Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
ALSO BY DOUGLAS STONE & SHEILA HEEN TITLE PAGE COPYRIGHT DEDICATION CONTENTS INTRODUCTION | From Push to Pull
WHAT COUNTS AS FEEDBACK? A BRIEF HISTORY OF FEEDBACK PULL BEATS PUSH THE TENSION BETWEEN LEARNING AND BEING ACCEPTED THE BENEFITS OF RECEIVING WELL DIGGING FOR PONIES
THE FEEDBACK CHALLENGE
1 | THREE TRIGGERS • That Block Feedback
THREE FEEDBACK TRIGGERS WHY WE GET TRIGGERED AND WHAT HELPS
1. TRUTH TRIGGERS: THE FEEDBACK IS WRONG, UNFAIR, UNHELPFUL
Separate Appreciation, Coaching, and Evaluation First Understand See Your Blind Spots
2. RELATIONSHIP TRIGGERS: I CAN’T HEAR THIS FEEDBACK FROM YOU
Don’t Switchtrack: Disentangle What from Who Identify the Relationship System
3. IDENTITY TRIGGERS: THE FEEDBACK IS THREATENING AND I’M OFF BALANCE
Learn How Wiring and Temperament Affect Your Story Dismantle Distortions Cultivate a Growth Identity
TRUTH TRIGGERS | the challenge to SEE
Truth Triggers Overview 2 | SEPARATE APPRECIATION, COACHING, AND EVALUATION
ONE DAD, TWO REACTIONS THERE ARE THREE KINDS OF FEEDBACK
APPRECIATION COACHING EVALUATION
WE NEED ALL THREE
EVALUATION SHORTFALLS APPRECIATION SHORTFALLS COACHING SHORTFALLS
BEWARE CROSS-TRANSACTIONS
A COMPLICATION: THERE IS ALWAYS EVALUATION IN COACHING
WHAT HELPS?
GET ALIGNED: KNOW THE PURPOSE AND DISCUSS IT SEPARATE EVALUATION FROM COACHING AND APPRECIATION
3 | FIRST UNDERSTAND • Shift from “That’s Wrong” to “Tell Me More”
WE’RE GOOD AT WRONG SPOTTING UNDERSTANDING IS JOB ONE
FEEDBACK ARRIVES WITH GENERIC LABELS GIVER AND RECEIVER INTERPRET THE LABEL DIFFERENTLY
Play “Spot the Label”
WHAT’S UNDER THE LABEL?
Coming From and Going To
ASK WHERE THE FEEDBACK IS COMING FROM
They Observe Data They Interpret the Data They Confuse Data and Interpretation (We All Do)
ASK WHERE THE FEEDBACK IS GOING
When Receiving Coaching: Clarify Advice When Receiving Evaluation: Clarify Consequences and Expectations
SHIFT FROM WRONG SPOTTING TO DIFFERENCE SPOTTING
DIFFERENT DATA
Biases Drive Data Collection
DIFFERENCES IN INTERPRETATION
Implicit Rules Heroes and Villains
ASK: WHAT’S RIGHT?
WHEN YOU STILL DISAGREE
“WHY CAN’T FEEDBACK JUST BE OBJECTIVE?”
A CONVERSATION WITH COMMENTARY
PAUL’S PREPARATION: MINDSET AND GOALS THE CONVERSATION
4 | SEE YOUR BLIND SPOTS • Discover How You Come Across
THE GAP MAP BEHAVIORAL BLIND SPOTS
YOUR LEAKY FACE YOUR LEAKY TONE YOUR LEAKY PATTERNS E-MAIL BODY LANGUAGE THEY MAY SEE EXACTLY WHAT WE ARE TRYING TO HIDE
THREE BLIND-SPOT AMPLIFIERS
AMPLIFIER 1: EMOTIONAL MATH AMPLIFIER 2: SITUATION VERSUS CHARACTER AMPLIFIER 3: IMPACT VERSUS INTENT THE RESULT: OUR (GENERALLY POSITIVE) SELF WE COLLUDE TO KEEP EACH OTHER IN THE DARK
WHAT HELPS US SEE OUR BLIND SPOTS?
USE YOUR REACTION AS A BLIND-SPOT ALERT ASK: HOW DO I GET IN MY OWN WAY? LOOK FOR PATTERNS GET A SECOND OPINION
Honest Mirrors Versus Supportive Mirrors
RECORD YOURSELF FOCUS ON CHANGE FROM THE INSIDE OUT HAVE A PURPOSE
RELATIONSHIP TRIGGERS | the challenge of WE
Relationship Triggers Overview 5 | DON’T SWITCHTRACK • Disentangle What from Who
RELATIONSHIP TRIGGERS CREATE SWITCHTRACK CONVERSATIONS
SWITCHTRACKING DEFEATS FEEDBACK SILENT SWITCHTRACKING CAN BE WORSE
TWO RELATIONSHIP TRIGGERS
WHAT WE THINK ABOUT THEM
Skill or Judgment: How, When, or Where They Gave the Feedback Credibility: They Don’t Know What They’re Talking About Trust: Their Motives Are Suspect
SURPRISE PLAYERS IN THE FEEDBACK GAME
Strangers Those You Least Like and Who Are Least Like You
HOW WE FEEL TREATED BY THEM
Appreciation Autonomy Acceptance
RELATIONSHIP TRIGGERS: WHAT HELPS?
SPOT THE TWO TOPICS GIVE EACH TOPIC ITS OWN TRACK
Signposting
LISTEN FOR THE RELATIONSHIP ISSUES LURKING BENEATH THEIR “ADVICE”
LOUIE AND KIM: TAKE TWO
6 | IDENTIFY THE RELATIONSHIP SYSTEM • Take Three Steps Back
WHO IS THE PROBLEM AND WHO NEEDS TO CHANGE? SEE THE RELATIONSHIP SYSTEM TAKE THREE STEPS BACK
ONE STEP BACK: YOU + ME INTERSECTIONS TWO STEPS BACK: ROLE CLASHES AND ACCIDENTAL ADVERSARIES THREE STEPS BACK: THE BIG PICTURE (OTHER PLAYERS, PROCESSES, POLICIES, AND STRUCTURES)
FEEDBACK THROUGH A SYSTEMS LENS THE BENEFITS OF A SYSTEMS LENS
IT’S MORE ACCURATE IT MOVES US AWAY FROM NEEDLESS JUDGMENT IT ENHANCES ACCOUNTABILITY IT HELPS CORRECT OUR TENDENCY TO SHIFT OR ABSORB
Blame Absorbers: It’s All Me Blame Shifters: It’s Not Me
IT HELPS US AVOID “FIXES THAT FAIL”
TALKING ABOUT SYSTEMS
BE ON THE LOOKOUT TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR YOUR PART “HERE’S WHAT WOULD HELP ME CHANGE” LOOK FOR THEMES: IS THIS A ME + EVERYBODY INTERSECTION?
USE THE SYSTEM TO SUPPORT CHANGE (NOT THWART IT)
IDENTITY TRIGGERS | the challenge of ME
Identity Triggers Overview 7 | LEARN HOW WIRING AND TEMPERAMENT AFFECT YOUR STORY
THE LIBERATION OF HARD WIRING
A BEHIND-THE-SCENES LOOK AT YOURSELF ON FEEDBACK
1. Baseline: The Beginning and End of the Arc 2. Swing: How Far Up or Down You Go
Bad Is Stronger Than Good
3. Sustain and Recovery: How Long Does the Swing Last?
Negative Recovery: Righty or Lefty? Sustaining Positive Feelings Four Sustain/Recovery Combinations
WIRING IS ONLY PART OF THE STORY
THE MAGIC 40
EMOTIONS DISTORT OUR SENSE OF THE FEEDBACK ITSELF
OUR STORIES HAVE AN EMOTIONAL SOUNDTRACK THOUGHTS + FEELINGS = STORY
HOW FEELINGS EXAGGERATE FEEDBACK
OUR PAST: THE GOOGLE BIAS OUR PRESENT: NOT ONE THING, EVERYTHING OUR FUTURE: THE FOREVER BIAS AND SNOWBALLING
8 | DISMANTLE DISTORTIONS • See Feedback at “Actual Size”
SETH TAKES A RELAXING VACATION FIVE WAYS TO DISMANTLE DISTORTIONS
1. BE PREPARED, BE MINDFUL
Know Your Feedback Footprint Inoculate Yourself Against the Worst Notice What’s Happening
2. SEPARATE THE STRANDS: FEELING / STORY / FEEDBACK
Our Stories Shadowbox with the Past
3. CONTAIN THE STORY
Use a Feedback Containment Chart Draw the Balancing Picture Right-Size the Future Consequences
4. CHANGE YOUR VANTAGE POINT
Imagine You’re an Observer Look Back from the Future Cast the Comedy
5. ACCEPT THAT YOU CAN’T CONTROL HOW OTHERS SEE YOU
Have Compassion for Them
WHEN LIFE COMES DOWN HARD
DROWNING ASK FOR SUPPORT
9 | CULTIVATE A GROWTH IDENTITY • Sort Toward Coaching
FEEDBACK CAN ROCK OUR SENSE OF SELF
IDENTITY: OUR SELF-STORY
IS YOUR IDENTITY BRITTLE OR ROBUST? GIVE UP SIMPLE LABELS AND CULTIVATE COMPLEXITY
KEEP IT OUT OR LET IT IN? EMBRACE IDENTITY NUANCE THREE THINGS TO ACCEPT ABOUT YOURSELF
You Will Make Mistakes You Have Complex Intentions You Have Contributed to the Problem
YOU’VE BEEN COMPLICATED ALL ALONG
SHIFT FROM A FIXED MINDSET TO A GROWTH MINDSET
PUZZLING KIDS FIXED VERSUS GROWTH ASSUMPTIONS BUT AREN’T SOME TRAITS FIXED? IMPLICATIONS FOR HOW WE RESPOND TO FEEDBACK AND CHALLENGE
The Accuracy of Our Self-Perception How We Listen to Feedback How We Respond to Struggle Can Create Self-fulfilling Prophecies The Framing Matters
MOVE TOWARD A GROWTH IDENTITY
PRACTICE #1: SORT TOWARD COACHING
Hear Coaching as Coaching When Coaching and Evaluation Get Tangled
PRACTICE #2: UNPACK JUDGMENT FROM THE EVALUATION SUITCASE PRACTICE #3: GIVE YOURSELF A “SECOND SCORE”
FEEDBACK IN CONVERSATION
10 | HOW GOOD DO I HAVE TO BE? • Draw Boundaries When Enough Is Enough
FINDING BOUNDARIES, SETTING BOUNDARIES THREE BOUNDARIES
1. I MAY NOT TAKE YOUR ADVICE 2. I DON’T WANT FEEDBACK ABOUT THAT SUBJECT, NOT RIGHT NOW 3. STOP, OR I WILL LEAVE THE RELATIONSHIP
HOW DO I KNOW IF BOUNDARIES ARE NEEDED?
DO THEY ATTACK YOUR CHARACTER, NOT JUST YOUR BEHAVIOR? IS THE FEEDBACK UNRELENTING? WHEN YOU DO CHANGE, IS THERE ALWAYS ONE MORE DEMAND? DOES THE FEEDBACK GIVER TAKE THE RELATIONSHIP HOSTAGE? ARE THEY ISSUING WARNINGS—OR MAKING THREATS? IS IT ALWAYS YOU WHO HAS TO CHANGE? ARE YOUR VIEWS AND FEELINGS A LEGITIMATE PART OF THE RELATIONSHIP?
WHERE BOUNDARIES WOULD HELP: SOME COMMON RELATIONSHIP PATTERNS
THE CONSTANT CRITIC HATE-LOVE-HATE RELATIONSHIPS RENOVATION RELATIONSHIPS BUT WAIT, DOES THAT MEAN . . . ?
TURNING AWAY FEEDBACK WITH GRACE AND HONESTY
BE TRANSPARENT: ACTUALLY TELL THEM BE FIRM—AND APPRECIATIVE REDIRECT UNHELPFUL COACHING USE “AND” BE SPECIFIC ABOUT YOUR REQUEST DESCRIBE CONSEQUENCES
YOU HAVE A DUTY TO MITIGATE THE COST TO OTHERS
INQUIRE ABOUT, AND ACKNOWLEDGE, THE IMPACT ON THEM COACH THEM TO DEAL WITH THE UNCHANGED YOU PROBLEM SOLVE TOGETHER
11 | NAVIGATE THE CONVERSATION
KEYFRAMES OF THE CONVERSATION THE ARC OF THE CONVERSATION: OPEN-BODY-CLOSE OPEN BY GETTING ALIGNED
CLARIFY PURPOSE, CHECK STATUS
1. Is This Feedback? If So, What Kind? 2. Who Decides? 3. Is This Final or Negotiable?
YOU CAN INFLUENCE THE FRAME AND AGENDA
BODY: FOUR SKILLS FOR MANAGING THE CONVERSATION
LISTEN FOR WHAT’S RIGHT (AND WHY THEY SEE IT DIFFERENTLY)
Your Internal Voice Is Crucial
Triggered: From Assistant to Bodyguard When Empathy Shuts Down
What Helps? Listen with a Purpose
Prepare to Listen Find the Trigger Patterns And Then Negotiate
Listening’s Second Purpose: To Let Them Know You Hear Them Beware Hot Inquiry
ASSERT WHAT’S LEFT OUT
Shift from “I’m Right” to “Here’s What’s Left Out” Common Assertion Mistakes
Truth Mistakes Relationship Mistakes Identity Mistakes
BE YOUR OWN PROCESS REFEREE
Process Moves: Diagnose, Describe, Propose
PROBLEM SOLVE TO CREATE POSSIBILITIES
Create Possibilities Dig for Underlying Interests
Three Sources of Interests Behind Feedback
Generate Options
CLOSE WITH COMMITMENT PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER: A CONVERSATION IN MOTION
AN EVALUATION CONVERSATION ABOUT RATINGS AND BONUSES
Version One Version Two Version Three Version Four: A More Skillful Conversation
12 | GET GOING • Five Ways to Take Action
NAME ONE THING
ASK: “WHAT’S ONE THING YOU SEE ME DOING THAT GETS IN MY OWN WAY?” LISTEN FOR THEMES ASK WHAT MATTERS TO THEM
TRY SMALL EXPERIMENTS
DON’T DECIDE, EXPERIMENT
Try It On Try It Out You May Be Surprised
IT’S NOT ALL-AND-ALWAYS
RIDE OUT THE J CURVE
TWO DECISION MAKERS INCREASE THE POSITIVE APPEAL OF CHANGE
Make It Social Keep Score
INCREASE THE COST OF NOT CHANGING
Tie Yourself to the Mast Recognize the J Curve
COACH YOUR COACH
WHAT COACHING YOUR COACH DOESN’T MEAN TALK ABOUT “FEEDBACK AND YOU” DISCUSS PREFERENCES, ROLES, AND MUTUAL EXPECTATIONS HIERARCHY AND TRUST DON’T BECOME A GIMME-FEEDBACK FANATIC YOUR COACH CAN HELP YOU GET IN SYNC WHEN THE PERSON BEING COACHED IS THE BOSS
INVITE THEM IN
A GOOD LISTENER ASKS FOR HELP A FRUSTRATED ADVISER OPENS UP PERFECT FEEDBACK FOR THE PERFECT PERSON SHIFTING MIRRORS
We Triangulate for Comfort, but Not Coaching Hank Has a Hunch Make Two Lists to Stay on Track
13 | PULL TOGETHER • Feedback in Organizations
THERE ARE NO PERFECT FEEDBACK SYSTEMS
CAN’T LIVE WITH IT, CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT IT
WHAT LEADERSHIP AND HR CAN DO
1. DON’T JUST TRUMPET BENEFITS, EXPLAIN TRADEOFFS 2. SEPARATE APPRECIATION, COACHING, AND EVALUATION 3. PROMOTE A CULTURE OF LEARNERS
Highlight Learning Stories Cultivate Growth Identities Discuss Second Scores Create Multitrack Feedback Leverage Positive Social Norming
WHAT TEAM LEADERS AND FEEDBACK GIVERS CAN DO
1. MODEL LEARNING, REQUEST COACHING 2. AS GIVERS, MANAGE MINDSET AND IDENTITY 3. BE AWARE OF HOW INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES COLLIDE IN ORGANIZATIONS
WHAT RECEIVERS CAN DO
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS NOTES ON SOME RELEVANT ORGANIZATIONS ABOUT THE AUTHORS NOTES ROAD MAP
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion