The Problem With Being “Too Nice” at Work | Tessa West | TED

1,344,260 views ・ 2024-05-29

TED


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00:03
So why is it the case
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that when we are feeling the most anxious, uncomfortable,
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socially awkward versions of ourselves,
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when our hearts are pounding and our palms are sweating
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and we feel like crawling out of our skin,
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are we also the most nice and often generic to the people around us?
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I'm a social psychologist,
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and I've been studying the science of uncomfortable social interactions
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for over 20 years.
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So everything from new roommate relationships,
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negotiations,
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upward feedback with your boss to doctor patient-interactions,
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those moments where you need to break in and say,
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"Yeah, for the last 20 minutes,
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I actually have no idea what you were talking about.
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Can we maybe rewind a bit?"
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And to study these things,
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I look at three main outcomes.
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First, I look at what people say, the things we can control,
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how friendly we are,
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how much we complement one another,
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how much we give gracious feedback.
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Second, I look at the things that are tougher for us to control,
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our nonverbal behaviors, things like fidgeting,
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avoiding eye contact, playing with our hair,
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doodling even,
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even our tone of voice.
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And then I look at the things that are impossible for us to control
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our under-the-skin responses,
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our physiology, our cardiovascular reactivity,
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things like blood pressure, heart rate,
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these types of things
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that we often don't even really realize that we're feeling.
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And the way I do this is by having people come into the lab
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and interact with each other in a bunch of different settings,
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and I have them negotiate with each other,
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I have them get acquainted with each other.
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And often it's the case that in these interactions,
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people are required to give some form of feedback to their partner.
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Tell them honestly what they're thinking or feeling,
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come in with an offer for a negotiation,
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tell them what they could have done better next time.
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And I think we all kind of know what it feels like
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to be in one of these studies.
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You might not know what it would really feel like to be in one of my studies.
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There's a lot of equipment involved,
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but we plug people up to all of these things
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to measure these under-the-skin responses.
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We videotape them to capture those behaviors that I just mentioned.
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Now, to get us all into this mindset of what it's like to feel awkward,
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but maybe potentially a little bit nice,
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I want you all to think
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about what was the last awkward interaction that you had.
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OK, so keep this thought in your mind.
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You can think about it for a few moments,
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because in a couple minutes,
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I'm actually going to randomly call on someone based on your seat
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to have you come up
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and share your story of what that moment felt like.
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So before we do that,
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I just want you all to kind of get a sense of the typical pattern that we see
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when people are engaging in these interactions.
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So we bring them into the lab,
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we hook them up to all this equipment
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and within moments, within the first 20 seconds,
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we start to see those stress responses that I mentioned.
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Their heart rate goes up, their blood pressure increases.
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It doesn't take much to get people to start to feel anxious.
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Next, we see it in those nonverbal behaviors.
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They start to fidget,
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they avoid eye contact,
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they pull their chair a couple inches away
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from the person who's sitting next to them,
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in an effort just to get a little bit more distance.
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One of my favorite findings is in doctor-patient interactions,
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uncomfortable doctors,
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they look down at the chart more,
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or they look more at the computer screen
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instead of making eye contact with those patients.
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So let's all return to your awkward moment.
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Does everyone have an awkward moment in mind or thinking about one?
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How many of you have increases in your heart rate,
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maybe your palms are sweating?
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You can start to feel yourself getting a little tingly
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just with the mere thought of being called upon today?
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Hey, a few of you.
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How many people would actually be excited about that opportunity?
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Not -- OK, same people.
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(Laughter)
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How many of you, if I did call on you, would walk up here,
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you would grin through gritted teeth like this
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and you would do it even though you secretly hated me the whole time?
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A few of you.
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Don't worry, I'm not going to actually do this.
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This was all just a ruse to teach you a lesson
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which is, in uncomfortable social interactions,
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we often don't have a social script of what to do.
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Instead of telling people what we really think, what we really feel,
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we do the nice thing that makes us incredibly uncomfortable.
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Now one of my favorite findings illustrating this effect
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is in the context of negotiations.
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I went to a major firm and I brought people together
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who were used to working with one another,
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and we had them engage in a negotiation.
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And at the end of it,
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there was a winner and there was a loser.
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So we said to the winner,
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you know, this is really a study about feedback.
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And what we would like you to do is give some constructive feedback
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to the person who just lost.
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What are some things that they could do better next time?
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What are some potential missteps?
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How many of you think that that's what they actually did,
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they really followed our instructions?
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OK, nobody.
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[You] can see where this is going.
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What we found is that even when we're talking to someone
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who just lost a negotiation to us, we tend to bend over backwards.
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We say things like,
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"The way you made that really early offer and didn't even ask for a counter,
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that was amazing."
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Or "It was so great how you didn't even ask me anything about my side,
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or what I was willing to kind of, you know,
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change on or be flexible on."
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People layered on the compliments
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to someone who they just beat in a negotiation,
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telling them how great they are.
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So often these kinds of interactions
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that take the form of what I’ll call “anxious niceness,”
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they involve a lot of compliments,
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telling people what they do well in a very general, non-specific way.
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But a lot of my work actually looks
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at what's it like to be on the receiving end
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of these types of interactions.
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How do you feel when you interact with someone over and over again
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who's giving off these kinds of brittle smiles?
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These are typically the kinds of facial expressions
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that we actually see from people, kind of sneering,
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a little bit of side eye,
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you know, arms crossed, these types of things.
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After a lifetime of interacting with someone
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who engages in anxious niceness,
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what we find is that most people on the receiving end
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are racial minorities.
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They are disadvantaged group members,
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they are the type of people
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that we are worried about appearing prejudiced in front of,
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and that anxiety is regulated
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by being over-the-top nice to these folks.
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We also find that these individuals tend to be more synchronized to
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and attentive to the how-we-say-it piece
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than the what-we-say part.
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So in one study, we had Black and white Americans
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interact with each other in a cross-race interaction,
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and we brought them into the lab
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and we measured the physiology of both partners.
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What this allowed us to do is capture the degree
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to which people stress.
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Those under-the-skin responses can actually be caught by their partners.
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And what we expected to find
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is that the Black participants would become more synchronized,
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physiologically, to those whites.
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They'd be more attuned to those, kind of, nonverbal signals of anxiety.
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And that's exactly what we found.
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The more anxious those white participants appeared,
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the more they fidgeted, the more they avoided eye contact,
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even the higher their cortisol reactivity,
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indicating some real deep, kind of, under-the-skin stress response,
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the more those Black participants became linked up to them over time.
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And I think this finding is a little bit terrifying.
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I think it means that we often think of our own stress and our own physiology
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as independent of the people we interact with,
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but our bodies are not always our own,
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our physiology is not always our own.
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And if you spend a lifetime interacting with people who are so nice to you,
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in an effort to control their anxiety,
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you could potentially catch that stress.
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It could negatively affect your bodies.
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Now often what we find is the type of feedback
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that people are actually getting
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isn't always super direct.
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Sometimes it's a little bit patronizing.
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So you could probably see where I'm going with this.
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Having over-the-top positive nice feedback can harm your performance,
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it can make it very difficult for you to climb up,
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difficult to kind of know where you stand, what you should do better,
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what you should stop doing,
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but can also damage people in ways that we often don't think about.
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It can affect their reputations outside of the interaction context.
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So imagine the case that you're one of these people
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who loves giving this general, nice feedback,
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and you have someone who works for you,
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and a recruiter calls, maybe a past employee,
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a recruiter calls you,
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or someone asks you for a letter of recommendation,
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the kinds of things you're going to put are going to be like,
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"They're are real team player."
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"They have great energy at work."
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Generic things.
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Yes, they're nice, but they are not very telling
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about what that person is really like.
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And what we find is that the readers of these things, at best,
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think to themselves,
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"Wow, they must not really know this person at all.
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I don't even know what this means."
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At worst, they think to themselves,
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"Well, they probably have some real opinions.
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They're just afraid to share them."
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So these kinds of general positive feedback
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tend to actually harm people's reputation when they're not backed up with real data.
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So I think we have to then think
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about what is the solution to this problem.
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Is it the case that we should all just be meaner to each other
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in an effort to be more direct?
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I don't think that's the case at all.
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I think there are some things we can do,
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and I'm going to highlight three of them,
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to improve the degree to which we give clear,
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consistent feedback to people,
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particularly in the workplace.
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So first we need to ask ourselves the question,
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how many people are on board with this niceness culture, really?
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There's a bit of a plural ignorance that goes on
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when we think about how nice we are to people at work.
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What I've found is that for every one person
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who loves this kind of general, generic, nice feedback,
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there's another person who feels like it's lazy,
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who feels like it's not helpful.
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And I actually learned this lesson the hard way
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from one of my students recently.
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She was giving a practice talk in my lab,
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and she spent weeks and weeks preparing it,
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probably harder than anyone else I'd ever seen
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on preparing a talk like this.
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And then she went and gave it, and she came back and I said,
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"How did the talk go? Did it go well?"
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She said, "It was terrible. It was horrible.
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It was the worst experience."
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I said, "Well, what happened?"
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And she said, "All I got were a bunch of 'Great jobs,'
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‘That was interesting’
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and then some clap emojis from the people on Zoom.
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Not a single person asked a tough question," she said.
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And I had this moment where I realized
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that positive feedback can come across as lazy feedback.
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It can come across as disengaged feedback.
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And so if we want to change this culture,
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we actually need to first do a quick pulse
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of how many people are actually more interested in doing the tougher,
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constructive forms of this type of feedback.
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So you might be thinking to yourselves,
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"Alright, I might be on board with this idea of tough,
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yet honest feedback.
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So what should I do?
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Should I go to people and say, ’Alright, do you want me to be ... nice
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or honest and useful?'"
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No, do not do this.
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You will, by and large, get a lot of people telling you,
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"You know, I actually just want to keep it nice.
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That just feels a lot more comfortable for me."
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What I learned in my work
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is that this process I've been talking about,
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about giving anxious, nice feedback,
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is just as much about the feedback receiver
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as it is about the feedback giver.
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People get into a bit of a dance with each other.
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I give you nice feedback, you kind of know it's BS,
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but you smile and say thank you and then, you know, go on your way.
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It takes a lot to break that interpersonal cycle.
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And to do that,
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we have to think about how we actually want
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to frame our feedback to other people.
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So instead of asking people,
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"Should I be nice or honest and useful?"
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What I like to do is ask people,
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"Can I give you feedback on a couple dimensions?"
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Can we think about feedback as general versus specific?
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Another dimension would be,
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can we think about things that you're doing well
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you should keep doing
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versus things that "please stop."
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And I'll get in a moment
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to how we can actually frame that form of negative feedback.
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So I think a lot of us are actually pretty decent
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at the positive general feedback, right?
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"I love how timely you are."
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But what does that mean?
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It could mean that you're on time for meetings,
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it could mean that you turn your work in on time,
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it could mean it in a very global way of,
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"You sure managed to do a lot in five years."
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Or it could mean something so specific,
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like, “It’s so helpful that you send in your reports by 5 pm,”
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but I don't really want to comment
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on all those other kinds of forms of being timely.
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And when we do the kind of general feedback that is negative,
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the "please stop," we need it to be specific.
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So kind of, one of the more common forms of general negative feedback people get
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is "You don't take enough initiative here."
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How many of you have ever been told, “Please take some more initiative”?
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I think most of us at some point in our lives have experienced this.
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What does that mean?
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Does it mean I should speak up more in meetings?
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Does it mean I should be quicker on my email?
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Does it mean I should do your job without complaining about doing your job,
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which is often what it actually means?
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We have to break it down into the specifics,
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and that could include things like,
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"Don't wait for Tom to ask if you found any errors
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before you say, 'Tom, I found some errors.'"
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Now an important piece here is what people should do instead.
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Often if we get to the stage
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where we're comfortable enough telling people,
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“I have a specific, critical, negative thing I want to tell you,” --
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“Please stop interrupting people,”
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you know, not telling Tom about the errors,
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showing up five minutes late with coffee
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so I know what you were doing during those five minutes --
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we don’t tend to replace them with anything,
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but we know from our personal lives that replacing negative critical,
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"please stop" behaviors is absolutely essential.
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So I want to take you out of the workplace for a moment.
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And we're going to go to the bedroom.
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Yes, I said we're going to the bedroom.
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So imagine it's the case that you just had sex with someone for the first time.
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OK, we're all there, we've done a lot of mentalizing today.
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And you turn to the person and you say,
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"Those last three things you just did back there,
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no good.
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They're all bad.
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Didn't like any of them."
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They're going to look at you in shock and surprise and say,
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"Well, what should I do instead," right?
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And until we're ready to actually fire the person
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or kick them out of bed
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or fire them from our team,
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we have to focus on those replacement behaviors,
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what they should be doing instead.
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And I think as we think through kind of, scaling this type of feedback,
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it can be very scary to make these types of change.
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What I found is that cultures of anxious, nice feedback are ingrained.
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They're systemic,
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they are deeply embedded in a community,
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in the workplace, in a team,
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even in dyadic interpersonal relationships.
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And so to break that cycle, you have to start small,
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you need to start neutral.
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And by neutral I mean things
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that are not scary to hear critical feedback on.
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You might be thinking to yourself,
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what's some neutral feedback that you could give me
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at the end of my talk?
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How about "I would switch the order of the points on your talk"
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or "I would change the font."
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These types of feedback are specific, and so they're useful,
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but they're not scary to deliver
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and they're not actually scary to receive.
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And what we find is that when people take these baby steps
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to work up to this type of feedback,
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they are much less anxious in the delivery.
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So those behaviors I opened with of people fidgeting,
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engaging in what we call a brittle smile,
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avoiding eye contact,
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they actually go down
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and so do those stress responses
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when you know and you're anticipating giving this kind of feedback
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that isn't going to sting.
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And I think as you work through this,
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I don't want to be a proponent of killing niceness entirely.
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I think it's actually really important
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to put niceness in the delivery of your feedback,
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and that can come across in a bunch of different ways.
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It can come across as by showing you're engaged, you listened.
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You know what the person's actually trying to do,
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you're aligned with their goals.
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The first time I actually got this type of critical nice feedback
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was after a talk I gave
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and the person came up to me and she said,
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"Can I give you some feedback?"
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And immediately my heart started pounding.
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I'm like, oh great, here we go.
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No one likes hearing, "Can I give you some feedback?"
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And she opened with three things that she thought I did well.
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"I really liked points one, two and three you made in that talk.
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They really resonated with me.
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But you have this habit when you're concentrating
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of looking up and to the right,
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and so you spent half the talk kind of staring at the ceiling
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or the exit sign in this case,
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instead of making eye contact with the audience.
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And it's distracting and it creates a distance."
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So I thought a little bit about it
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with my eyes probably rolled up inside my head,
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and I thought, OK, I can actually make that change.
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It doesn't feel super scary.
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And so I did.
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I made that change, and I thought about how she framed that feedback
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through this culture of niceness.
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So I want to wish you all luck
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on your journey of trying to change culture of feedback,
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killing anxious niceness,
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and hopefully have some concrete steps to help you move forward.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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