As a small business owner, I bet you occasionally find yourself in stressful client interactions–you know those conversations that seem to escalate with no solution in sight. It’s not always easy to be kind and patient when someone is angry or upset. Working with difficult clients can be stressful and even overwhelming. They often have an unending list of requests, demands and deadlines, and they expect you to meet all of them. I know you are committed to your clients, for they are the reason you’re bringing your product or service to the world. With this in mind, if you can find new ways to handle stressful interactions, you can create new possibilities for your working relationships. In this article you’ll learn five steps to handle stressful client interactions with ease, to transform difficult situations into easeful ones. This will enable you to create a successful, profitable business that makes a real difference in the world. 1. Approach Each Client Situation in a “Charge Neutral” Manner In the process of dealing with a stressful client interaction (whether on the phone or face-to-face), quietly check in with yourself to see what it’s causing for you. If you’re feeling anxious or defensive or “revved up,” it’s helpful to become neutral quickly. Take a few deep breaths and focus your attention on your feet for a minute. This will shift your energy, disperse some of the adrenaline, and reduce the stress in the conversation so you can be more calm and productive during the interaction. 2. Honor Your Client’s Perspective You know the saying, “The Customer Is Always Right”? It’s quite true. Even if you don’t always agree with your client, it’s important to respect their perspective and needs. Set aside your own opinions and requirements. Allow yourself to honor your client by listening intently to what they are saying, then tell them that you’ve heard them and appreciate their concerns. By doing this, you begin to re-establish trust and truly honor the circumstances and problems they are experiencing. 3. Be Curious About Your Clients and Their Issues One of the best ways to build long-term success with a client is to find out more about the issues they have and what is making them upset. When you can step away from your own feelings and your own way of doing things, and instead stay curious about your clients, you can better understand them and can better fulfill their needs. Closely monitor your tone of voice and body language during your interaction. Stay open and inquisitive without fear or judgment. Doing slow, deep breathing (in and out of your nose with your mouth closed) allows you to slow down enough to get curious. 4. Ask Powerful, Clarifying Questions During a stressful interaction with a client, it’s a good idea to ask them some specific open-ended questions (in a charge-neutral fashion) to help you fully understand their concerns. This will help defuse the situation so that you can explore potential solutions to the problem. Examples of such questions are “What one thing would you like from me?” or “What is missing that you’re like to have included?” or “What questions do you have about this?” These types of questions will allow you to stay focused on them to resolve matters more quickly. 5. Create a Clear Agreement About the Resolution and Next Steps Once you’ve fully understood the particular situation and your client’s concerns, it’s helpful to suggest two possible solutions to the problem (clients appreciate it when they get to choose how a problem will get resolved. ) Once you agree on the solution, create a clear agreement around it (with specific, measurable and time-bound parameters) and also a clear set of next steps to implement the solution. Confirm with the client that it fits with their expectations. It’s absolutely essential that you can enter into a stressful client situation in an easeful way. If you have to step away from an interaction so that you can get your own focus and calmness back, then take that time. Simply trust that matters can be resolved in a calm manner. One of my clients did this when dealing with an angry customer in his eco-printing business. He momentarily changed his focus in the midst of a difficult conversation. He took a few breaths and consciously stayed very calm. He soon noticed that his customer actually calmed down as well. They quickly reengaged and came to a solution to the problem they were facing. By approaching the situation in a charge-neutral manner and tapping into his mind-body connection, my client was able to get himself and his customer to create the perfect result. With ease in mind, he brought a new lightness to the situation, producing wonderful new possibilities. I wish you well as you begin to look for ways to handle all your client interactions with ease. May you know joy, may you know peace and may you work with ease. Visit www. WorkWithEase. com to receive your free audio program entitled “7 Simple Strategies to End Work Stress and Overwhelm with Confidence. ”
Posts Tagged ‘Conversations’
5 Steps To Handle Stressful Client Interactions With Ease
December 31st, 2009Posted in Articles
Tags: 5 Steps Adrenaline Client Client Interaction Client Interactions Client Situation Conversations Deep Breaths Difficult Situations Ease Face To Face Five Steps Handle Interactions Neutral Manner New Ways Perspective Possibilities Profitable Business Respect Small Business Owner Steps Stress Stressful Working Relationships
How Children Learn Through Play
December 13th, 2009Lessons from books are great, but children learn through play far better than they do in other forms. There are several reasons for this. At the heart of it is their desire to learn. When learning is not so much work but is fun, children are more willing to participate. They want to jump in and have a good time. As a parent, the more that you can teach through play, the more that your child will retain later on. While some skills need to be taught formally, such as math facts and reading, there are still great ways to teach through play.
Children learn through various methods, but often their physical and social world teaches them the most. Even small infants learn this way. Parents can enhance a young child’s learning process by giving them a variety of ways to learn through sight, touch, taste and smell. For infants, play the games that children love, such as peek a boo and other interactions that teach cause and effect. It also teaches them how to interact socially with their families.
As children grow older, they still need stimulation. Remember, kids having fun gives them an added incentive to do the activity you want them to. Pretend play is one of the core elements of the development of imagination. Pack up a truck full of great costumes (you can pick these up very inexpensively after Halloween) and encourage both boys and girls to play. What you will find is that many of the role playing games they play now are direct reflections of the experiences they have had. For example, a child who may be going to daycare for the first time, may practice leaving her baby doll at a pretend daycare. The act is helpful, but the conversations they have of telling the doll that “mommy will be back very soon” will help them later to deal with their fears of being left. Encourage this type of play.
Child’s play through the years changes even more so. During preschool and kindergarten, one of the best ways to teach a child is through stories and pictures. They learn to interact with each other as well as with the outside world. For example, set the stage for a great adventure story. Read them the story during the morning hours. Then, give them a few ideas and let them act out the story in their own way. You can teach many of the fundamentals in this manner, everything from manners to helping those in need.
Other activities to encourage helping children learn through play include:
· Craft projects: they explore their talents and explore texture, dimension, color and shapes
· Dance: They explore their physical bodies and stay physically fit
· Building with blocks: Everything from wooden blocks to Lego’s helps children to learn structure, dimension, balance, and help them to grow their imagination.
· Drawing: Use various types of mediums from paints to pencil to help them to learn numbers, letters, shapes and much more
These activities can incorporate other skills, too. For example, perhaps an art project can center around a specific letter of the alphabet. Do not be elaborate, but do be dramatic.
Kids having fun is something you definitely want to consider for the long term. For example, children who are nine years old and up need to develop great reasoning skills and need to learn to think strategically. They also need to develop good social skills. Great ways for kids having fun through these lessons can be anything from fun science projects to advanced building sets done in teams and even 3-D puzzles. Encourage computer projects and video games as well. Unbelievably, the video game they love to play is teaching them great hand eye coordination (assuming that the content within it is appropriate. )
How children learn through play is really up to you, their parent. Encouraging them to play, pretend, and learn all go hand in hand. The skills most children learn at these early ages are not just their math facts and their ABC’s, but they are the foundations of how to learn, how to interact with other people, and how to explore, reason and strategize. These items will carry on with them throughout their lives.
Finding The Best Course To Learn Spanish
October 22nd, 2009Finding the best course to learn Spanish can be a daunting task, especially on the internet where there is so much to choose from. So, how do you find the best one? Here are a few things to consider when deciding which course is the best to help you learn Spanish:
1. Choose a Spanish course that offers interactive learning, where you actually participate and use your voice to repeat words and phrases out loud. This is important because it will help to reinforce the learning in your brain, and help you learn Spanish faster.
2. Choose a course that has Spanish learning games included. If you are doing something fun such as playing a game, you are much more likely to learn Spanish faster and easier because you are having fun. Anything is easier to learn when you’re having fun doing it!
3. Make sure the course has enough material and is complete. There are many courses that fall short in this area. You want to make sure there are enough exercises and lessons in the course to enable you to learn Spanish thoroughly enough to carry on conversations. Ideally, you want to find a course that offers beginner through advanced Spanish.
4. Look for a course that helps you learn Spanish with audio lessons, to help your ear get used to the sound of the language and help you pick up the accent faster.
5. Find a course developed by a native speaker. The chances are better that the course will include more “street lingo” of the language, which is much better for you. While it is ok to learn proper grammatical Spanish, you also want to learn Spanish that native speakers actually speak. After all, that is why you are learning Spanish in the first place, to be able to converse with native Spanish speaking people.
6. Compare prices for the type of content offered. Many times you can find Spanish courses that offer about the same information, but the prices fluctuate greatly. Many Spanish courses that cost several hundred or even thousands of dollars sometimes just aren’t worth it. You can find a good Spanish course for less than $300. If it costs any more than that, don’t bother. Just because you spend more money doesn’t mean you will necessarily learn Spanish any better or faster. Concentrate on the quality of the course first, and then consider price.
Copyright 2006, ReviewsOnTheWeb.com.
By: Todd Nelson
Posted in Articles
Tags: Accent Best Course To Learn Spanish Conversations Daunting Task Exercises Having Fun Interactive Learning Learning Games Lingo Native Speaker Native Speakers Phrases Playing A Game Something Fun spanish course Spanish Courses Spanish Learning Spanish People Spanish Speaking People Thousands Of Dollars