Back in the old days – the receptionist would tell a
visitor: Oh, he's not busy – he's on the phone!
'Doing business' then was meeting with others, writing
correspondence, or compiling proposals and reports. Early on the
phone was more novelty than tool – it was seen by many as personal
entertainment with a tenuous connection to the business process –
similar to Facebook today.
Some traditions die hard – as evidenced by that
co-worker who begins a conversation from your office door while you
are on the phone – no class and no appreciation of the value of the
phone as a significant business tool.
Seth
Godin has blogged often about the imperfection of communication –
written, pictured (i.e., video), and verbal – but notes that phone
calls are the least imperfect, since a cycle of clarity is built in.
'Huh?'
is a great way to get the other person to clarify in realtime.
A business toolbox without the phone as a versatile tool
is like an auto mechanic without a hammer – sometimes it's just
what is needed for getting results efficiently!
On a daily basis Dick
Davies and I have a structured phone call for updates on
projects, planning, and sharing interesting new information. We also
have an 'As I See It' discussion which is wide ranging and open –
which result in deeper knowledge of the topic and often new strategic
insights as well.
This process is an effective substitute for those
stimulating, informal 'office' chats when we were all in a single
location. But can it scale for a collaborative project team with
members located around the U.S. (or world) in many locations.
General
Stanley
McChrystal
when
Commander, U.S. Forces Afghanistan (USFOR-A) held an 'As We
See It' session with 70 nodes around the region for 90 minutes
everyday – he said this was the most effective way to tap local
knowledge of enemy activities and keep all units up to date on
current information
and
plans.
Email, Hangouts, Cloud-based document collaboration, and
other technology applications enable asynchronous
team performance, but sometimes the old technology of clear,
realtime, interactive, verbal communication is the best and most
efficient. Pick up the phone and join the call for immediate results.
Oh, he's busy right now...he's
on the phone!
Sales
Lab Video Channel -
Entertaining
experience
3 comments:
Seeing General McChrystal explaining that 90 minute call made me think we are on the right track.
It's hard to keep focus for the whole call, especially when others are slacking.
I'm also seeing texters stopping in the middle of the sidewalk with a crowd behind them, "Wha? Oh sorry."
How much concentration can one have when walking and texting? Both these tasks are dangerous when 'multitasking'.
Thanks for the comment.
I watched a video that said two people in a conversation go at 60 bits per second. We parse language at 100 bits per second.So when two people are talking at you, it's hard to parse.
When texters get overloaded, they don't walk, they stop suddenly or veer into other people. Incredible trust in people who don't care.
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