Deep Listening - Impact beyond words - Oscar Trimboli
Un pódcast de Oscar Trimboli
159 Episodo
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The Five Levels of Listening - Listening for the Context
Publicado: 30/8/2019 -
The Five Levels of Listening – Listening to the Content
Publicado: 16/8/2019 -
Listening to the research
Publicado: 5/7/2019 -
The Five Levels of Listening – Listening to Yourself (Part 2)
Publicado: 24/5/2019 -
The Five Levels of Listening - Listening to Yourself (Part 1)
Publicado: 12/4/2019 -
The Five Levels of Listening - The big picture
Publicado: 15/3/2019 -
Oscar's life of listening
Publicado: 22/2/2019 -
An evolution in Deep Listening
Publicado: 15/2/2019 -
Curing cancer with listening rather than chemotherapy Dr Bronwyn King
Publicado: 25/1/2019 -
Listen like FBI negotiator Chris Voss
Publicado: 11/1/2019 -
How a Chief Listening Officer helps patients recover
Publicado: 21/12/2018 -
Listen to your audience like SXSW
Publicado: 7/12/2018 -
Thank you
Publicado: 6/12/2018 -
Why your doctor needs to listen deeply
Publicado: 19/10/2018 -
How listening can change a point of view
Publicado: 5/10/2018 -
How to listen across generations
Publicado: 21/9/2018 -
Listen like a journalist
Publicado: 7/9/2018 -
Hearing aids to help people listen
Publicado: 10/8/2018 -
Listen like an anthropologist
Publicado: 3/8/2018 -
Listening to the unsaid in your audience
Publicado: 13/7/2018
The world is a noisy place where you fight to be heard every day. Despite the fact that we have been taught at home and at school how to speak, none of us has had any training in how to listen. Multiple academic studies have shown that between 50% and 55% of your working day is spent listening, yet only 2% of people have been trained in how to listen. We feel frustrated, isolated and confused because we aren't heard. As a speaker, it takes absolutely no training to notice when someone isn't listening - they're distracted, they interrupt or drift away as you talk. Yet the opposite is also true, without any training in how to listen we struggle to stay connected with the speaker and the discussion. This results in unproductive workplaces where people fight to be heard and need to repeat themselves constantly, send emails to confirm what they said and then have follow-up meetings to ensure what was said was actually heard by those in the meeting. It's a downward spiral that drains energy from every conversation and reduces the productivity of organisations. This podcast is about creating practical tips and techniques to improve your daily listening. Listen for free
