I Have Some Questions...
🧠 Erik’s Take This conversation with Nicole O’Sullivan went deeper than expected—and that’s exactly why it mattered. What stood out wasn’t just how to sell better, but how to think better about people. Erik reflects on a core shift: most communication breakdowns aren’t tactical—they’re patterned. We’re not bad at conversations because we lack scripts; we struggle because we’re running unconscious habits around listening, judging, and responding. The real unlock? Interrupting those patterns long enough to actually see the human in front of you. That’s where influence starts—not in persuasion, but in presence. 🎯 Top Insights from the Interview * People don’t listen to understand—they listen to respond. Most conversations are pre-loaded with internal dialogue. Changing that pattern is the first step toward real connection. * Everyone operates from a deeply ingrained communication pattern. These patterns were learned early and reinforced over time. Leaders who recognize them can actually develop better communicators. * “Scratch the record” to break your brain’s pattern bias. Your brain wants shortcuts. Great leaders resist that instinct and stay curious instead of defaulting to assumptions. * Every person is a fingerprint—not a category. Treating people like patterns kills connection. Treating them like individuals builds influence. * The “Employee Bill of Rights” is a leadership baseline People should always know: * What they’re doing well * What to improve * What they’re aiming for * How they’re held accountable 🧩 The Personal Layer This conversation didn’t just reinforce ideas—it challenged assumptions. Erik reflects on how easy it is to slip into pattern recognition when interacting with others. It’s efficient, but it’s also dangerous. It strips away nuance and replaces curiosity with certainty. He also acknowledges something harder: everyone has been on both sides of this. * Being treated like a process instead of a person * Treating someone else the same way That tension is where growth lives. There’s also a deeper realization here: Great communication isn’t about saying the right thing—it’s about earning the right to be heard by making the other person feel seen first. 🧰 From Insight to Action * Audit your listening pattern. Ask yourself: Am I trying to respond… or trying to understand? * Practice “scratching the record” in real time. When you feel yourself labeling someone—pause and get curious instead. * Use the 4-question leadership framework in 1:1s. Make sure every team member can clearly answer: * What am I doing well? * What should I improve? * What’s my goal? * How am I measured? * Slow down your responses. The pause between listening and speaking is where better leadership decisions happen. * Replace judgment with a question. Instead of assuming, ask: “What might I be missing here?” 🗣️ Notable Quotes * “People don’t listen with the intent to engage—they listen with the intent to respond.” * “Your brain wants patterns. Leadership requires you to interrupt them.” * “Be curious, not judgmental.” * “Everyone is a fingerprint.” * “If people don’t feel seen, you don’t get influence.” 🔗 Links & Resources * Listen to Nicole O'Sullivan's Episode [https://podcast.languageofleadership.io/178-nicole-o-sullivan-what-if-a-mindset-shuft-could-add-56m-to-your-sales]
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