What Every “Tell-it-like-it-is†Person Needs to Know
Vannoy and Ross
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Do you know anyone who proudly exclaims, “You’ll never wonder what I’m trying to say, because I like to tell it like it is.†After hearing such claims, do you cringe and find yourself scratching your head, hoping for the day your tell-it-like-it-is friend gets wiser?
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Consider the young football player. In high school you can be an incredible success – perhaps even all-conference – if you just hit hard. But if you want to make the team at the college level, where everyone hits hard, then you have to add technique to your game.
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And if you want to play professionally some day? Then, you have to hit hard, demonstrate flawless technique and you have to play smart.
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In other words, simply hitting hard isn’t enough. In fact, such a narrow-minded approach is not even close to being effective, let alone professional.
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Why are so many tell-it-like-it-is people hard to work with? It’s like a roulette table as it’s always a gamble: You never know what you’re going to get. Are they going to tell it like it is…and leave a trail of destruction that hurts people, relationships and results? Where no one is inspired to share innovative ideas? Where confidence is bludgeoned?
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Or, can the tell-it-like-it-is person also demonstrate a style and show they’re smart enough…so when they speak they develop:
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Better ideas than their own
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The people around them
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Relationships with others in the room
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Greater confidence in the plan being created
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And improved performance and results?
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Our friend, Susan, inspired this: When someone says “I tell it like it is,†consider that we should respond: Let me tell you like it is: It is vital that when you share your perspective you do it in a way that moves thoughts, people and results forward.
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What style and smarts will you model as you tell it like it is?
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