is changing and what you and your organization need to do to adapt. The Great Resignation is The Great Opportunity if you are willing to take action!?Click here to download the PDF.

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Scott says some of the most common mistakes are showing employees care but not challenging them directly (Ruinous Empathy), getting so busy we fail to show we care personally or challenge directly and just flatter people – (Manipulative Insincerity), being reluctant to have ‘getting to know you’ conversations – these are the basis for the beginning of caring, and criticizing the feedback.

Do you have a ‘bad boss’? No matter how terrible your boss is, you can be a good boss. You don’t need to imitate yours. You can create a good micro culture.

Start by soliciting feedback and understanding what would make your boss’ job better. Ask if you can provide some criticism. If you can – create this culture with your own team – and then work with your boss to create it.

If you can’t get to the point where you can get radical candor with your boss – if you can’t criticize your boss, you might want to start to look for a new job

What you will learn in this episode:?

● Do leaders need to find a purpose for their employees or is it the responsibility of the employees to find purpose in their work?

● What makes a good employee?

● Is it possible to learn to have career conversations?

● Efficient workplace practice ideas

● Why Kim Scott wrote her book

● Examples of bad bosses and good bosses

● How to have Radical Candor

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Listen to the episode on?Apple Podcasts,?Spotify,?Google Podcasts, or your?favorite podcast platform.

If you want more content like this?you can subscribe to my Youtube channel.

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The #1 challenge for organizations right now is how to attract and retain talent. Organizations are stuck in old ways of thinking about work and they are struggling!?In my new PDF, I outline 7 ways the workforce is changing and what you and your organization need to do to adapt. The Great Resignation is The Great Opportunity if you are willing to take action!?Click here to download the PDF.

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Zakaria Khan

Business Owner at TKT home made mosla products

2 年

Thanks for sharing

Jason Mashak

M.Ed. | MarComms Dir. @Whalebone (DNS4EU Consortium Leader) ???? | “Revenue Marketing Ones to Watch 2024" ??

2 年

‘Radical candor’ just sounds like living and working in Central/Eastern Europe, where people are generally far more direct. ??

Hernan Chiosso, CSPO, SPHR ??

I use AI to help organizations conquer culture, people, product, process, and tech challenges. Fractional CHRO, HR Innovation Consultant, HRTech Product Manager, Remote work expert. productizehr.substack.com

2 年

I read the book a few years ago, and even got the revised version that came out later, after the "Radical Candor" term was kind of highjacked by the "Silicon Valley" TV show. Through my career, I have seen so many managers stuck in the Ruinous Empathy quadrant. Hey, I was stuck there myself on occasions. It's good to give it a name so you can work on it. I found the combination of Radical Candor (Kim Scott) + Fierce Conversations (Susan Scott, they are not related AFAIK) to be a quite powerful combination.

Michael Meyer

Manufacturing / Design Engineer at Advanced Thermal Sciences Corporation

2 年

Good old fashion southern mannerisms on speaking, new label on an old idea.

Brandon Springle, MHR

Organizational Strategist | Curious Researcher | Psychological Safety Coach | Talent Accelerator | Signal Seeker | Thought Partner | Writer | Keynote Speaker

2 年

I expect this will be incredible!

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