Ep 136: How Radical Candor Can Make You A Better Leader at Work and in Life

Ep 136: How Radical Candor Can Make You A Better Leader at Work and in Life

Kim Scott is the New York Bestselling Author of a new book, Radical Candor: Be a Kickass Boss without Losing Your Humanity Kim is also the co-founder of Candor, Inc and co-host of the podcast Radical Candor. She led AdSense, YouTube, and Doubleclick Online Sales and Operations at Google and then joined Apple to develop and teach a leadership seminar. Kim has been a CEO coach at Dropbox, Qualtrics, Twitter, and several other tech companies

Radical Candor is demonstrated when one cares personally for someone and also challenges them directly. Great bosses can be source of growth and joy. It is evident that they care about you. They will also tell things that you need to hear. The framework consists of four points:

  1. Radical Candor – praise and then criticize
  2. Obnoxious Aggression – when you challenge but don't care (praise that doesn't seem sincere or criticism that isn't delivered kindly)
  3. Manipulative insincerity – when you neither care nor challenge (non-specific praise or criticism that is not clear)
  4. Ruinous Empathy – compassion without providing honest feedback

How does Radical Candor contribute to an employee experience? It will give you a witness to your life and it will help you grow in the way you want to grow. When you are doing great work, you want it recognized, when you mess up, someone will let you know.

Scott gives four steps on how to get to Radical Candor. First, come up with a go-to question. People don't want to tell you so it's difficult. Think of a question. For example: Is there anything I could do or stop doing that would make it easier to work with me? Whatever question works for you - figure out how to ask it

Second, embrace the discomfort. The only way to get the feedback is to make it more uncomfortable for them not to answer. So – after you ask the question – shut your mouth…count to 6…

Third,listen with the intent to understand - not to justify or respond. You cannot be defensive or you will not get any more feedback in the future from that person.

And finally, reward the candor. Give them a reward for telling you – if you agree with the feedback, fix the problem. And then tell the person and thank them for helping you. If you disagree, first of all focus on what you can agree with…then say I want to follow up in a few days. Then explain why you disagree. Sometimes the only reward is a fuller discussion of why you disagree.

Scott says some of the most common mistakes are showing employees care but not challenging them directly (Ruinous Empathy), getting so busy we fail to show we care personally or challenge directly and just flatter people – (Manipulative Insincerity), being reluctant to have 'getting to know you' conversations – these are the basis for the beginning of caring, and criticizing the feedback.

Do you have a 'bad boss'? No matter how terrible your boss is, you can be a good boss. You don't need to imitate yours. You can create a good micro culture.

Start

Kim Scott is the New York Bestselling Author of a new book, Radical Candor: Be a Kickass Boss without Losing Your Humanity Kim is also the co-founder of Candor, Inc and co-host of the podcast Radical Candor. She led AdSense, YouTube, and Doubleclick Online Sales and Operations at Google and then joined Apple to develop and teach a leadership seminar. Kim has been a CEO coach at Dropbox, Qualtrics, Twitter, and several other tech companies

Radical Candor is demonstrated when one cares personally for someone and also challenges them directly. Great bosses can be source of growth and joy. It is evident that they care about you. They will also tell things that you need to hear. The framework consists of four points:

  1. Radical Candor – praise and then criticize
  2. Obnoxious Aggression – when you challenge but don't care (praise that doesn't seem sincere or criticism that isn't delivered kindly)
  3. Manipulative insincerity – when you neither care nor challenge (non-specific praise or criticism that is not clear)
  4. Ruinous Empathy – compassion without providing honest feedback

How does Radical Candor contribute to an employee experience? It will give you a witness to your life and it will help you grow in the way you want to grow. When you are doing great work, you want it recognized, when you mess up, someone will let you know.

Scott gives four steps on how to get to Radical Candor. First, come up with a go-to question. People don't want to tell you so it's difficult. Think of a question. For example: Is there anything I could do or stop doing that would make it easier to work with me? Whatever question works for you - figure out how to ask it

Second, embrace the discomfort. The only way to get the feedback is to make it more uncomfortable for them not to answer. So – after you ask the question – shut your mouth…count to 6…

Third,listen with the intent to understand - not to justify or respond. You cannot be defensive or you will not get any more feedback in the future from that person.

And finally, reward the candor. Give them a reward for telling you – if you agree with the feedback, fix the problem. And then tell the person and thank them for helping you. If you disagree, first of all focus on what you can agree with…then say I want to follow up in a few days. Then explain why you disagree. Sometimes the only reward is a fuller discussion of why you disagree.

Scott says some of the most common mistakes are showing employees care but not challenging them directly (Ruinous Empathy), getting so busy we fail to show we care personally or challenge directly and just flatter people – (Manipulative Insincerity), being reluctant to have 'getting to know you' conversations – these are the basis for the beginning of caring, and criticizing the feedback.

Do you have a 'bad boss'? No matter how terrible your boss is, you can be a good boss. You don't need to imitate yours. You can create a good micro culture.

Start by soliciting feedback and understanding what would make your boss' job better. Ask if you can provide some criticize. If you can - create this culture with your own team - and then work with your boss to create it.

If you can't get to the point where you can get radical candor with your boss – if you can't criticize your boss, you might want to start to look for a new job.

What You Will Learn In This Episode

  • Do leaders need to find a purpose for their employees or is it the responsibility of the employees to find purpose in their work?
  • What makes a good employee?
  • Is it possible to learn to have career conversations?
  • Efficient workplace practice ideas
  • Why Kim Scott wrote her book
  • Examples of bad bosses and good bosses
  • How to have Radical Candor

by soliciting feedback and understanding what would make your boss' job better. Ask if you can provide some criticize. If you can - create this culture with your own team - and then work with your boss to create it.

If you can't get to the point where you can get radical candor with your boss – if you can't criticize your boss, you might want to start to look for a new job.

Things you will learn:

  • Do leaders need to find a purpose for their employees or is it the responsibility of the employees to find purpose in their work?
  • What makes a good employee?
  • Is it possible to learn to have career conversations?
  • Efficient workplace practice ideas
  • Why Kim Scott wrote her book
  • Examples of bad bosses and good bosses
  • How to have Radical Candor

Avsnitt(1179)

Sparks: Think Beyond Borders: How to Cultivate a Global Citizen Mindset With Solvay CEO Ilham Kadri

Sparks: Think Beyond Borders: How to Cultivate a Global Citizen Mindset With Solvay CEO Ilham Kadri

Every great leader knows that the world is bigger than your comfort zone. They don't just surround themselves with people who think like them. They seek out different perspectives, challenge their own...

28 Mars 20256min

Bestselling Author Reveals How The World's Best Investors Think & Why Leaders Need to Pay Attention!

Bestselling Author Reveals How The World's Best Investors Think & Why Leaders Need to Pay Attention!

Most people see investing as just stocks and numbers, but the world's greatest investors approach it differently. Their biggest lessons go beyond money—they're about how to think, make smarter decisio...

24 Mars 202559min

Sparks: Three Strategies That Help Your Career and Why Usual Career Advice Do Not

Sparks: Three Strategies That Help Your Career and Why Usual Career Advice Do Not

Most career advice is useless. "Follow your passion." "Wait for the right opportunity." "Success happens when you get lucky." These are some of the most common (and misleading) career clichés. And if ...

21 Mars 202510min

Betterworks CEO Doug Dennerline on Why Annual Performance Reviews Are Broken

Betterworks CEO Doug Dennerline on Why Annual Performance Reviews Are Broken

Traditional performance reviews are broken—outdated, ineffective, and dreaded by employees and managers alike. Many companies scrapped them, only to bring them back in new forms. Why? What's really dr...

17 Mars 202551min

Sparks: Vulnerable Leadership: Revealing the Secret Formula to Any Leader's Success

Sparks: Vulnerable Leadership: Revealing the Secret Formula to Any Leader's Success

Vulnerability alone WON'T make you a great leader. Yes, vulnerability is key to trust and connection. Leaders are told to be open, admit mistakes, and be authentic. But vulnerability without leadershi...

14 Mars 202510min

Is AI Taking Over The World? Not So Fast! - Chief AI Officer of PwC US, Dan Priest

Is AI Taking Over The World? Not So Fast! - Chief AI Officer of PwC US, Dan Priest

AI is moving faster than most leaders can keep up. If you're not leveraging it, you're already behind. But AI adoption isn't as simple as plugging in new tech. While some companies are already using i...

10 Mars 202555min

Sparks: Understanding Employee Experience: How It Results in Real ROI and How to Create Truly Engaged Teams

Sparks: Understanding Employee Experience: How It Results in Real ROI and How to Create Truly Engaged Teams

The workplace has evolved. It's no longer about employees convincing companies to hire them—it's about companies proving why employees should want to stay. The game has changed, and so must leadership...

7 Mars 20256min

The Power of HR: How CHROs Will Shape the Future of Work

The Power of HR: How CHROs Will Shape the Future of Work

Join the world's top CHROs who are a part of Future of Work Leaders. An exclusive group of people leaders from around the world who are moving beyond traditional HR to focus on the future of work, emp...

5 Mars 20254min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

framgangspodden
varvet
rss-jossan-nina
rss-svart-marknad
svd-tech-brief
badfluence
rss-borsens-finest
uppgang-och-fall
avanzapodden
bathina-en-podcast
fill-or-kill
rss-dagen-med-di
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
lastbilspodden
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
borsmorgon
bilar-med-sladd
24fragor
tabberaset