Tips to Improve Your Leadership Communication
Here are some tips to improve your leadership communication. One of the most important attributes any leader can possess is the ability to communicate well with others. Good leaders understand this attribute is one they need to consistently work on to continually improve. Good communication is vital for any type of leader, as he or she must manage multiple interactions within varied relationships. Any given day, a leader will likely have multiple opportunities to communicate with employees, other businesses, and clients. Therefore, how well his or her communication skills are used in each interaction will go a long way in determining their leadership success or failure. This skill is important enough to work on developing each day; what things should you be doing in order to improve your leadership communication skills?
To more effectively communicate, there are several key tips to improve your leadership communication, but the following tips are some of the most important.
IT’S OK TO ASK QUESTIONS
One of the best ways to improve communication is by asking questions, and the quality of those questions is significant. A vague question most often produces a vague reply or answer. You should ask thoughtful and meaningful questions to provoke productive and intelligent thoughts and answers. Good leaders realize they can always learn from others, including those they lead. Asking the right questions can help lead to the right solutions and answers you seek.
ALWAYS CONTROL YOUR EMOTIONS
Another thing that helps improve communication is being able to control your emotions. How you feel and the message you want to convey may be at odds with each other. Showing your frustration at a mistake made by a team member will result in more problems. What you want to communicate is a way to resolve the situation in a calm and competent way. The tone of your voice, the expression on your face, and your body language all portray what you truly feel and think. With practice you can learn to control your reactions, stay calm in tough situations and stay positive, no matter how tough things look. Remember the words you speak will often weigh much less than the emotions you display.
LEARN TO LISTEN
Arguably, the most important thing to practice if you want to improve communication is learning how to listen. This goes hand in hand with and is the equally weighty part of asking the right questions. Make sure you always take the time to carefully listen to the answer when you ask a question. Avoid preparing your response while the other person is still speaking and instead truly hear and understand what he or she has to say. It does not matter how thoughtful of a question you ask if you don’t truly hear the answer.
BE AN ACTIVE LEADER
Some bosses are micromanagers, which most employees hate. On the other end of the spectrum, there are those bosses who are almost never seen. It’s important to be present in your team’s activities and a big part of that is the knowledge that they can approach you whenever necessary. So, make sure you are accessible both physically and emotionally when they need you.
EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE
Lastly, if you want to improve your leadership communication skills you must know how to be emotionally intelligent. Emotional intelligence consists of several aspects, including being empathetic, calm under pressure and disciplined. Being emotionally intelligent or competent does not come automatically. It takes time to develop this ability, through experience and work. However, this is a very important part of improved leadership communication and by no means does it represent a weakness.
TIME TO START IMPLEMENTING
If you want to improve your leadership communication skills start by trying to implement these key attributes into your actions. You should find some very positive results.
https://www.forbes.com/pictures/eilh45eigje/keys-to-improving-leader/#4126edfa43b7
We hope you found this article about Improving Leadership Communication helpful. If you have questions or need expert tax or family office advice that’s refreshingly objective (we never sell investments), please contact us or visit our Family office page or home page www.Groco.com. Unfortunately, we no longer give advice to other tax professionals gratis.
To receive our free newsletter, contact us here.
Considerately yours,
GROCO, GROCO Tax, GROCO Technology, GROCO Advisory Services, GROCO Consulting Services, GROCO Relationship Services, GROCO Consulting/Advisory Services, GROCO Family Office Wealth, and GROCO Family Office Services.
Thieves Steal Confidential Taxpayer Info Via IRS Website
Just when you thought you were safe to access important and confidential information via the IRS website, it turns out scammers are at it again. According to reports from the IRS, thieves have managed to break into one of the government agency’s website services and steal the confidential information of thousands of taxpayers. In fact,…
SEC Penalizes Deutsche Bank for Questionable Accounting Issues
Accounting mistakes can happen to anyone, whether you’re self-employed, have a small business with just a few employees, or you run a major corporation. However, even when mistakes happen, the consequences can be damaging. When those mistakes, or irregularities, involve large organizations like corporations, banks and financial institutions the consequences can be severe. Recently, the…
Activists, Unions Take Aim at Governor Brown’s Budget Grip
California Governor Jerry Brown has been known to rule the state’s budget with a tough grip. Not much has passed or been voted down without him having a hand in the decision. The governor has fought for tax hikes, put the kybosh on new programs that call for more spending and worked tirelessly on building…
Tax Fraud Getting More Advanced – Are You Prepared?
It used to be that tax fraud was fairly cut and dry. Essentially, it involved an individual or company who, for various reasons, tried to purposely fudge on their taxes, either by understating their income or by trying to completely skip out on filing a return. Those practices certainly still exists, despite the IRS’s constant…