Shane Toohey Archives – Business Blueprint https://businessblueprint.com/tag/shane-toohey/ The Live Experience | Available in Australia Thu, 04 Nov 2021 03:30:23 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://businessblueprint.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/cropped-cropped-favicon-180x180-1-32x32.jpg Shane Toohey Archives – Business Blueprint https://businessblueprint.com/tag/shane-toohey/ 32 32 Effective Communication Tips https://businessblueprint.com/effective-communication-tips/ https://businessblueprint.com/effective-communication-tips/#respond Wed, 18 Jan 2012 05:55:50 +0000 http://www.businessblueprint.com/?p=4356 How a message is delivered and how a message is received can be two completely different stories. Communication is an art that needs to be practised and cultivated. Here’s a sneak peak at an interview between Dale Beaumont and Shane Toohey on communicating effectively. Shane created a business consultancy called Peak Teams. Together with his…

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not-listening_iStock_000009757016XSmall-300x199How a message is delivered and how a message is received can be two completely different stories. Communication is an art that needs to be practised and cultivated. Here’s a sneak peak at an interview between Dale Beaumont and Shane Toohey on communicating effectively.

Shane created a business consultancy called Peak Teams. Together with his business partner, Ian Schubach, Shane developed a patent-pending technology that simulates adventure environments to create unique and powerful learning programs on leadership, teamwork and change. Peak Teams works with some of the biggest and best-known companies in the world.

What are your tips on how to communicate a message more effectively?

  • Clarity – is about being very clear on what your message is and why it is important. If you are not clear in your communication you cannot convey a sense of purpose to people.
  • Brevity – this means being brief with your message. A short, concise message holds people’s attention and achieves maximum impact. Most people talk for too long.
  • Consistency – is about making sure you deliver the same message, in the same way, every time. Lack of consistency in communication causes people to lose their trust and respect for you.
  • Repetition – is required to make people remember your message over time. Far too many executives launch a grand new plan with a single announcement. There are millions of new pieces of information given to people every day over the internet, in newspapers, company intranets and so on. If you fail to constantly repeat your message, your audience will forget what you say and lose the importance of what you are trying to achieve.
  • Flexibility – means adapting your delivery style to suit the different needs of the audiences you have. For example, it may be acceptable to communicate with a 21-year-old via text message, but if you tried that with a 55-year-old your message might not be so well received (or even be received at all). Flexibility is also required to address different personality types, such as introverts and extroverts. You may need to speak more and ask more questions of introverted people to check that they understand you, as opposed to the extroverts who will probably want you to speak less and listen to them more.
  • Alignment – is about making sure that your message is relevant to you, your audience and the situation. Is the message aligned to your business goals and objectives? Is your message aligned to your family’s values? Is the message aligned to what people expect of you in your role? Is your message aligned to what you expect of your team’s behaviour and performance?

For more of this interview and on tips for an effective communication check out “Secrets of Inspiring Leaders Exposed!

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Practical Ways to Become a Better Listener https://businessblueprint.com/become-a-better-listener/ https://businessblueprint.com/become-a-better-listener/#respond Tue, 17 Jan 2012 05:21:28 +0000 http://www.businessblueprint.com/?p=4352 Each person has two ears and one mouth. That should say something to us about the ratio between listening and speaking. Take a look at this segment from an interview by Dale Beaumont with Shane Toohey. Find out how to become a better listener, utilising both ears, knowing and understanding that this alone can have…

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Each person has two ears and one mouth. That should say something to us about the ratio between listening and speaking. Take a look at this segment from an interview by Dale Beaumont with Shane Toohey. Find out how to become a better listener, utilising both ears, knowing and understanding that this alone can have great impact on your business growth and success.

Shane created a business consultancy called Peak Teams. Together with his business partner, Ian Schubach, Shane developed a patent-pending technology that simulates adventure environments to create unique and powerful learning programs on leadership, teamwork and change. Peak Teams works with some of the biggest and best-known companies in the world.

What are some of the practical things one can do to become a better listener?

For most people today, the single biggest impediment to good listening is lack of time. People make themselves too busy to listen. So the first and most important step for becoming a better listener is to make some time and ask the question – what are the benefits of listening?

In business, listening is the best way to strengthen teamwork, create new ideas and improve customer service. When people listen in the workplace, staff morale goes up and productivity increases because people develop new skills to solve problems so much faster. To become a better listener in the workplace, you must plan to make time to talk to people. Plan to have your conversations in quiet places that are free from all the usual office distractions – phones, faxes, computers, coffee machines. And respect the other person; never answer your mobile phone or look at your watch when you are listening to people.

One other critical skill to improve listening at work is being open to the other person’s point of view. Do not interrupt other people before they finish speaking and seek to really understand what they are saying before you give your opinion.

At home, listening is the glue that holds families together. Without good listening, marriages break down and children grow apart from their parents, especially in the teenage years. Becoming a better listener at home involves many similarities to the workplace. Intent is very important, so commit to wanting to listen to your husband, wife or kids and demonstrate that you care by putting down the television remote control or the newspaper.

Remember above all else that listening is a gift, so give it freely and often.

For more of this interview and how to become a better listener check out “Secrets of Inspiring Leaders Exposed!

 

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