

Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most [Stone, Douglas, Patton, Bruce, Heen, Sheila, Fisher, Roger] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most Review: Tons of useful info - Awesome book. Every page has something notable and applicable. My wife and I use it and it has definitely helped us regarding our communication. Can't recommend it enough Review: Practical and helpful - This is a really good book. It's got simple wisdom about how to have difficult conversations. I found it useful, others may find it's a life transformation.



| Best Sellers Rank | #5,652 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1 in Management Science #24 in Interpersonal Relations (Books) #158 in Success Self-Help |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 369 Reviews |
A**R
Tons of useful info
Awesome book. Every page has something notable and applicable. My wife and I use it and it has definitely helped us regarding our communication. Can't recommend it enough
M**R
Practical and helpful
This is a really good book. It's got simple wisdom about how to have difficult conversations. I found it useful, others may find it's a life transformation.
E**1
Good Book
Good book to how to handle difficult conversations. I definitely recommend it. Easy to read and useful for personal growth.
K**D
This was a good book
This book is so shallow that it works for both babies and adults. I absorbed what I needed reflected and now I'm ready for my next read.
D**H
How to Be Right Without Technically Saying You’re Right (And Other Fairy Tales)
The Authors: The Harvard Negotiation Project (A.K.A. People who think logic works on your toddler). Do you love the feeling of swallowing your pride until you choke? Do you enjoy pretending that your coworker’s absolute incompetence is just a "difference in working styles"? Then boy, do I have the book for you. From the ivory tower geniuses who brought us Getting to Yes (the book that convinced us we could negotiate world peace if we just used enough Venn diagrams) comes this updated guide to handling the moments in life where you actually just want to scream into a pillow. The Premise The book assumes that human beings are rational actors who, when presented with a "Learning Stance," will stop being defensive jerks. It suggests that instead of winning an argument, we should try to understand the other person. Gross. The "Method" The authors break down every argument into three layers: The "What Happened" Conversation: Where you have to pretend you don't know exactly who left the milk out. The Feelings Conversation: Where you have to acknowledge that the other person has emotions, even though their only emotion should be shame. The Identity Conversation: Where you realize you aren't the hero of the story. (Speak for yourself, Harvard). The "Updates" This third edition is updated for the modern era, addressing things like social media. Finally, a chapter on how to use "I statements" when a stranger on Twitter accuses you of having the IQ of a ham sandwich. It also covers "communicating via technology," which I assume is just 20 pages of advice on why you shouldn't break up with someone via Snapchat. The Verdict Difficult Conversations is an incredibly useful, well-researched, and practical guide that completely ruins the joy of righteous indignation. It forces you to be the "bigger person," to "disentangle intent from impact," and to "listen." It’s exhausted me just typing that. If you actually do what this book says, your relationships will undoubtedly improve, your work life will be smoother, and you will navigate conflict with grace. But you’ll miss the sweet, sweet dopamine hit of just yelling, "Because I said so!" Rating: 5/5 stars for effectiveness; 0/5 stars for letting me be petty. Key Takeaways for the Reluctant Adult: The "Third Story": The book suggests framing a conflict from the perspective of a neutral third observer. I prefer the "My Story," where I am right, and you are wrong. Curiosity: You are supposed to be "curious" about why your employee is underperforming. Note: "Are you actually kidding me?" does not count as curiosity. The Cost: The price of this book is $20, but the real cost is having to admit that maybe, just maybe, you are part of the problem. Next Step: Would you like me to roleplay a "Difficult Conversation" with you so you can practice these techniques (or just vent)?
E**H
Valuable Information
This should be added to your list of books to read. The author provides insight and valuable tools for handling conversation topics that may be awkward or problematic. Geared towards the work place, but the strategies are valuable in all relationships.
S**S
Highly recommend
One of the most impactful books I’ve ever read. Highly recommend.
A**R
Book text invisible
Can’t even read this book… the text is in GRAY and hardly visible. Publishers saving cost on ink??????
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