Communicating Consequences
| About the Author |


Kerry
Patterson is coauthor of the New York Times bestseller, Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High. more
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Dear Authors,
I was wondering if you could
address how to make it safe
to discuss something when
certain answers really are
going to result in very bad
consequences?
I understand the need to
master my stories, but sometimes the
truthful answer is the one
with negative consequences.
For example: You suspect an
employee of having lied on
his or her resume. You hope
it's not true, but there is
a lot of reason to think it
is. How can you make it safe
to talk about if the person
knows that admitting the
truth could get him or her
demoted or fired?
Signed,
Hopeful but Worried

Dear Hopeful,
This question gets at the
very foundation of safety.
You want the other person to
talk openly and honestly
about a possible problem,
and this requires that he or
she feels safe. And yet you
fear if he or she does talk
openly, it could easily
result in a serious negative
consequence. How can that
be safe?
Let's
look at two elements of
safety. First, can a person
express his or her opinions
without others jumping all
over what he or she has to
say? Will his or her ideas
be listened to in an
atmosphere of curiosity? Do
others desire to learn, or
do they just want to look
good or “win”? Will the
discussion be propelled
along by the merits of each
argument, or will power,
position, and politics play
a bigger role than the
facts?
People
need to know that if they do
open up, their thoughts will
be treated with respect and
genuine curiosity. We all
make better decisions when
the pool of shared meaning
is filled with a complete
array of thoughts, feelings,
opinions, and theories. Each
opinion must be given a fair
hearing. Each must stand up
to honest and careful
scrutiny. Facts must rule
over politics. This type of
safety helps people make the
best decisions and lies at
the heart of many of the
skills we cover in the book
Crucial Conversations.
But
there’s another element of
safety that gets to the
heart of your question: “But
what if honesty leads to
severe negative
consequences?”
The
safest world is one where
individuals are held
accountable for the
consequences of their own
actions. While an individual
may shrink in the face of
criticism, and it may be
easier in the short run to
avoid paying the
consequences, it is always
better for the individual as
well as the society at large
if people are connected to
the consequences of their
own behavior. People can’t
learn and organizations
can’t progress if the
feedback loop connecting
behavior to outcome is in
any way blocked or tainted.
Allowing individuals to face
difficult consequences can
be hard. For example, as
much as a parent might
desire to celebrate a child’s
honesty for having the
courage to admit to his
or her wrong actions by
glossing over the actions
themselves—such misplaced
mercy not only keeps the
individual from learning and
growing, but insults honesty
itself. You don’t need offer
others a “free ticket” in
order to protect them or
make their life easier, when
what you’re really doing is
making the situation easier
for yourself while
potentially harming them in
the long run.
I
broached this very topic
last month in a conversation
with the renowned
psychologist Albert Bandura
at his office at Stanford
University. At the time I
was trying to understand how
Mimi Silbert, known for
helping criminals turn their
lives around, had been able
to create a culture where
ex-felons “ratted on each
other.” At her facility in
San Francisco, if you
observe someone doing
something against the rules
or the law, you turn him or
her in—on the spot. This flies in the face
of the unwritten rule to
never rat on a buddy—so how
has she been able to
successfully turn this norm
on its ear?
“It’s
because she’s not asking
them to rat on each other,”
explained Bandura. “It’s
because she’s asking them to
care enough about the other
person to hold him or her
accountable. When you love
others, you don’t turn a
blind eye to their mistakes.
You provide the other person
an opportunity to learn and
grow.”
Now,
this isn’t a lesson in spin
or semantics, it’s a
philosophical stance. First,
you make it safe for others
by listening to what they
have to say. Second, you
create the ultimate safety
net by being consistent in
connecting behavior to
consequences, thus allowing
both the individual and the
organization to progress
unhindered. In the case of
people who have lied on
their resume, better to
learn from the experience
than to be rewarded for a
behavior that will not serve
them over the long run. Yes,
bringing the truth under the
harsh light of day could
hurt in the short run, but
isn’t that how we develop
character in the first
place? By doing what’s
right—even when it’s hard to
do?
Good
luck on what could be a true
test of character,
Kerry

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