What is listening?
Not only does listening enhance your ability to learn and understand messages from another person, done well, empathetic listening can make you a better parent, partner, colleague, CEO, manager, friend, therapist or sibling. It also makes the experience of speaking to you more enjoyable to other people.
Listening demonstrates that you respect others, and is the first step in building trust, rapport and recognising the contributions of others.
What is the purpose of listening to others?
How is 'Listening' and sound linked to our health as individuals and as a species?
Julian Treasure at his 2011 TedTalk; "5 ways to listen better" encouraged the audience to "listen consciously to live fully for connection, understanding and peace".
Watch the full TedTalk below:
Listening has its enemies
Our findings support existing evidence that managers who listen well are perceived as people leaders, generate more trust, instill higher job satisfaction, and increase their team's creativity. Yet, if listening is so beneficial for employees and for organisations, why is it not more prevalent in the workplace? Why are most employees (managers included) not listened to in the way they want?
Research shows that a few barriers often stand in the way:
Several managers reported in a study that, when they tried listening to employees who they'd confronted about poor attendance, they learned that these employees were struggling with supporting a family member through illness and hardship. This realisation threatened managers' attitudes and views about themselves - an experience called cognitive dissonance that can be difficult to navigate.
Tips for becoming a better listener
Listening resembles a muscle. It requires training, persistence, effort, and most importantly, the intention to become a good listener. It requires clearing your mind from internal and external noise and, if this isn't possible, postponing a conversation for when you can truly listen without being distracted.
Here are some best practices:
Empathetic listening requires that listeners quell the brain's biological need for efficiency, prediction and planning and employ a purely bottom-up process to become truly open to the input of others.
As Ram Charan concluded, "Truly empathetic listening requires courage - the willingness to let go of the old habits and embrace new ones. But once acquired, these listening habits are the very skills that turn would-be leaders into true ones. If we each are indeed creating our own individual perceptions, perhaps empathetic listening is what enables those perceptions to dovetail into collective understanding. Therefore, instead of remaining helpless because of the limitations of his or her own experience and knowledge, instead of having to discover what others have already discovered, instead of exploring the false trails they explored and repeating their errors, he or she can go on from where they left off".
Language and empathetic listening makes effective, sustainable change possible.
Research findings also suggest that attentive and non-judgemental listening seems to make an employee more relaxed, more self-aware of their strengths and weaknesses, and more willing to reflect in a non-defensive manner. This can make employees more likely to cooperate (versus compete) with other colleagues, as they become more interested in sharing their attitudes, not not necessarily in trying to persuade others to adopt them, and more open to considering other points of view.
This is relevant to all employees at all levels. Listening is about listening to others, being listened to and listening to ourselves.
Resources:
Ferry, K (2023) 'The Science of Listening'. Briefings Magazine.
Itzchakov, G. Kluger, A.N. (May 17, 2018) 'The Power of Listening in Helping People Change'. Harvard Business School.
Treasure, J. (2011) '5 Ways to Listen Better'. Ted Global 2011, July.
Darwin Head Office
Level 2, The Avenue
217/12 Salonika Street
Parap NT 0820
(above Karma Cafe)
P: (08) 8941 1752
E:
easadarwin@easa.org.au
Toll Free: 1800 193 123 (NT only)
Alice Springs
Jock Nelson Centre
10/16 Hartley Street,
Alice Springs NT 0870
P: (08) 8953 4225
E: easaalicesprings@easa.org.au
Katherine
Katherine Regional Training Centre
Block F, Room 3
19 Second Street
Katherine NT 0850
P: (08) 8941 1752
E: easadarwin@easa.org.au
Visiting Service
Jabiru
Coolalinga
Tennant Creek - Barkly Business Hub
Nhulunbuy
EASA acknowledges and pays respect to the Traditional Owners of the country in which we work and live and recognise their continuing connection to land, waters and community.
We will stand with them to care for and protect their lands.
Thank you for contacting us.
We will get back to you as soon as possible.
Oops, there was an error sending your message.
Please try again later.