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Difficult conversations don't have to be difficult: a simple, smart way to make your relationships and team better. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley. ISBN 978-1394187171. Reynolds, Marcia (13 October 2014). The Discomfort Zone: How Leaders Turn Difficult Conversations Into Breakthroughs. Berrett-Koehler Publishers. ISBN 978-1-62656-067-3.
The introduction states that Fierce Conversations is a "guide to tackling your toughest challenges and enriching relationships with everyone important to your success and happiness through principles, tools, and assignments designed to direct you through your first fierce conversations with yourself on to the most challenging and important conversations facing you."
In an organization, communication occurs between members of different hierarchical positions. Superior-subordinate communication refers to the interactions between organizational leaders and their subordinates and how they work together to achieve personal and organizational goals [1] Satisfactory upward and downward communication is essential for a successful organization because it closes ...
Dec. 15—Having difficult conversations in the workplace can be a tough task, for both employees and employers. That skill was the topic of the Women in Business luncheon Wednesday, with Aiken ...
Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High was first published in 2002 by McGraw-Hill, with a second edition published in 2012, [1] and a third edition published in 2022. [2] A business self-help book written by the four co-founders of VitalSmarts, Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, and Al Switzler, the book has ...
Addressing this issue directly with a line leader can be difficult for graduates, given that over a third (36%) feel uncomfortable having difficult conversations at work.
On several different factors, subordinates are judged on 'how much' of that factor or trait they possess. Typically, the raters use a 5- or 7-point scale; however, there are as many as 20-point scales. [1] Employee-comparison methods: rather than subordinates being judged against pre-established criteria, they are compared with one another.