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Parita Kuttappan, Professional Coach, on Energy Management

August 25, 2025 by John Ray

Parita Kuttappan, Professional Coach, LIVE from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit, on North Fulton Business Radio with host John Ray
North Fulton Business Radio
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Parita Kuttappan, Professional Coach, LIVE from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit, on North Fulton Business Radio with host John Ray

Parita Kuttappan, Professional Coach, LIVE from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 893)

Parita Kuttappan, a certified professional coach, joined host John Ray live from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit to share insights from her keynote on energy and how we manage it.

Parita explained how energy functions like a bank account, where daily choices and long-term habits determine whether we thrive or become depleted. She introduced a framework of six areas of influence, including physical, social, and emotional, that affect energy levels and encouraged participants to journal or track patterns to recognize where their energy is being drained.

She also emphasized the importance of proactive self-care, from small restorative practices to cultivating supportive relationships, so we do not end up “in the red” energetically. Her encouragement to allow ourselves grace and to stop wearing the “superwoman cape” reminded the audience that strength is built through awareness, balance, and self-compassion.

This interview was originally broadcast live from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit held on August 12, 2025, at The Commons at Phase in Alpharetta, Georgia. John Ray Co. and North Fulton Business Radio were the Media Sponsors for this year’s Summit.

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Introduction and Event Overview
00:57 Meet the Keynote Speaker: Parita Kuttappan
01:58 Understanding Energy Management
03:54 Six Areas of Influence on Energy
04:52 The Importance of Journaling
06:30 Balancing Energy in Daily Life
08:48 Encouragement and Final Thoughts

Parita Kuttappan

Parita Kuttappan is a certified and professional mindset and confidence coach for executive and professional women and working parents.

She has 16 years of experience in strategic human resources in both the professional services and defense industries. Parita earned her Certified Professional Coach (CPC) certification through iPEC (Institute for Professional Excellence in Coaching) coaching, an ICF-Accredited Coaching Training Program.

Parita truly believes her coachees are the experts in their lives, while she is the expert in the coaching process. She uses powerful questions and tools to help her clients overcome unhelpful blocks, manage their energy, and understand how to create thoughts and feelings that lead to fulfillment and joy. Regardless of who she is working with, Parita’s core mission is to empower working women and parents everywhere to unlock their inner goal-getters, bring awareness to what is most important to them, and live more joyful and confident lives.

Connect with Parita on LinkedIn

Parita Kuttappan

2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit

The 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit was held on Tuesday, August 12, 2025, at The Commons at Phase in Alpharetta, Georgia.

The mission of BOLD—Businesswomen Organizing for Leadership and Development—is to connect businesswomen to build outstanding networks and spheres of influence, to collaborate with each other and with partner organizations to develop their businesses, and to celebrate and recognize the women of North Fulton.

Website

Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce (GNFCC)

The Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce is a private, non-profit, member-driven organization comprised of over 1,400 business enterprises, civic organizations, educational institutions, and individuals. Their service area includes Alpharetta, Johns Creek, Milton, Mountain Park, Roswell, and Sandy Springs. GNFCC is the leading voice on economic development, business growth, and quality of life issues in North Fulton County.

As a five-star accredited chamber, GNFCC’s vision is to be the premier organization driving member and community success across the region, and they are dedicated to pursuing this vision based on the guiding principles of advocacy, inclusivity, and operational excellence.

GNFCC promotes the interests of their members by assuming a leadership role in making North Fulton an excellent place to work, live, play, and stay. They provide one voice for all local businesses to influence decision-makers, recommend legislation, and protect the valuable resources that make North Fulton a popular place to live.

For more information on GNFCC and its North Fulton County service area, follow this link or call (770) 993-8806. For more information on other GNFCC events, follow this link.

Connect with GNFCC:  Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

About North Fulton Business Radio and host John Ray

With over 890 episodes and having featured over 1,300 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in our community like no one else. We are the undisputed “Voice of Business” in North Fulton!

The show invites a diverse range of business, non-profit, and community leaders to share their significant contributions to their market, community, and profession. There’s no discrimination based on company size, and there’s never any “pay to play.” North Fulton Business Radio supports and celebrates businesses by sharing positive stories that traditional media ignore. Some media lean left. Some media lean right. We lean business.

John Ray, host of  North Fulton Business Radio, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors
John Ray, host of North Fulton Business Radio and Owner, Ray Business Advisors

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. John and the team at North Fulton Business Radio, LLC, an affiliate of Business RadioX®, produce the show, and it is recorded inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

The studio address is 275 South Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009.

You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, and many others.

John Ray, The Generosity MindsetJohn Ray also operates his own business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their value, their positioning and business development, and their pricing. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as consultants, coaches, attorneys, CPAs, accountants, bookkeepers, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

John is the national bestselling author of The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

Renasant Bank supports North Fulton Business Radio

Renasant BankRenasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions, with over $17 billion in assets and more than 180 banking, lending, wealth management, and financial services offices throughout the region. All of Renasant’s success stems from each banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way to better understand the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram | X (Twitter) | YouTube

Beyond Computer Solutions supports North Fulton Business Radio

If you’re a law firm, medical practice, or manufacturer, there’s one headline you would rather not make: “Local Business Pays Thousands in Ransom After Cyberattack.” That’s where Beyond Computer Solutions comes in. They help organizations like yours stay out of the news and in business with managed IT and cybersecurity services designed for industries where compliance and reputation matter most.

Whether they serve as your complete IT department or simply support your internal team, these professionals are well-versed in HIPAA, secure document access, written security policies, and other essential aspects that ensure your safety and well-being. Best of all, it starts with a complimentary security assessment.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | YouTube

Tagged With: 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women in Leadership Summit, Beyond Computer Solutions, burnout prevention, emotional intelligence, energy management, executive coach, executive coaching, GNFCC, Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, John Ray, North Fulton Business Radio, Parita Kuttappan, professional coach, renasant bank, self-awareness, Stress Management, Women in Business, Women in Leadership, women’s leadership, working parents

Mercedez Jackson, Fulton County Schools, on Resilience

August 25, 2025 by John Ray

Mercedez Jackson, Fulton County Schools, LIVE from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit, on North Fulton Business Radio with host John Ray
North Fulton Business Radio
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Mercedez Jackson, Fulton County Schools, LIVE from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit, on North Fulton Business Radio with host John Ray

Mercedez Jackson, Fulton County Schools, LIVE from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 892)

Mercedez Jackson from the Fulton County Schools Social Services Department joined host John Ray live from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit to share her insights from her keynote address at the event on building resilience in the face of fear and stress.

Mercedez discussed the importance of self-awareness, naming and normalizing our fears, and recognizing how stress manifests differently for each person. She explained the continuum of mental health, ranging from excelling to crisis, and emphasized how awareness and intentional strategies, such as asking for help, delegating, or pausing before responding, can help individuals move toward thriving.

Her encouragement to “sit in the uncomfortable space” and remember that feelings pass provided the audience with both practical tools and hope. Mercedez also underscored the power of empathy and honest communication in relationships at home and at work.

Mercedez reminds us that resilience is not about avoiding hardship but choosing to move forward with courage, self-reflection, and the right support.

This interview was originally broadcast live from the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit held on August 12, 2025, at The Commons at Phase in Alpharetta, Georgia. John Ray Co. and North Fulton Business Radio were the Media Sponsors for this year’s Summit.

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Welcome to the 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women in Leadership Summit
00:56 Introducing Mercedez Jackson, Fulton County Schools
01:16 Understanding Resilience and Fear
03:37 Self-Awareness and Stress Management
06:19 The Mental Health Continuum
08:24 Encouragement and Intentional Living
10:40 Contact Information and Closing Remarks

Mercedez Jackson, Fulton County Schools

Mercedez Jackson is Coordinator of School Social Work Services at Fulton County Schools.

Fulton County Schools (FCS) is the fourth largest school system in Georgia, serving a diverse and geographically expansive area outside the City of Atlanta. It operates 102 schools, including elementary, middle, and high schools; startup charter schools; and a virtual school, with a projected enrollment of about 86,000 students for the 2025-26 school year. Founded in 1871, the system employs over 10,900 staff, including 6,200 certified personnel, and is known for its commitment to student achievement, continuous improvement, and community engagement. The district uniquely spans both the northern and southern parts of Fulton County, separated physically by the City of Atlanta’s own school system, and focuses on providing a well-rounded education while fostering a safe and efficient learning environment.

Connect with Mercedez on LinkedIn

Mercedez Jackson

2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit

The 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women’s Leadership Summit was held on Tuesday, August 12, 2025, at The Commons at Phase in Alpharetta, Georgia.

The mission of BOLD—Businesswomen Organizing for Leadership and Development—is to connect businesswomen to build outstanding networks and spheres of influence, to collaborate with each other and with partner organizations to develop their businesses, and to celebrate and recognize the women of North Fulton.

Website

Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce (GNFCC)

The Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce is a private, non-profit, member-driven organization comprised of over 1,400 business enterprises, civic organizations, educational institutions, and individuals. Their service area includes Alpharetta, Johns Creek, Milton, Mountain Park, Roswell, and Sandy Springs. GNFCC is the leading voice on economic development, business growth, and quality of life issues in North Fulton County.

As a five-star accredited chamber, GNFCC’s vision is to be the premier organization driving member and community success across the region, and they are dedicated to pursuing this vision based on the guiding principles of advocacy, inclusivity, and operational excellence.

GNFCC promotes the interests of their members by assuming a leadership role in making North Fulton an excellent place to work, live, play, and stay. They provide one voice for all local businesses to influence decision-makers, recommend legislation, and protect the valuable resources that make North Fulton a popular place to live.

For more information on GNFCC and its North Fulton County service area, follow this link or call (770) 993-8806. For more information on other GNFCC events, follow this link.

Connect with GNFCC:  Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

About North Fulton Business Radio and host John Ray

With over 890 episodes and having featured over 1,300 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in our community like no one else. We are the undisputed “Voice of Business” in North Fulton!

The show invites a diverse range of business, non-profit, and community leaders to share their significant contributions to their market, community, and profession. There’s no discrimination based on company size, and there’s never any “pay to play.” North Fulton Business Radio supports and celebrates businesses by sharing positive stories that traditional media ignore. Some media lean left. Some media lean right. We lean business.

John Ray, host of  North Fulton Business Radio, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors
John Ray, host of North Fulton Business Radio and Owner, Ray Business Advisors

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. John and the team at North Fulton Business Radio, LLC, an affiliate of Business RadioX®, produce the show, and it is recorded inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

The studio address is 275 South Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009.

You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, and many others.

John Ray, The Generosity MindsetJohn Ray also operates his own business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their value, their positioning and business development, and their pricing. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as consultants, coaches, attorneys, CPAs, accountants, bookkeepers, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

John is the national bestselling author of The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

Renasant Bank supports North Fulton Business Radio

Renasant BankRenasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions, with over $17 billion in assets and more than 180 banking, lending, wealth management, and financial services offices throughout the region. All of Renasant’s success stems from each banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way to better understand the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram | X (Twitter) | YouTube

Beyond Computer Solutions supports North Fulton Business Radio

If you’re a law firm, medical practice, or manufacturer, there’s one headline you would rather not make: “Local Business Pays Thousands in Ransom After Cyberattack.” That’s where Beyond Computer Solutions comes in. They help organizations like yours stay out of the news and in business with managed IT and cybersecurity services designed for industries where compliance and reputation matter most.

Whether they serve as your complete IT department or simply support your internal team, these professionals are well-versed in HIPAA, secure document access, written security policies, and other essential aspects that ensure your safety and well-being. Best of all, it starts with a complimentary security assessment.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | YouTube

Tagged With: 2025 GNFCC BOLD Women in Leadership Summit, Beyond Computer Solutions, emotional intelligence, Fulton County School System, Fulton County Schools, GNFCC, Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, John Ray, Leadership, mental health, Mercedez Jackson, North Fulton Business Radio, renasant bank, resilience, self-awareness, social services, Stress Management, Women in Business, Women in Leadership

Emotional Intelligence in Client Conversations, with Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises

December 4, 2024 by John Ray

Emotional Intelligence in Client Conversations, with Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises, on The Price and Value Journey podcast with host John Ray
North Fulton Studio
Emotional Intelligence in Client Conversations, with Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises
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Emotional Intelligence in Client Conversations, with Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises, on The Price and Value Journey podcast with host John Ray

Emotional Intelligence in Client Conversations, with Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises (The Price and Value Journey, Episode 119)

In this episode of The Price and Value Journey podcast, host John Ray welcomes executive coach and trainer Dawn Cook Causey to discuss the critical role of emotional intelligence (EQ) in professional services. Dawn, an expert with over 22 years of experience in EQ, explains how EQ can enhance client value conversations and ultimately improve service pricing. They explore the four key components of emotional intelligence: self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, and relationship management. Dawn shares practical techniques and examples, including the ARC (Ask, Reflect, Confirm) method, to illustrate how service providers can better understand and meet client needs. The episode highlights the importance of empathy, active listening, and self-awareness in building trust and effectively serving clients.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton affiliate of Business RadioX®.

Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises

Dawn Cook Causey
Dawn Cook Causey

Dawn Cook Causey has over 25 years of demonstrated excellence in leadership development of executives and teams via facilitating business and personal skills development workshops, performing executive coaching and consulting with clients on their developmental needs.  Her vast experience includes working with such companies as UPS, Cox Communications, SunTrust (Truist), Verizon, Raymond James, Siemens, Optum, Northeast Georgia Health Systems, Emory HealthCare and Fox Sports.

She has held key director-level positions in small to medium-sized companies prior to graduating into her roles as consultant and coach. Her unique perspective comes from working within corporate headquarters with worldwide responsibilities, in franchise offices with district and regional responsibilities, and externally to small and medium-sized companies.

Educated in Adult Learning Theory and Neuroscience, Dawn applies this knowledge to developing and coaching others for success in various business arenas, including emotional intelligence, communication, leadership, customer service, public speaking and sales. By using an analytical, science-based and research-supported approach to understanding and changing human behavior, she is able to connect with even the most black and white thinkers.

Certified in Emotional Intelligence (EQ) by 6 Seconds, the Institute for Health and Human Potential, and TalentSmart, Dawn incorporates EQ into much of her coaching and training. In 2002, Dawn underwent personal training from the “father of coaching,” Thomas Leonard, through Coachville’s Certified Coach program. Dawn has spent over 1,500 hours coaching executives and teams to a higher standard of performance. Her training and successful track record have positioned her as an expert in the field of emotional intelligence and leadership development.

Dawn is a founding member of the International Association of Coaches and served as a volunteer coach for Cool Girls, a non-profit organization dedicated to helping young girls make the best choices for a happy, healthy life. Dawn also gives back to her community by facilitating free educational discussions to single adults who seek better self and social management skills through increased emotional intelligence.

Dawn is also an accomplished presenter, speaking for audiences of fifty to five hundred. Her favorite topic to present on is the neuroscience of emotions, which involves understanding how the brain manages emotions during interactions, tying emotions to top performance, and applying this knowledge in leadership.

Website | LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | X (Twitter)

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Introduction to The Price and Value Journey
00:26 Meet Dawn Cook Causey: EQ Expert
02:08 Dawn’s Journey into Emotional Intelligence
06:32 Defining Emotional Intelligence
12:00 The Importance of EQ in Professional Services
17:17 Using Empathy to Uncover Client Needs
22:27 Power Outage Panic on Super Bowl Sunday
23:12 Active Listening vs. Empathetic Listening
24:48 Understanding Client Motivations and Concerns
28:55 Self-Awareness and Self-Management in Client Conversations
31:50 Building Trust and Rapport with Clients
35:23 Handling Direct Clients and Budget Conversations
37:33 EQ in Action: A Real-Life Coaching Story
40:47 Conclusion and Contact Information

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional service providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing that reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line and the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is hosted and produced by John Ray and the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. The show can also be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray, Author of The Generosity Mindset and Host of "The Price and Value Journey"
John Ray, Author of The Generosity Mindset and Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include business coaching and advisory work, as well as advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, coaches, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a podcast show host and producer and owns the North Fulton (Georgia) affiliate of Business RadioX®. John and his team work with B2B professionals to create and conduct their own podcast using The Generosity Mindset™ Method: building and deepening relationships in a non-salesy way that translates into revenue for their business.

John is also the host of North Fulton Business Radio. With over 800 shows and having featured over 1,200 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in its region like no one else.

John’s book, The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices

The Generosity Mindset, by John RayJohn is the #1 national best-selling author of The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

If you are a professional services provider, your goal is to do transformative work for clients you love working with and get paid commensurate with the value you deliver to those clients. While negative mindsets can inhibit your growth, adopting a different mindset, The Generosity Mindset™, can replace those self-limiting beliefs. The Generosity Mindset enables you to diagnose and communicate the value you deliver to clients and, in turn, more effectively price to receive a portion of that value.

Whether you’re a consultant, coach, marketing or branding professional, business advisor, attorney, CPA, or work in virtually any other professional services discipline, your content and technical expertise are not proprietary. What’s unique, though, is your experience and how you synthesize and deliver your knowledge. What’s special is your demeanor or the way you deal with your best-fit clients. What’s invaluable is how you deliver great value by guiding people through massive changes in their personal lives and in their businesses that bring them to a place they never thought possible.

The combination of all these elements is quite different for you compared to any other service provider in your industry. Therein lies your value, but it’s not the value you see. It’s the value your best-fit customers see in you.

If pricing your value feels uncomfortable or unfamiliar to you, this book will teach you why putting a price on the value your clients perceive and identify serves both them and you, and you’ll learn the factors involved in getting your price right.

The book is available at all major physical and online book retailers worldwide. Follow this link for further details.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: building trust, clients, Dawn Cook Causey, emotional intelligence, empathetic listening, EQ, John Ray, listening, professional services, professional services providers, The Price and Value Journey

Donna Kent with New Life Consultants and Jerry Mastellon with CEO Perspective Coaching

August 14, 2023 by Karen

Donna-Kent-with-New-Life-Consultants-and-Jerry-Mastellon-with-CEO-Perspective-Coaching-feature
Phoenix Business Radio
Donna Kent with New Life Consultants and Jerry Mastellon with CEO Perspective Coaching
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Donna Kent with New Life Consultants and Jerry Mastellon with CEO Perspective Coaching

New-Life-Logo

New Life Consultants, LLC provides leadership training and development. They are strategic design thinkers and support strategy development across most industries.

Certified in DISC, Emotional Intelligence, and Positive Intelligence they provide personal profile assessments to build better communications and relationships along with 360-degree reviews. Expert in process improvement and the tools/training to drive accountability with a special focus on sales, marketing, and leadership excellence.

Their training includes transferable tools to improve team performance both individually and collectively. NLC develops new generation leaders to meet today’s unique business challenges.

As Vistage chairs, they facilitate CEOs in peer groups to see the perspective from other points of view in a nonjudgemental surrounding which promotes learning and transformation for CEOs to be their best.

Donna-Kent-Phoenix-Business-RadioDonna Kent is a business builder with a passion for growth.

A strong relationship leader she incorporates people development, process improvement, and technology enablement for high growth. She is people-centric, market-driven, and client-focused. An English major and former educator, she is trained in corporate and global sales and marketing.

She is both Malcolm Baldridge trained and certified. She has led units of more than 2,000 people and 17 direct reports during her 30+ years in the corporate world working with major clients and industries both nationally and globally.

She has held many senior executive positions in sales, marketing, channels, and general management for companies such as Xerox, Deluxe Corporation, Televerde, Tallwave, and NewLAWu.s..

Locally she ran one of the largest associations in the nation. As CEO of the Arizona Technology Council, she enabled a technology-based business growth landscape for the state.

Donna couples her big business success with a decade of experience in venture development. For instance, Donna has led major market transitions from analog to digital, from product-based to consulting services, and designed a transformative business model for the legal industry.

She has written and executed strategies from donor-based to business sustainability for non-profits around the globe and businesses looking to pivot. In the process, she has grown small and mid-sized companies to their next levels of success while mentoring young entrepreneurs. in addition, Donna mentors The Go Program with ASBA and those coming out of transformational programs and looking to start-up businesses.

Donna is the Founder of New Life Consultants, LLC where she facilitates people development, strategic planning, and execution with an organizational alignment. She develops “new generation leaders” through coaching, training, and teams of high-potential leaders. Donna spent 4 years with a focus on the national ACE market training and coaching leaders to meet the needs of a multi-generational workforce.

Donna has successfully launched a CEO/Business Owners Peer Advisory Executive Board across diverse industries and backgrounds. As a result, Donna enables growth and transformational change of leaders to be better leaders, make better decisions, and deliver better results. Certified in DISC, EQ, and PI assessments, her strategic development and execution are key skills for improved organizational design.

Recently Donna graduated from the Stanford Graduate School Strategic Design Thinking program and facilitates such for Vistage CEOs.Donna has a strong passion for ministry work and the underserved. Donna severs on 5 boards. With a heart for Africa, Donna sponsors children in Rwanda and Tanzania.

Formerly a New Yorker, Donna calls Scottsdale, Arizona home for the past 25 years. She is the proud mother of Victoria and Jack and her son-in-law Braudy. As college graduates her children both biological and sponsored are on their life journey and career track. They share a strong family bond and a common value to create impactful lives and experiences that bring greater joy to those they encounter. Donna is excited to welcome her first grandchild Teddy Feb 26th!

Connect with Donna on LinkedIn.

At CEO Perspective Coaching, individuals embark on a transformative journey, guided by the belief that shifting one’s perspective can revolutionize their life, business, and relationships.

CEO Perspective Coaching is a haven where the convergence of self-awareness insights and strategic wisdom offers a dynamic path to transformation with a unique blend of introspection and practicality, allowing individuals to harmonize their personal growth with their professional success. CEO-Perspective-Coaching-logo

In a world often driven by external benchmarks, CEO Perspective Coaching offers a departure from the ordinary. It encourages conscious leadership and self-awareness as driving forces, fostering authentic leadership, fearless innovation, and resilience amidst ambiguity.

Embrace the extraordinary – where shifting perspectives becomes a catalyst for personal evolution, reimagining business strategies, and cultivating profound connections. With CEO Perspective Coaching, the power of perspective isn’t just a tool; it’s a revolution that shapes lives, empowers businesses, and enriches relationships.

Jerry-Mastellon-Phoenix-Business-RadioJerry Mastellon, the visionary force behind CEO Perspective Coaching, brings a wealth of expertise from his extensive career as a Business Executive and Entrepreneur. With over 30 years of profound experience in the consumer packaging industries, Jerry has honed his skills in crafting innovative business concepts and pioneering models that have redefined markets.

His journey is marked by a relentless pursuit of excellence, where he has consistently delivered groundbreaking offerings to even the most discerning customers. Jerry’s prowess spans across various domains, from start-up ventures to optimizing established enterprises from New York to Arizona.

His proficiency encompasses the intricate realms of retail, both online and brick and mortar, as well as sales, merchandising, product development, operations, supply chain management, distribution, customer insights, and virtual and ecommerce initiatives.

Jerry Mastellon’s approach is anchored in a unique fusion of spiritual insight and business acumen. He envisions a realm where shifting perspectives sparks transformative change, not only in business but also in life and relationships.

As the visionary leader of CEO Perspective Coaching, Jerry continues to inspire individuals to embrace conscious leadership, authenticity, and personal evolution as the driving forces for success.

Connect with Jerry on LinkedIn and Instagram.

Tagged With: Assessments, business planning, coach, conscious leadership coaching, development, emotional intelligence, High Performing Teams, holistic business coaching, Leadership, leadership Excellence, people development, personal growth and success, perspective business transformation, perspective shifting coaching, Strategic Design Thinking, training, Transformation

The Costs of Not Listening: An Interview with Christine Miles, EQuipt

April 12, 2023 by John Ray

Christine Miles
North Fulton Studio
The Costs of Not Listening: An Interview with Christine Miles, EQuipt
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Christine Miles

The Costs of Not Listening: An Interview with Christine Miles, EQuipt

Christine Miles, author of What Is It Costing You Not to Listen?  joined host John Ray to discuss the art and skill of listening. Christine described why she’s so passionate about listening, why listening must be learned, why professional services providers don’t actually listen, and the role of curiosity. Christine and John also discussed the six most powerful questions that get results, the steps on what she calls The Listening Path™, how to effectively use silence, and much more.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

EQuipt

EQuipt is a training and consulting company that helps organizations grow sales, develop people, and create cultures of understanding. The Listening Path™ is a transformational system on listening to understand, that has been taught at various Fortune 100 corporations, universities, law firms, and privately-held companies nationwide.

The Listening Path™ will help you Strengthen customer relationships, Increase in-person and virtual communication effectiveness, Reduce costs, Gain trust, Increase collaboration, Fuel productivity, Optimize client solutions, Develop a culture of empathy, Promote psychological safety, Shorten sales cycles, and Improve prospecting and sales efforts.

Website |LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

Christine Miles, Founder and CEO, EQuipt

Christine Miles, Founder and CEO, EQuipt

Christine Miles is an author, professional keynote speaker, consultant, executive coach, thought leader, and entrepreneur. She is the Founder and CEO of EQuipt, a training and consulting company that helps leadership teams grow sales, develop people, and create cultures of understanding. She developed The Listening Path™, a transformational workshop on listening to understand, which has been taught at various Fortune 100 corporations, universities, law firms, and privately held companies.

She is the author of What Is It Costing You Not to Listen?

What Is It Costing You Not to Listen? will encourage you to examine how you are listening. You’ll discover that not only are many of the problems in your life due to not listening effectively, but listening helps to solve most problems. Christine Miles is a longtime expert in educating individuals and organizations on how to listen in ways that transform how they lead, sell, influence, and succeed in every aspect of life. Following the steps of her breakthrough Listening Path™ will provide you with a critical key to your success – understanding.

Through Christine’s game-changing approach to listening, you will learn to:

• Hear what is said and not said
• Identify your listening persona and realize when it is unhelpful
• Soothe your subconscious so you can listen differently
• Listen with intent to gather others’ stories
• Replace interfering direct questions with just six questions
• Mini-reflect to speed up the listening process without getting lost
• Affirm to create alignment, break down walls, and solve problems

In business, listening is good for the bottom line. It creates trust between coworkers so they can solve problems better, get things done, manage conflict, stay engaged, and empower one another. In personal relationships, listening is an act of love that communicates to people they are important to you.

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TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] And hello again, I’m John Ray on the Price and Value Journey. And I’m delighted to welcome Christine Miles. Christine is an expert on the thing that us, professional services providers, probably have the biggest problem with, it’s listening.

John Ray: [00:00:20] Christine is an author. She’s a professional keynote speaker, consultant, executive coach, thought leader, entrepreneur. She’s done it all. She’s the founder and CEO of EQuipt. And through her company, she helps leadership teams, individuals – we’ll get into her precise work – gross sales, develop their people, all through helping improve their listening skills.

John Ray: [00:00:49] And, Christine, you’re already amazing. I’m just putting that out there because I’ve already, you know, gotten familiar with your work, which is why I wanted you to be on the Price and Value Journey. So, thank you for joining us.

Christine Miles: [00:01:04] Well, it’s my absolute pleasure. I’ll try to meet those very kind words.

John Ray: [00:01:10] Well, for way of introduction, what did I miss that people need to know about you and your work?

Christine Miles: [00:01:19] Yes. So, the work we do, the foundation of the house is really how to listen in – what we call – a transformational way. So, really listen to understand and to discover the meaning of the message, the insight in the conversation. And that is the foundation of the house. There’s a lot of aspects of communication we touch.

Christine Miles: [00:01:40] Listening really teaches you more than you think. It tells you a lot about how to tell versus how to understand. And it also builds what we call your emotional skills. So, when you learn to listen in a different way, you learn to listen to yourself, you learn to listen to others. And that’s the foundation of emotional intelligence, which is, you know, self-awareness and other awareness. And we know that that’s really what makes great companies great. That’s what makes good people really great at what they do or that is that EQ difference.

Christine Miles: [00:02:12] I always say, we’re throwing a ball and you’re chasing it to get in shape rather than just telling you to go for a run. So, there’s a lot of things that it elevates when you learn to listen differently.

John Ray: [00:02:23] One of the things that I find interesting about this topic, and every time I post about it like on LinkedIn or wherever, I get all these comments about, “Yeah. You’re so right, John. And, yeah, we’ve got to listen and so forth.” And we all agree that we’ve got to listen better. And then, here comes the person that’s got the cliche about two ears and one mouth and blah, blah, blah. So, talk about why. I mean, to me, this is lip service in a way, right?

Christine Miles: [00:02:57] It’s frustrating to me as well. But I try to remind myself it’s nobody’s fault and here’s why. Because we’re told to listen from a young age and we are very rarely taught. So, we do equate hearing with listening rather than listening, as you said in your intro, is a skill. It is in fact a skill. So, it’s not like walking where you just have your legs and then, without any problems, you learn to walk. You don’t learn to listen just because you have two ears. It is something that needs to be developed.

Christine Miles: [00:03:31] And so, the problem is nobody knows how really. The majority of us don’t know how. We don’t know what good looks like. We don’t know how to do it. Because we’ve been winging it and we think we’re better than we are sometimes. Or if we’re not as good as we think we should be, we don’t really know how to fix it.

John Ray: [00:03:48] Yeah. No, that makes sense. And it seems to me – and you’re the expert, so this is a question – we’re taught to have the answers, right? The kid in class, it’s like, “Oh. I’ve got the answer,” you know, with their hands raised. So, we’re taught to project, we’re taught to speak up, we’re castigated for not speaking up. And we’re never really taught listening.

Christine Miles: [00:04:21] And then, take that into business life, what do we tell employees? “Don’t come to their manager with problems. Come to them with solutions.” And I say, “No. Come to me with the root cause of the problem so that we can figure out the best solution.” But we’re expecting people to just have the right answers. And then, we’re solving a lot of problems that aren’t really the problem and wasting a lot of time and resources. And it does start very young.

Christine Miles: [00:04:47] It’s funny, we were at a school a few weeks ago piloting something, and I asked the teachers do they teach listening. And this is a private school in the Philadelphia area. They’re very well known and recognized. And the teachers try to teach it. And they said what happens is the kids, when the teacher asks a question, everybody raises their hand. And let’s just say little Johnny is the one that’s answering, all the other kids their hands are still up. And they go, “No, put your hands down while Johnny’s talking.” And I’m thinking, This is just 40 years later in a meeting where everybody wants to just talk, just waiting their turn.

Christine Miles: [00:05:22] So, while it’s the right idea, again, it’s behaviorally-based rather than brain-based. Because listening is really happening or not happening in our brains. And the brain is the greatest enemy of listening. So, unless we learn how to manage our subconscious brain that is in overdrive and telling us to do everything but listen, we’re just white knuckling our way through it. We’re waiting our turn, but we’re not really certain how to change it. And that leads us to wanting to provide answers to solve problems, because that’s what we’re trained to do. And then, it interferes with the most important part, which is let me understand before I try to solve.

John Ray: [00:06:03] I want to dig into that a little more, but before we do, I don’t want to get too far away from your work without asking you why you’re so passionate about this particular topic. You know, I’ve heard some of this story before, but I think it’s important for our listeners to hear it in full.

Christine Miles: [00:06:24] Well, I appreciate that. So, we all have a reason why we do what we do. We don’t always know what that reason is. My reason came to me pretty early in life because I learned to listen differently. I can remember as early as five when I had moments of, like, paying attention to things that were different. A big part of that was my mother. She had mental health issues that she came by very honestly. She had lost her mother from childbirth. Her mother died from childbirth. So, she was set up for a lot of pain.

Christine Miles: [00:06:58] And what I saw was a woman who was very warm and loving and charismatic. She lit up the room. But underneath the surface was this real dark pain that most people didn’t see. So, I learned to see that what’s happening on the surface isn’t happening below the surface. And that was part of my role in the family, is to understand that, attend to that. I mean, while there was burden in that, trust me, the therapist and I still talk about it. There was also a great gift, which was I learned to listen differently and understand things that most people didn’t understand at a very young age.

Christine Miles: [00:07:33] And that was obvious to me. It became more and more obvious over the years, but as early as high school. And anything I was succeeding in, it wasn’t because of my natural talents and abilities, whether that was on the athletic field or academically or anything I did in my career, it was because, fundamentally, I was able to listen in a different and more compelling way.

Christine Miles: [00:07:54] And then, as I studied psychology and I went into my career, I also saw that not listening was why families were failing, relationships were failing, businesses were failing, teams were failing, projects were failing. The very thing that made me succeed is often the threat to why things weren’t working.

Christine Miles: [00:08:12] And so, what I’ve done over the course of my career is try to help others learn to understand, and listen, and solve problems through understanding versus throwing resources at it or throwing more telling at it. And that’s evolved to really creating a common language and provide people the tools that calm that brain down – what I was taught as a kid, basically – and deconstruct it so that it could be replicated more simply and easily.

John Ray: [00:08:43] So, let’s get back to that. You mentioned the subconscious and how just the way we’re wired really holds us back when it comes to listening.

Christine Miles: [00:08:57] The subconscious brain is a super power. It’s emotional. We know now from the neuroscience that that’s how people buy. They buy emotionally. We know this as service consultants. We go in and they buy us before they buy what we do. That’s an emotional decision, which is also why listening is so, so very important when you go in as a professional services company.

Christine Miles: [00:09:24] But it’s also that, you know, our own brains are emotional, and so we want to make the sale. So, we go into a prospect, and what are we thinking about? We’re thinking about what do I need to say. How do I need to convince them. What do I have to offer them. And our emotional brains are in overdrive. We’re thinking about what we’re going to say, how we’re going to respond, how we’re going to advise them, all of the things that are the opposite of listening. And so, that’s one of the problems.

Christine Miles: [00:09:51] The second is, the more knowledge and experience you have, the more likely you are to not listen. Because you’ve seen the problem so many times, you know what the solution is and you build a solution to solve that problem. So, we tend to go in and start selling way too soon and problem solving way too soon.

John Ray: [00:10:09] Yeah. And we think we’re being helpful because we’re bringing our experience and knowledge to the table. That’s what clients want after all, right? And that’s not all they want, though. They want to be heard.

Christine Miles: [00:10:22] Well, sometimes the person rushing to the solve is the prospect. I told a story about this in my book. In 2007, I started my own executive coaching practice and I was in denial that I’d been in sales my entire career at this point. So, I’m out on my first sales call. It’s a pretty big meeting. And I’m sitting with the CEO and he says, “I want training for my executive team.” Well, I was in the training business for many years at this point, and I’m thinking, “Training for what?” Like, I had no idea what he wanted.

Christine Miles: [00:10:54] And so, I kept going, “Take me back. Tell me more.” And trying to lasso him back. And he’s like, “Well, can you just put a proposal together for me? And here’s a marketing packet that somebody else gave me.” And I was thinking, “Oh, crap. I don’t have this marketing packet. This is my first sales call.” And I just was like, “I don’t have that. Is that helpful to you?” He goes, “Well, not particularly.” And I go, “Okay.” But I had to keep lassoing him back because he wanted the solution, he wanted the answer.

Christine Miles: [00:11:23] So, sometimes it’s us and sometimes it’s them. And it’s a sales trap. I made a very big sale that day. And I still work with that CEO now at a second company that he started. And so, part of it was because I didn’t know what he needed. And my naivety even more so slowed me down to slow him down. And I really uncovered what the real need was rather than just throwing what he wanted me to throw at it, which is was right in my wheelhouse, but it wasn’t going to be helpful. So, it’s a big trap both what we do and what the prospect does. So, we have to be really careful and slow down to listen differently.

John Ray: [00:12:02] So, let’s talk about how we do that. You talk about the listening path. It’s on the wall behind you. I could see it. And what you mean by that are tools. You have to have tools in the tool kit, as it were. Right?

Christine Miles: [00:12:18] That’s right. So, the problem and the name of my book is called, What Is It Costing You Not To Listen? Because you can’t solve a problem you don’t know you have. And so, as we talked about, we’re set up not to know how to listen and know what good listening looks like. So, sometimes we have to first analyze what’s it costing us? How did we lost the sales? What’s happening to our relationship?

Christine Miles: [00:12:41] The solution is the listening path, and that’s the path to understanding. And the metaphor is you wouldn’t go hiking in the woods for three weeks backpacking without any tools or supplies in your backpack. And yet that’s exactly how we go into conversations. We go in unprepared to really know how to understand. And so, we provide those tools to keep you on the main path. Because when you’re listening, you’re always listening to a story. When you’re going in to talk to a client or a prospect, they’re telling you a story.

Christine Miles: [00:13:12] Here’s the problem. People are terrible storytellers. We are wired to listen to stories, to learn from stories. But we’re not wired to be great storytellers. There’s a few that have stood out in history that have made their mark, Lincoln being an example of that. But most of us really are terrible at it. So, because of being bad storytellers, we disorient the listener right off the bat. And if the listener doesn’t know where they are in the story, they’re going to struggle to figure out where to take the client, the prospect, or partner.

Christine Miles: [00:13:46] So, that’s part of what the tools do. They help you understand where you are in the story, how to stay on the main path, and how to be the guide to get the person to where you need them to go.

John Ray: [00:13:58] Now, you talk a lot about identifying your listening persona. Is that part of the listening path and part of success on that path?

Christine Miles: [00:14:10] It is. And so, one of the things – and I think this will resonate with you – is that we’re taught about listening is it’s really important to be curious and to ask really good questions. So, I have a team of executive coaches that are certified, and one of the things they go through is they go through how to ask really good questions when they’re trained. And the problem is, when you have to think of really good questions, what are you doing? You’re thinking rather than listening. And when you’re asking questions, that shapes the story because my questions are going to shape the story you tell.

Christine Miles: [00:14:46] So, there’s two listening personas when you’re on this listening path. One is The Curious Detective and one is The Defense Attorney. And think about it. Defense attorneys put people on the witness stand. They ask questions to shape the story that they need the person to tell to make their case.

Christine Miles: [00:15:03] Now, let’s take that into sales. You go in with your prospects or clients, you have an idea about how to help them. You go in and ask them very specific questions. And what are you doing? You’re shaping the story that they might tell you rather than getting the story, curiously letting it unfold so that you can drive value and uncover the real problems so that you can answer things that nobody else is answering. So, questions can force you into that defense attorney rather than the curious detective.

Christine Miles: [00:15:36] And one of the tools on the listening path is what we call the compass, which are the six most powerful questions. And, initially, when we teach people how to listen transformationally, these are the only questions you’re allowed to ask. Take all other questions off the table. And these six alone get you further than any specific diagnostic questions on the path.

John Ray: [00:16:00] Okay, So, you set it up here. Let’s talk about the six questions. I’m just going to say my personal favorite on there that I use is Tell me more.

Christine Miles: [00:16:11] You use that already? Yeah. So, tell me more.

John Ray: [00:16:15] Tell me more. Yeah.

Christine Miles: [00:16:16] Why does that work for you? Tell me more.

John Ray: [00:16:20] It works particularly when I don’t know what’s been said. And I don’t know, like, where that’s coming from, how to define what we’re talking about. I don’t want to say I don’t understand because I don’t want to crush somebody across the table from me. But that’s one that I use quite frequently.

Christine Miles: [00:16:46] And do they tell you more?

John Ray: [00:16:47] Oh, absolutely. Absolutely.

Christine Miles: [00:16:49] Isn’t that amazing. Tell me more begets they tell you more.

John Ray: [00:16:52] It always works. Yeah.

Christine Miles: [00:16:54] It always works. And so, I’ll run through the list so we can talk about any one of them if you like. So, I’m glad you’re already using that. And I’m not surprised you’re also doing a radio show. So, these are the most powerful questions journalists, interviewers, and therapists use, by the way, hostage negotiators.

Christine Miles: [00:17:13] So, it’s take me back to the beginning, tell me more, how does that make you feel, then what happened or what happened next, hm – which is the non-verbal prompt of tell me more, or it sounds like you feel. So, there’s two feeling questions and four situational questions all open-ended. You can use them as often as you like and in anywhere you like. And if you only use those questions when you’re talking with someone, you will not shape the story and more of the story will come out than you’ve ever gotten before.

Christine Miles: [00:17:47] Because you just said it, when I say tell me more, I don’t even have to admit that I don’t understand. They just tell me more and then more opens up and I get more of the story. See, ignorance is bliss. Whenever I’m confused or whenever I’m not clear, then I know I’m in the right space because that means they’re not being a good storyteller. And I better lens back to figure out what’s going on.

John Ray: [00:18:13] Yeah. And that takes some humility to get in that posture, right? I mean, because you can write these six questions down, you can memorize them, so forth – six responses, I mean. You can memorize them, what have you, but then you get in the heat of the moment and it goes out the window unless you’ve got the right mindset.

Christine Miles: [00:18:48] So, a couple things. It’s counter to all the training we’ve had because what we’re trained to do from a young age, not just in business, we are trained to show up and be smart, show that we’re smart, and questions are a way to show that we’re smart and that we know what we’re talking about and what we’re doing. So, it’s counterintuitive. So, it’s a bad habit, if you will.

Christine Miles: [00:19:14] And so, we have to unwind that. And the way you unwind that is first you have to have the right tool and then you have to have the right practice. So, several years ago now, we were doing a sales kickoff and the head of the organization got up to introduce us.

Christine Miles: [00:19:30] And he said he just heard a Navy SEAL speaking – because it was at a large company offsite. And the Navy SEAL said, “Look, most people think they’re going to rise to the level that they need to in a crisis based on adrenaline and all the things that are going off. You know, we’re going to lift the car off of somebody. We’re going to be the hero. When, in fact, what we rise to is the level of competence and training that we have in crisis.”

Christine Miles: [00:19:55] That’s why we practice as athletes. That’s why we practice whatever we’re doing, because you need to be able to do it under pressure. So, that’s why when you use these questions in real life all the time, then when you’re in that sales meeting or that client meeting, it’s more natural. You’ve already unwound kind of what you’ve been doing all these years.

Christine Miles: [00:20:17] We have people that take those questions, plop them down, we have mouse pads. They just set them down at the meeting to remind them. It also helps relax the brain. You don’t need to think about how you’re going to respond. You don’t need to worry about what you’re going to say next because the questions are a sedative for your subconscious so that that tool does the work for you.

John Ray: [00:20:39] I love that point. And I love the metaphor you use with it, that it’s a sedative. Because your subconscious is in overdrive and you don’t even necessarily know it. And you need to go ahead and inject that overdriven subconscious with a sedative, and you’ve given us the tools to do that.

Christine Miles: [00:21:05] Yeah. And the other thing is, if we take it back to the path metaphor, so you’re on the Appalachian Trail and you’re hiking and there’s a main path, but there’s also a lot of little side routes. And conversations are exactly that. There’s the main path and then there’s all these little side trails. What happens with very specific questions is we go off into the woods and we get lost often because we’re deep into an area we don’t need to be.

Christine Miles: [00:21:33] What those six questions do is they get you back to the main path, to the story. Because people, when you give them the room become a storyteller. This is how you become the guide as the listener. When you guide them on the main path, they’ll stay on the main path. If you take them down a side trail near a ravine, they’re going to fall off if they follow you.

Christine Miles: [00:21:57] So, the questions calm the brain and keep you on the main path to getting that story. And, really, once you get that, you know how to help them in a more compelling way than just giving them a solution. You drive value for your customers.

John Ray: [00:22:14] That’s a magic word for me, is value. My ears perk up when I hear that word, as it does for our listeners. But talk a little bit, if you will, about the reflecting. You talk about many reflections to speed up the listening process, and that concept is a little confusing to me, so talk about that.

Christine Miles: [00:22:50] Well, first of all, let me take a step back. So, great listening is about proficiency, how well you do it, and efficiency. So, I believe in both. People think I’m very patient. Don’t mistake my understanding for patience. I want to get things done really quickly. I want you to feel good about getting things done quickly. And I know how to help get that story out of you faster so we can get there more quickly.

Christine Miles: [00:23:20] It is a slow down to speed up, though. So, I learned this in sports. I chased any ball that would let me chase it. But field hockey was my sport of choice. And one of the things I learned is that if you could run down the field of speed – I was a defender and everybody was faster than me, everybody – I knew how to cut off the angle. Based on your pace, I could figure it out. If you took a pullback, if you took a little hitch step and then sped up again, I was done. I was done because I couldn’t change pace that way. Part of being in a conversation is you need to know how to change pace. When do I need to pull the ball back a little bit so then I could speed up again.

Christine Miles: [00:24:02] And when you do that, again, it changes the dynamics of the conversation. So, you’re getting into this reflecting tool. So, there’s six main tools on the listing path. And the first five are kind of the science and the sixth one is the art.

Christine Miles: [00:24:19] So, we talked about the compass as one of the tools. And really the map to the story is the main tool. Where am I in the woods? Where am I in the conversation? What’s the path to the story? That’s one of the tools.

Christine Miles: [00:24:33] And then, there’s something called the flashlight. And the flashlight is really when you’re hearing the story, once you think you’ve gotten it, how are you shining a light on what was said and highlighting what you heard. That’s what we call the flashlight. That’s a powerful thing. Tell me the story you just told me. I’m going to tell you the story you just told me, that’s the flashlight. Does that make sense?

John Ray: [00:24:56] Yeah. Yeah.

Christine Miles: [00:24:57] So, I’ll say the most powerful story you can tell someone is their own. There is nothing like a client or prospect talking to you for 30 minutes and you go, “Hold on. Before we go any further, let me make sure I understand.” And then, I tell you the story you just told me at a high level in 30 to 90 seconds. You’re going to feel like I really was paying attention. And you’re going to go, “Well, that’s right but that’s not quite right. Nope, you got me here but not here.” And there’s a different dialogue that opens up as a result of taking out that flashlight.

John Ray: [00:25:32] And this gets at where you talk about affirming to create alignment, break down walls, et cetera.

Christine Miles: [00:25:43] That’s right. So, the flashlight highlights the story. To affirm it, you have to make sure you didn’t contaminate the story. So, these two tools work hand in hand all the time. And by the way, these are the most underutilized tools. We tend to listen and say, “Yeah. I understand.” And when somebody says I understand to me, I never feel less understood.

John Ray: [00:26:10] In a way sometimes that can be insulting, too, right?

Christine Miles: [00:26:15] I don’t know what you understand. My question is really, “Tell me more. What do you understand? I want to hear this.” Because the words I understand do not convey understanding. Understanding is, “You know, John, what I hear is important to you and your listeners is how do you drive value in the sale? How do you make sure that your customers really feel listened to, understood, so that your solutions or your listener solutions can really be the game changing and you can make a big difference for your clients. Do I get you? Do I understand?” Probably closer, right?

Christine Miles: [00:26:50] So, we call that the water filter where affirming means let me make sure I didn’t contaminate your story by what’s going off in my brain. So, once I use that flashlight, shine a light on the story, I’m going to ask you and I’ll use these very specific words. I’m going to say, “Do I get you?” That’s a prompt to say do I get you and your story, not just the story, not just your situation, but do I get you as well as your situation.

John Ray: [00:27:25] Wow. I love that. That is powerful. And that’s a good segue, I’ve got a few specific situations maybe we can talk about that services providers run into. And one of those is when you’re trying to have a value conversation, how do you know when it’s time to pivot? You’re doing the best you can in trying to understand where that client sees value, both tangible and intangible value, how do you know when it’s time to pivot?

Christine Miles: [00:28:10] So, this is when you know it’s time to pivot. We call that earning the right. Have I earned the right to start to tell you what I think to sell you my solution? What happens is we tend to go forward right away. We come in offering the solution. Maybe our prospect or client says, “Tell me the solution.”

Christine Miles: [00:28:30] Here’s what always happened to me, I started my career, I have a background in psychology as a therapist. I was a home-based family therapist at 22. So, I went into people’s houses at 22, knocking on their doors saying, “I’m Christine. I’ll be your family therapist.” They pretty much had that look on their face, so it was terrifying. Fortunately, I was mentored and trained through a world renowned facility. I ultimately got certified.

John Ray: [00:28:58] But you were also brave, though. I mean, so you had courage to do that.

Christine Miles: [00:29:05] I did. I did. It’s really how I wanted to make a difference at the time. Here’s what’s fascinating, is that, I was the youngest person on my team. Most people were in their 30s – which seemed old at the time – and they had social work and experience. But I stood out more because I didn’t know anything and I went in and listened. And they said I had this uncanny ability to join – they called it joining – with the families. And all I did was go in and do the very things that I’m talking to you about.

Christine Miles: [00:29:40] That’s how I built credibility. I wasn’t going in and saying I know your situation. I was going in and saying tell me about your situation, tell me about your kids, tell me what’s going on, let me understand you. The therapist taught me how to do exactly what you’re talking about, which is how do you shift it then from understanding to telling? And that’s about earning the right. Most people go in and just start telling versus earning that right first.

Christine Miles: [00:30:08] So, the pivot happens after you use the flashlight in the water filter. So, you highlight. You shine a light on the story. You say, “Do I get you?” And one of three things is going to happen in that conversation. Your client is going to say, “Yeah. You get me.” Or they’re going to say, “You get me,” and they’re going to start telling you more.” Or they’re going to say, “Yes. You absolutely get me.”

Christine Miles: [00:30:34] So, the first one is what we call in the sales world an urban dictionary, where the client says yes but they really mean no. That happens all the time. Your spouses do that to you. Your friends do that to you. Your colleagues do that to you. You’re walking down the hall and you say, “Hey, how are you doing today, John?” And you’re like, “I’m great.” You just got the urban dictionary often because people aren’t always doing great. They’re going, “I’m not so great. I just had a fight with my wife or something’s going on.” But we don’t share that.

Christine Miles: [00:31:07] In our sales conversations, that happens all the time. We ask somebody, “Did I get you?” And they don’t tell you the truth. So, you got to watch for that. “You know what? I don’t know. That doesn’t sound like I really got you. Tell me more.” And once we’re certain and people will then go, “Well, as a matter of fact, what you missed was blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.” So, we have to challenge that moment where we hear the, “Yeah. I get you.”

Christine Miles: [00:31:38] Once we’ve affirmed and really solidly confirmed that we’ve affirmed right, then we can start to tell. Then, we can start to say, “You know what? Now that I really understand, let me tell you what I think. Is that okay?” And then, they’re ready to listen in a different way because you’ve already understood them.

John Ray: [00:32:00] Got it. Yeah. That’s very helpful. But you mentioned a live situation that fits this particular question, which is the client that wants to rush to what your solution is, and you’re trying to slow them down, you’re trying to use the tools that you teach. How do you slow down that freight train?

Christine Miles: [00:32:33] Well, you have to have an awareness, first of all. This is also what the tools do, when you know where you are in the story, you know where you need to go. So, there’s four milestones on the map, the path to understanding, there’s the beginning. It’s just like a movie. So, picture a movie now. There’s the beginning of the movie, there’s the struggle, there’s the tipping point, and there’s the new beginning or the ending.

Christine Miles: [00:33:01] So, as salespeople, as providers who want to be helpful, by the way, I believe most people go in because they want to be helpful. Yeah, we need to make money, but we want to help and make a difference. I might start at the tipping point, “I already know what your solution is. Let me tell you how to get you to the end or new beginning of your story.” Or our customer or prospect can do that, “I need help. I’m at a tipping point. Tell me what you would do if you were me. And take me to the new beginning.”

Christine Miles: [00:33:29] The way to do that is one of those compass questions is it’s click bait. I have help. I need a problem. If you don’t understand what the problem is and you haven’t spent some time, it is click bait.

Christine Miles: [00:33:40] You just went into a rabbit hole on your phone of all the things you shouldn’t be looking at because you clicked where the customer is, rather than saying, “Hold on a second. Let’s slow down. Take me back to where this started.” That’s where the compass gets you back to the beginning of the story, take me back.

Christine Miles: [00:33:58] And I’ll tell you again where I really profoundly learned this. So, being a therapist so young, by the time I was 28, I had a pretty decent amount of experience. Even though I was doing organizational work at the time, I always saw clients. And so, I say, “How do you want me to help?” And they go, “Well, I want you to help me solve this,” or my marriage, or this or that. And I go, “Okay, how would you like me to help? Well, just tell me what I should do. Tell me this.”

Christine Miles: [00:34:22] And debris on the wall, lots of experience and go, “Okay. Well, this is what I think you should do.” You know what they would do?

John Ray: [00:34:30] Tell me.

Christine Miles: [00:34:32] They’d argue. “I can’t do that. I can’t leave my husband. I can’t do that. I can’t this.” People don’t like to be told what to do even if they’re the ones telling you to tell them. It’s a sales trap. It’s a sales trap. So, even if you think you understand them at that moment, even if you think you know the answer, don’t fall for it. Don’t click bait.

Christine Miles: [00:34:57] Take a step back. Slow them down. Because getting giving them a no is how you also get them to yes. And if you force them to slow down, you’re forcing them to take a hitch step so that they can get down the field faster. We need to be the guide. When they say we need to control the conversation, kind of control it by talking rather than insisting that others talk so that we can listen and understand before we move forward to the new beginning.

John Ray: [00:35:27] So, let’s say we’ve got a situation where we’ve allowed a prospective client to become a client and we think there’s something hidden. This happens, like, all the time, right? Because just like you said, people don’t want to fess up. But those things that they don’t want to talk about may be the most important part of the engagement because you’ve got to understand those to be able to really solve their problems. So, how do you have that conversation after the fact?

Christine Miles: [00:36:11] So, there’s two things here. So, the first is – and I believe this is a big part of this problem – is that most times when we’re selling, we don’t ask people about their feelings. We do not ask, “How does that make you feel?” Because in business, we think that’s an intrusive question. When, in fact, it’s one of the most powerful things we can find out is how people are feeling. I’m undaunted by asking somebody how they feel because I started to do it when I was five. So, I’ve never not asked a CEO, a chairman of the board in any situation how they feel. It’s just part of my nomenclature. It needs to become part of ours. If you do that earlier, you won’t be in that situation as often. I can promise you that.

Christine Miles: [00:37:02] And there’s two questions on the compass, How does that make you feel and It sounds like you felt. So, we have to get over ourselves and realize we need to ask about the feelings. That will unlock a lot of what you’re talking about so you don’t find as many surprises.

Christine Miles: [00:37:16] The second thing is, let’s just say it happens anyway because there’s shame and there’s embarrassment sometimes with what’s going on. And we have to feel comfortable to talk about that. So, it’s never too late to go back. And I’ll give you another therapy story from back in the day that makes the sales point.

Christine Miles: [00:37:36] So, when I stopped working as a therapist fulltime, I went into the world of employee assistance programming and I was running the organizational development side of the business. As I said, I was always seeing clients, more the high profile ones. And I had a buyer from a home shopping network that we worked with that was in a pretty big job. We had eight sessions. So, they put her with me, you know, eight sessions to try to help her.

Christine Miles: [00:38:02] So, she came in and said, “I’m having marital problems. My husband’s laying on the couch. He doesn’t want to come in. I’m frustrated. I’m not happy.” And I said, “Well, your husband doesn’t come in. We can still work on the marriage even if you’re here.” And, boom, we went off. So, now, I’m already engaged with her as a client.

Christine Miles: [00:38:17] Guess what she told me on session four? On session four, she says to me, “I have something to tell you, Christine, that I didn’t tell you yet.” “Oh, okay. Well, have at it.” She said, “Well, I’m having an affair with our neighbor who’s our best friend. Like, we do everything together. My husband’s best friend and my best friend. And the husband and I are having an affair.”

Christine Miles: [00:38:42] I got four sessions in on eight sessions and went, “Oh, no.” [Inaudible]. No judgment. But that would have really been helpful for me to know in session one, right? Whose fault was that? It was mine because I didn’t dig enough what else is happening, take me back, tell me more. I went forward too much. I started solving too much.

Christine Miles: [00:39:03] But at that moment I just said, “All right. Take me back. Let’s go back. How did that start? Where did that begin? How is that impacting your marriage?” And then, we started over on the path because I missed a big part of the beginning of the movie. So, I had to go back to the beginning to understand how that was impacting, why that happened. So, it’s never too late to go back, but it’s important that we go back once we hear that.

John Ray: [00:39:30] Yeah. I love that. One final thing, just something that’s really tactical. How do you feel about the use of silence? So, for example, someone says, “That’s too expensive.” And you’re silent. And silence abhors a vacuum, or whatever that saying is. So, is that the way to respond? Or should we say tell me more? How do you feel about silence, I guess?

Christine Miles: [00:40:10] Well, again, my sales training was [inaudible] based on how I was trained as a therapist at 22. Because eventually I worked in-patient and we worked via one way mirrors. So, sometimes I had 20 people behind a mirror and a lead therapist calling in and saying, “You have to say this to the family.” Or in a very compelling story, one time they made me sit on my hands for an entire session because the family wasn’t talking. And I had to sit there and learn how to be silent until they started talking. And it’s powerful. There’s a quote that the CIA says, “Silence sucks the truth out.”

John Ray: [00:40:44] Oh, I like that.

Christine Miles: [00:40:46] Silence is a very powerful tool. It’s also a listening inhibitor. Because people are afraid of it. It’s uncomfortable. We tend to fill the space. So, it takes some practice to get good at knowing how and when to be silent. So, it takes a comfort level. So, it won’t be the most natural thing for those who aren’t comfortable with it. But if you can practice your way to success, that’s a very powerful tool as far as listening. Even when you’re not asking a bomb question like that, sometimes it’s just you stop talking and I don’t feel the need to ask you another. I just wait and then you’ll start talking more.

Christine Miles: [00:41:24] So, I feel it’s a very important tool. I also feel interrupting is a very important tool. It’s very important to be able to interrupt people. Most people don’t think that means you’re being a good listener, but it is one of the most powerful things you can do as a listener. The only way and only reason you’re allowed to understand is – pardon me – interrupt is to understand and not to tell.

Christine Miles: [00:41:49] So, John, I could interrupt you and say, “Hold on. Hold on. Let me make sure I get you.” And then, slow you down and interrupt for that because I think you’re getting lost deep in the woods. But if I interrupt to just start talking, totally different matter. Silence and interrupting are very, very important. If you’re not comfortable with silence, the tell me more, take me back, how does that make you feel are going to get you there as well.

John Ray: [00:42:19] Wow. This has been powerful. Christine Miles, you’re terrific. And thank you so much for the work you do and how you’re sharing it with the world. I want to make sure that we shoutout properly where folks can find you. Certainly, your book – which is one of my favorite book titles in a long time – What Is It Costing You Not To Listen? If that’s not a compelling title, I don’t know what is. But give everyone directions on how they can learn more about you and your work.

Christine Miles: [00:43:00] Sure. I appreciate the comment on the book title because I went against a lot of advice to title it that. Because, again, most people want to title it The Solution. And I’m like, “You can’t solve a problem you don’t know you have.” So, the book can be found on all the major outlets, Amazon. And in any form that you want it because I’ve learned people want their book the way they want it, audio, Kindle, hardback, softback.

Christine Miles: [00:43:27] They can find me @cmileslistens. My contact information is also in the book, by the way, and that includes my cell phone. And they can find us on EQuipt, that’s E-Q-U-I-P as in Paul-T as in Tom, -people.com.

John Ray: [00:43:43] Terrific. Christine Miles, thank you again for coming on. I appreciate you. And I know our listeners are going to just love this. So, thank you.

Christine Miles: [00:43:52] My pleasure. Thank you.

John Ray: [00:43:54] Absolutely. Hey, folks, just as we wrap it up, if you want to know more about this podcast series, you want to see the show archive, of course, you can go to your favorite podcast app, Price Value Journey would be the search term to be able to find this series on your favorite app. You can also go to pricevaluejourney.com and find the show archive there, a link to the show archive there.

John Ray: [00:44:20] You can also find information on my book that’s going to be released later this year called The Price and Value Journey – imagine that – The Price and Value –

Christine Miles: [00:44:30] Congratulations.

John Ray: [00:44:30] Yeah. The Price And Value Journey: Raising Your Confidence, Your Value, and Your Prices Using the Generosity Mindset Method. If you want to know more and get updates as they happen on that book and when it’s coming, you can sign up there.

John Ray: [00:44:48] So, for my guest, Christine Miles, I’m John Ray. Thank you again for joining us on The Price and Value Journey.

 

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,700 podcast episodes.

Coming in 2023:  A New Book!

John’s working on a book that will be released in 2023:  The Price and Value Journey: Raise Your Confidence, Your Value, and Your Prices Using The Generosity Mindset. The book covers topics like value and adopting a mindset of value, pricing your services more effectively, proposals, and essential elements of growing your business. For more information or to sign up to receive updates on the book release, go to pricevaluejourney.com.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: Christine Miles, connect, emotional intelligence, EQquipt, influence, John Ray, listening, listening skills, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, professional services providers, Sell, solopreneurs, Solve, The Listening Path, value, value pricing

Building Culture Through Human Connection E29

February 3, 2023 by Karen

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Phoenix Business Radio
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Building-Culture-Through-Human-Connection

Building Culture Through Human Connection E29

Do you ever feel like you are moving through the motions at work and not really connecting with the people there? You want to know them more and truly connect but you aren’t. Do you ever feel this same way when you are at a networking event? As if it is a competition for how many names and business cards you can share?

This is because you are not finding the real connection with people.

True human connection and communication is what really builds culture and relationships. True connection with others helps good leaders to become the best leaders. We discussed this with Craig Forman with CultureAmp and Bobi Seredich with Southwest Institute for Emotional Intelligence on this episode of the Culture Crush Business Podcast.

When we reflect on this podcast, we have so many topics that were discussed.

Self awareness
Military culture and influence
Emotional intelligence for the workplace
Ways to inspire people through culture
Having the courage to be vulnerable
The fitbit affect with culture
Leveraging data to grow culture
Stop, Breath, Ask

If you are curious about these topics then you will have to listen to the podcast to hear more from Bobi and Craig about them.

In the meantime, we do have a few other quick takeaways from the podcast about shifting your attitude and actions.

Intent versus impact: We all have good intentions but others judge us by our actions. When you are forming a relationship or bond with someone, be curious instead of judgemental. Love human beings, not human doings. Let’s try to be more intentional.

Transformational versus transactional: Let’s try to be less transactional and more transformational. When it comes to connections and relationships, it does not need to be a tit for tat game. If we come at relationships with the want and need to help support and transform, then the relationship has the opportunity to build in a more unique way.

culture-amp-logo-full-purple-reversed

Culture Amp is a culture-first software company that is building a survey and analytics platform for people and culture.

The Culture Amp team combines deep knowledge in psychology, statistics, user experience and engineering into a platform that is transforming organizations worldwide.

Craig-Forman-Culture-CrushCraig Forman is a Lead People Scientist at Culture Amp, an employee experience platform used by over 6000 organizations worldwide. He both supports organizations in building effective people and culture strategies along with building the world’s largest community of people focused on building a better world of work. Behind all of his work is a mission to help the world work better by improving the places we work.

He holds a Masters degree in Industrial / Organizational Psychology, and is a proud veteran of the US Air Force.

Connect with Craig on LinkedIn.

SWIEI_LogoMark_HORZ_Orange

The vision at the Southwest Institute for Emotional Intelligence is to enhance life and leadership through Emotional Intelligence (EI) mastery. They have a proven approach to teaching EI skills that are immediately applied to business growth.

They teach influencers and leaders to connect confidently with each other in more meaningful and productive ways – to better collaborate, communicate, express empathy, perform under stress, adapt to change, and drive results.

The Southwest Institute for Emotional Intelligence offers keynotes, workshops, online courses, coaching, and consulting.

Bobi-Seredich-Culture-CrushBobi Seredich is the Co-Founder & President of The Southwest Institute for Emotional Intelligence. She is a certified coach and trainer in Emotional Intelligence from the Institute for Health and Human Potential. She is a recognized speaker, author, trainer, and successful entrepreneur specializing in leadership development.

Her passion is to guide individuals and organizations to a higher performance level through her own business knowledge, inspirational stories and leadership emotional intelligence training. She has spent over 25 years of her career dedicated to creating, directing, writing and presenting leadership programs for top companies in the U.S. and around the world.

In 2001 she founded Equanimity, Inc. also known as EQ Speakers, a speakers bureau, and leadership training company. It fast became a top speaker bureau that booked hundreds of speakers with large Fortune 500 clients. EQ Speakers was sold in 2012 and continues to be a leader in the industry.

Her book, Courage Does Not Always Roar Ordinary Women with Extraordinary Courage, was published by Simple Truths in the spring of 2010. The book is a collection of her experiences and stories of women who have had the courage to overcome very difficult life events. She is a mother of twins, Alex and Gia.

Follow Southwest Institute for Emotional Intelligence on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

About Culture Crush

Culture is not just a tag word to be thrown around. It is not something you throw in job descriptions to draw people to applying for jobs within a company.

According to Marcus Buckingham and Ashely Goodall in their book Nine Lies About Work, “Culture is the tenants of how we behave. It’s like a family creed. This is how we operate and treat each other in the family.”CultaureCrushKindraBanner2

As a growing company- Culture Crush Business Podcast is THE culture improvement resource that supports companies and leaders.  Our Mission is to improve company cultures so people WANT to go to work. Employees and leaders should like where they work and we think this is possible.

Within the company: Culture Crush has Vetted Resources and Partnerships with the right people and resources that can help improve your company culture.

On this podcast:  We focus on everything surrounding businesses with good company culture. We will talk with company leaders to learn about real-life experiences, tips, and best practices for creating a healthy work environment where employees are finding joy and satisfaction in their work while also striving and growing within the company.  We also find the companies that offer resources to help improve company culture and showcase them on the show to share their tips and tricks for growing culture.

About the Host

ABHOUTHOSTHEADSHOT

Kindra Maples  is spartan racer, past animal trainer, previous magician’s assistant, and has a weakness for Oreo cookie shakes. Her journey working with people actually started working with animals as a teenager (don’t worry we won’t go that far back for her bio).

She worked for over 15 years in the zoo industry working with animals and the public. Her passion of working with animals shifted into working with people in education, operations and leadership roles. From there her passion of leadership and helping people develop has continued to grow.

Then came the opportunity for leading  the Culture Crush Business Podcast and she jumped on it. Leadership, growth, and strong company cultures are all areas that Kindra is interested in diving into further.

Shout Outs

We want to thank a few people for their behind the scenes effort in helping this relaunch to come to life. James Johnson with Tailored Penguin Media Company LLC.– It is a small, but powerful video production company with a goal to deliver the very best by articulating the vision of your brand in a visually creative way. Gordon Murray with Flash PhotoVideo, LLC. -Flash Gordon has been photographing since high school and evolving since then with new products that will equip, encourage, engage, and enable. Renee Blundon with Renee Blundon Design – She is not only one of the best free divers (that’s not how she helped with the podcast) but she is great with graphics design and taking the direction for the vision that you have while also adding creative ideas to bring to your vision to life.

These are just a few of the folks that supported the relaunch of the podcast. If you would like to be part of the Culture Crush team or would like to support underwriting the show- please reach out: info@culturecrushbusiness.com

Tagged With: company culture, Culture, Culture Amp, Culture First, emotional intelligence, Employee Engagement, leadership training, Learn EI

Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises, LLC

November 5, 2021 by John Ray

Dawn Cook Causey
North Fulton Business Radio
Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises, LLC
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Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises, LLC (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 408)

Executive coach Dawn Cook Causey joined host John Ray to define emotional intelligence (EQ) and explain why sharpening your EQ is so vital to business sucess. Dawn also offered practices for developing self-awareness, how she coaches her executive and business leader clients, and much more. She also shared a new e-book, Every Day is an Interview, which debuts soon.  North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

DayBreak Enterprises, LLC

DayBreak’s mission is to help organizations drive profits by developing their people.

They believe that better emotional intelligence (EQ) leads to better leaders which lead to better business performance. Research shows that leaders and teams with high EQ perform at a higher level, contribute to increased corporate earnings, enjoy higher morale and experience lower turnover. They like proving that research is accurate.

Although DayBreak is based in Alpharetta, Georgia and many of our clients are in Atlanta, we provide executive coaching and leadership development world-wide. Raising the bar for leadership has no limits.

DayBreak offers a variety of tools and assessments to enable you and your team to improve your success.

Developing your team drives business results by increasing skill and motivation. Superstar performance comes from individual contributors leveraging each other’s strengths in addition to their own.

Training your team to increase leadership skills will be six times more effective when it is supported by a strong framework that includes laser-focused objectives, highly engaging content and management-supported follow-up.

Dawn assists clients, teams, and organizations in increasing self-awareness, self-management, social awareness and relationship management so they are EQuipped to bring about change in themselves and their organizations.

Company website | LinkedIn | Instagram

Dawn Cook Causey, Executive Coach, DayBreak Enterprises, LLC

Dawn Cook Causey, Executive Coach, DayBreak Enterprises, LLC

Dawn Cook Causey is an Executive Coach working with leaders and teams to improve their leadership bench strength, increase the speed/reduce cost of doing business through better work relationships and deliver better results.

Her mission is to help organizations drive profits by developing their people. Better emotional intelligence (EQ) means better leaders which means better business performance. Research shows that leaders and teams with high EQ perform at a higher level, contribute to increased corporate earnings, enjoy higher morale and experience lower turnover. She likes proving that research time and time again. Those ‘touchy feely’ competencies are touching and feeling bottom lines everywhere.

Dawn helps leaders who are intellectually bright and technically strong, yet struggle to maximize their own or their team’s potential because they fail to maximize the power of emotions. Her ideal client is the one who is as passionate about developing themselves as she is about helping them do it. She has an excellent track record helping leaders who need to better balance their strong, results-oriented nature with leveraging relationships.

If you or your executives are in any of these positions, Dawn can help you:

– Executive who blew the doors off their competition and rose quickly to the top, but now having to manage and motivate others is a challenge,

– Chief Information Officer responsible for technical types with ‘black and white’ thinking who need their communication styles to be as scalable and efficient as their enterprise solutions,

– Chief Engineering Officer who recognizes that their engineers need to design a better system for relating to non-engineering folks, or

– VP of Human Resources looking for ways to impact the bottom line through higher employee engagement and morale, lower turnover and recruiting costs,

LinkedIn

Questions and Topics Discussed in this Episode

  • There are lots of coaches out there, we’ve interviewed several on this show. What is your niche or what makes you unique?
  • How did you get into coaching? What’s your journey?
  • Who do you coach? Describe your clients and the types of things you coach with them on.
  • In your bio, you say your motto is, “It’s your choice. Make it count.” Tell me about that.
  • And how does making a choice tie to emotional intelligence, since that is your specialty?
  • Can you give us an example of how you’ve worked with a client to make better choices?
  • You call yourself an Executive Coach. Do you ever do Life Coaching?
  • How has the pandemic affected your coaching business?
  • How can people connect with you if they want to start making better, more emotionally intelligent choices?

North Fulton Business Radio is hosted by John Ray, and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

RenasantBank

 

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

 

Special thanks to A&S Culinary Concepts for their support of this edition of North Fulton Business Radio. A&S Culinary Concepts, based in Johns Creek, is an award-winning culinary studio, celebrated for corporate catering, corporate team building, Big Green Egg Boot Camps, and private group events. They also provide oven-ready, cooked from scratch meals to go they call “Let Us Cook for You.” To see their menus and events, go to their website or call 678-336-9196.

Tagged With: A&S Culinary Concepts, Dawn Cook Causey, DayBreak Enterprises, emotional intelligence, EQ, executive coach, executive coaching, John Ray, Life Coach, North Fulton Business Radio, renasant bank, self-awareness

Christine Miller With Miller Sales Consulting

May 18, 2021 by Jacob Lapera

Christine-Miller-Miller-Sales-Consulting
Coach The Coach
Christine Miller With Miller Sales Consulting
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Christine-Miller-Miller-Sales-ConsultingChristine Miller
, owner of Miller Sales Consulting, focuses on helping companies grow their client base and increase revenue. She specializes in sales coaching, training, fractional sales manager services, and building high-performance sales teams.

Chris knows how to build an opportunity pipeline while maximizing client’s sales and marketing potential. The scope of her experience has spanned virtually all aspects of sales, marketing, advertising, as well as management and team building.

In addition to her consulting work, Christine spent many years as a Director of Sales in the corporate world. She is accomplished at recruiting, training and coaching salespeople and sales managers to success.

She is the author of Sales Geisha (available on Amazon). Christine is also a speaker and has presented on topics including: The Future of Sales: AI (Artificial Intelligence) and EI (Emotional Intelligence), Accelerate Your Sales: Key Actions to Take You from Preparation to Close, Strategic Account List Management and Sell Back, Utilizing LinkedIn for Sales Success.

Christine offers her services globally.

Connect With Christine on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • The future of Sales: AI (Artificial Intelligence) and EI (Emotional Intelligence)

Tagged With: artificial intelligence, emotional intelligence, Miller Sales Consulting

Leadership Strategies for the Virtual World E12

April 1, 2021 by Karen

AZ TechCast
AZ TechCast
Leadership Strategies for the Virtual World E12
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Leadership Strategies for the Virtual World E12

Without question, the pandemic suddenly and dramatically upended the working world, creating unanticipated business and leadership challenges. The rapid shift to remote work brought on countless challenges for organizations. The inability to bring external and internal stakeholders together in person for the foreseeable future adds more difficulty to decision-making and increases the potential for conflict.

During the ongoing crisis, senior leaders must rethink key decision-making processes in order to enhance trust, transparency and teamwork. More than ever, leaders must be attuned to the needs of their businesses, their workforce and other key partners and stakeholders, even though the stresses in their own lives may have increased during the pandemic.

Moderated by Phoenix Business RadioX, a distinguished panel of leadership experts from jdh Insights, Michael Beach Consulting and Andy Maurer Consulting joined Arizona Technology Council for an engaging discussion on best practices to deal with toxic stress, as well as strategies to improve the quality and impact of leadership while working virtually in these turbulent times.

In times of change and disruption, strong leaders are needed for business continuity. Because working effectively in a virtual environment requires a high level of independence, business leaders not only have to elevate their communication skills to connect personally with team members, they must also tap into emotional intelligence.

Andy-Maurer-LOGO

Andy Maurer Leadership Consulting coaches the world’s highest-level executives, CEOs, leaders, founders and entrepreneurs

AndyMaurerheadshotAndy Maurer is a keynote speaker and an emotional wellness coach for leaders. He has a background as a licensed therapist specializing in leadership, trauma, and emotional health.

With a background as a licensed therapist specializing in leadership, trauma and emotional health, Maurer utilizes cutting-edge neuroscience and performance research, paired with therapeutic best practices and strategies to help high-performance leaders, CEOs, founders and entrepreneurs operate at a higher caliber and in a healthy and sustainable way within their life, work and relationships.

After years of working with leaders, Maurer has come to believe that any leader can change the world, but only whole and emotionally healthy leaders are empowered to change it for the better.

Connect with Andy on LinkedIn and Facebook.

jdh Insights, LLC provides coaching and consulting services focused on cultivating leadership excellence and creating extraordinary employee experiences resulting in high performance organizations. JDHI-NSIGHTS-LOGO1

Visit https://jdhinsights.com to learn how jdh Insights can help your company leverage its greatest assets…their humans.

Joan-Hibdon-photo02Joani Hibdon is the principal owner of jdh Insights, LLC. Hibdon has more than 20 years of experience as a human resources leader responsible for leading all facets of human resources in a variety of global organizations.

Cultivating cultures where people thrive is what Hibdon is passionate about. She has gained the reputation of being a trusted advisor, coach and valuable business partner. Through executive coaching, Hibdon helps leaders discover the best version of themselves, allowing them to exceed their potential and feeling fulfilled in their lives.

The impact of executives and leaders who experience personal transformation creates high-performing cultures. Her experience in this area has proven that with the right leaders, teams and individuals achieve extraordinary performance results. Her ability to listen to others and share critical insights is essential for human and business results.

Hibdon has spent her career leading various human resource functions, working across diverse global industries including financial, cable, food services, software and telecommunications.

In addition to having expertise in executive coaching and leadership development, Hibdon knows how to align business strategy with human performance, create organizational and team effectiveness, and lead change management efforts. Joan believes that making an investment in people has a direct correlation to being a competitive differentiator for companies in their industry marketplace.

Companies Hibdon has worked for include Level 3 Communications, tw telecom, Webroot Software, JD Edwards, Oracle, Reiss Media and Time Warner Cable.

Hibdon graduated from the University of Phoenix with a Bachelor’s degree in Business Management. She holds several certifications in Leadership Coaching and Team Effectiveness.

Connect with Joani on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Michael-Beach-ConsultingLOGO

Michael Beach Coaching & Consulting sharpens the leadership abilities of C-Suite Executives, leadership teams and emerging leaders. As Certified Professional Business Coaches with decades of business experience and seasoned leadership acumen, the company equips your leaders and emerging leaders to understand and leverage their strengths and to develop new leadership capabilities.

Focusing on leadership development, emotional intelligence, communications excellence, and other disciplines, Michael Beach Coaching & Consulting have successfully led teams in organizations big and small, from Fortune 500 companies to start-ups.

Fast-growth companies rely on Michael Beach Coaching & Consulting to help them maximize opportunities to grow business quickly and profitably, serving their customers in a game-changing way.

Linda-Drake-photoLinda Drake is a seasoned leadership coach and business consultant for C-level, senior and emerging leaders. She has a focus on individual and team development and breakthrough results. Her clients appreciate her keen insights as she brings large company executive experience and deep understanding of deliverables and team management for global clients and supplier companies.

Drake’s coaching engagements with CEOs, entrepreneurs, and senior executives represent multiple disciplines both domestic and international including health care, tech sectors, insurance, advertising, banking and public relations.

Drake is the recipient of numerous state and national awards, including Entrepreneurial Woman of the Year, the Philadelphia Business Journal Women of Distinction Award, Ernst & Young’s Delaware Valley Entrepreneur of the Year, and the coveted Pioneer Award from PACE, the Professional Association for Customer Engagement.

Linda also won the Women Impacting Public Policy (WIPP) Member of the Year Award for leadership as Membership Chair.

Connect with Linda on LinkedIn.

About AZ TechCastAZTECHCASTLOGOBRX-4-23-2020

AZ TechCast is dedicated to covering innovation and technology in Arizona and beyond.

Through the art of connected conversation, AZ TechCast’s guests will share their expertise, success stories, news and analysis about the region’s leading startups, companies and emerging technologies, as well as the latest industry trends and critical issues propelling the state’s growing technology ecosystem.

About Your Hosts

Steven-ZylstraSteve Zylstra serves as president and CEO of the Arizona Technology Council, a role he assumed in 2007. He is responsible for strategy, operations, finance and policy development. Zylstra is a vocal spokesman for the value technology can provide in raising social and economic standards in Arizona.

Zylstra serves on numerous councils, committees and boards, was named “Leader of the Year, Technology,” by the Arizona Capitol Times, and “Most Admired Leader” by the Phoenix Business Journal. In addition, he was awarded an honorary doctorate of science in technology from the University of Advancing Technology in Tempe, Ariz.

Zylstra earned a bachelor’s degree in automotive engineering technology from Western Michigan University.

KarenNowickiv2Karen Nowicki is a successful author, speaker and the creator of Deep Impact Leadership™ and SoulMarks Coaching™. She is a two-time recipient of the prestigious national Choice Award® for her book and personal development retreat. Karen was crowned the first-ever “Mompreneur of the Year” Award in 2010 for the southwestern states. She was recognized for her leadership, business acumen, and work-life balance.

Karen has been an expert guest on regional TV and radio shows, including Fox Phoenix Morning Show, Sonoran Living, Good Morning Arizona, The Chat Room, and Mid-Day Arizona. She has been a regular contributor to many print and online magazines – publishing articles and blogs for business and education.

In addition to working with private coaching clients, Karen is also the Owner & President of Phoenix Business RadioX. The Business RadioX Network amplifies the voice of business – serving the Fortune 500,000, not just the Fortune 500. Phoenix Business RadioX helps local businesses and professional associations get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, profession, and community.

Of all the experiences Karen has had the privilege of participating in over her vast career, she shares that Phoenix Business RadioX is a pinnacle adventure!

Connect with Karen on LinkedIn and follow Phoenix Business RadioX on Facebook and Instagram.

About Our Sponsor

The Arizona Technology Council, Arizona’s only statewide organization serving the technology sector, fosters a climate of innovation to enhance technology in Arizona.

A trusted resource in strengthening Arizona’s technology industry, the Council proactively eliminates impediments that companies face, accelerates the entrepreneurial mindset in the state’s expanding innovation ecosystem, and works to create a destination for companies to be, thrive and stay.

Follow Arizona Technology Council on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram.

AZTClogomainRGBPNG300DPI

 

Tagged With: business coaching, change management, Cultivating leadership, emotional intelligence, Emotional wellness, executive coaching, executive development, leadership coach, Leadership consulting, leadership development, Leadership strategies, Leadership success, Optimal performance, Organizational Consultant

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