Leaders, empower others by asking questions

Do you want to empower others? Do you want to empower others to focus, solve problems, and achieve their goals? If so, provoke them. Provoke them to reflect. 
 
Reflection is powerful. Personally speaking, reflection helps me clarify my ministry goals, increase awareness of my progress, identify things that are hindering my progress, and develop action steps. In short, reflection helps me do ministry. 
 
I’ve seen reflection help fellow staff members at Christian Academy in Japan (CAJ). After reflecting, staff members were more focused on their goals, managed their time better, and led meetings more effectively.
 
But don’t take my word for it. I asked CAJ staff members to tell me how reflection empowers them. Here’s what they said: “Reflection helps me get clear on what’s going on so I can make effective decisions.” “Reflection helps me organize my tasks and next actions.” “Reflection helps me handle situations more effectively.”
 
So, how can you provoke reflection? By asking open-ended questions:
  • If your co-worker wants to more effectively disciple others, ask: How do you disciple people now? What’s causing you to want to improve? What’s “more effective discipleship” look like? What can you do?
  • If your team is planning an event, ask: What do we want to see happen? What will help this go well? Who’s going to do what?
  • If a pastor is dealing with conflict, ask: What happened? How do you feel? How does the other person see the situation? How can you demonstrate Christ’s love?
  • If a small group leader wants to help her members to be more engaged, ask: If your members got more engaged, what might happen? What helps your members get engaged? When are your participants not engaged? What can you do?
Bottom line: Empower other by asking questions.

*Want to empower others to ask questions? Then ask them questions like:
  1. What problems are those around you facing?
  2. What goals are they trying to achieve?
  3. What excites/concerns you about empowering others by asking questions?
  4. To what extent do you ask questions to help others focus? Prioritize? Solve problems?
  5. How could you more effectively use questions to empower others?
  6. What will you do?

How often are you interested in what others say?

Your mind is starting to wander. Your responses lack your usual focus and enthusiasm. When your calendar alarm goes off, you focus on it and miss a key thought your client has shared. And you’re concerned because you know these things indicate that you’re not really interested in what your client is saying.
 
Question: How often are you interested in what others say?
  • Consistently?
  • Usually?
  • Sometimes?
  • Rarely?
Make sure you’re consistently interested in what others say. Things that help me do this include the following:
  1. Focusing on my client as a fellow Christian who is working to pursue his calling.
  2. Making appropriate eye contact.
  3. Removing distractions before I start coaching. For example, if I’m using videoconferencing to coach, I turn off all other software applications.
Question: What will you do to ensure that you consistently are interested in what others say?

How often do you refrain from suggesting options?

Your client has explored what’s happening with her goal to make a career transition. You ask, “What can you do to move forward?” You wait about 15 seconds—your client doesn’t say anything. You rephrase the question and ask, “What are your options?’’ And you wait for about 10 seconds—your client doesn’t say anything. Then you say, “Here are 3 things you could do.…”
 
Not good. Why? Because by suggesting options you did the work your client is supposed to do. Because your suggestions interrupted some really good ideas your client was having—she wasn’t sitting there doing nothing. Because you hear your client say, “I appreciate your willingness to help. I was coming up with some good ideas, and when you gave your suggestions, I focused on listening to you. Now I’m having trouble remembering what I was thinking.” Ouch.
 
Question: How often to you refrain from suggesting options?
  • Consistently?
  • Usually?
  • Sometimes?
  • Rarely?
Make sure you consistently refrain from suggesting options. Things that help me do this include the following:
  1. Remembering that silence indicates reflection, not the absence of reflection.
  2. Remembering that brainstorming options helps my client get motivated for action. And I want my client motivated for action.
Question: What will you do to ensure that you consistently refrain from suggesting options?

Provoke reflection throughout your mission

I’m watching missionaries, who are sitting in pairs, deeply engaged in conversation. These missionaries are asking each other key questions: What people/projects are you investing your energy in? What’s been satisfying/frustrating? What are the reasons for your feelings of satisfaction/frustration? How can I pray for you?
 
I’m thinking, “This is going pretty well. They’re more engaged than if I did the traditional style of devotions. They’re provoking each other to reflect. And they look like they’re having a good time. Having them use a set of questions worked.”
 
Want to provoke reflection throughout your mission? Have people in your mission use a set of questions to talk together.
 
For example, when you are starting a mission gathering and need an icebreaker, have participants ask each other a set of questions:  When you were in 5th grade, where did you live? What did you enjoy doing? What’s easy/challenging about living in this country? In your recent personal life, what’s been encouraging/discouraging? Overall, how are you feeling? How can I pray for you?
 
When you’re leading a team meeting and want team members to reflect on ministry goals, have team members ask each other a set of questions: What are your ministry goals? What progress on your goals have you experienced? What roadblocks have you experienced? How can you leverage your progress and minimize your roadblocks? You talked about _____ today—what do you think you’ll do?
 
When you’re leading a workshop on getting more organized, have participants ask each other a set of questions: What tools do you use to get organized? How do you feel when you’re organized/disorganized? For you, what does being organized look like? To get organized, what do you need to keep doing, start doing, and stop doing? What will you do?
 
Use the following set of questions to reflect on this article:
  1. What is 1 thing from this article that interested you?
  2. What excites/concerns you about provoking reflection throughout your mission?
  3. How could using a set of questions help you provoke reflection?
  4. When could you use a set of questions to provoke reflection?
  5. What will you do?

How often do you refrain from describing your client’s reality?

Your client is talking about what’s happening with his goal to plan more effectively. You easily relate to this—a few years back you had a similar goal. Since then, you’ve done research on planning, coached 27 clients who are working on planning, and developed a 5-phase planning framework.
 
As you listen to your client, you think, “He’s at phase 2.” Your client pauses, and you hear yourself say, “As best I can tell, you’re in phase 2—you’re working and you have a plan. Since you don’t yet have a good documented plan, you follow your gut more than your plan.”
 
Then you recognize that you just described your client’s reality—something you don’t want to do. Because you want your client thinking, and when you describe your client’s reality, he’s not thinking.
 
Question: How often do you refrain from describing your client’s reality?
  • Consistently?
  • Usually?
  • Sometimes?
  • Rarely?
Make sure you consistently refrain from describing your client’s reality. Two things that help me do this are:
  1. Remembering that my client is the expert in his life—not me. He knows his reality.
  2. Remembering that my goal is to get my client thinking about his reality.
Question: What will you do to ensure that you consistently refrain from describing your client’s reality?

How often do you refrain from suggesting goals for the coaching session?

You ask your client, “What would you like to accomplish as a result of talking today?” Your client responds, “I didn’t really think about what I wanted to accomplish today. Nothing’s coming to mind. Got any ideas?”
 
This has happened with this client before. You quickly process through previous coaching sessions and think of 3 possible goals for the session. And you say, “How about how to handle email more effectively, how to make more time to talk with the kids, or how to more effectively target personal strengths?”
 
After asking the question, you realize that you’re suggesting goals for the coaching session. This is something you don’t want to do. Why? Because your client grows as she takes responsibility for identifying goals for a coaching session.
 
Question: How often do you refrain from suggesting goals for the coaching session?
  • Consistently?
  • Usually?
  • Sometimes?
  • Rarely?
Make sure you consistently refrain from suggesting goals for the coaching sessions. Things that help me do this include the following:
  1. Sharing with new and current clients that they are responsible for setting goals for coaching sessions and that setting goals helps them grow.
  2. Recognizing that if a client doesn’t have a goal for a session, now is a good time to have the client develop a list of goals.
Question: What will you do to ensure that you consistently refrain from suggesting goals for the coaching session?

How can you focus others?

By asking questions like:
  1. What’s your mission statement?
  2. What excites/concerns you about the mission?
  3. How does your work help achieve the mission?
  4. What helps you achieve the mission? What gets in your way?
  5. On a scale of 1-5 (5 being high), how focused are you on your mission statement?
  6. What can you do to increase your focus?
  7. What will you do?

How often do you refrain from giving advice/suggestions?

You want to help people. I do, too. One way to help people is by giving advice. But there are some definite downsides to giving advice:
  • You might irritate someone by giving unsolicited advice.
  • Your advice might work for you and not for the person you’re talking to.
  • If someone takes your advice and it doesn’t work, that might harm your relationship.
  • Giving advice doesn’t target developing the person into a better problem solver—it targets solving the immediate problem.
I don't want to irritate people, give advice that doesn’t work, put my relationships at risk, or only solve the immediate problem. I want people to solve their own problems by developing as problem solvers. So, I strive to refrain from giving advice.
 
Question: How often do you refrain from giving advice?
  • Consistently?
  • Usually?
  • Sometimes?
  • Rarely?
Strive to consistently refrain from giving advice. Strive to consistently focus on what others think in order to help them become better problem solvers. When you are tempted to give advice or when you find yourself focusing on what you are thinking, ask an open-ended question instead:
  • What’s your goal?
  • What’s going on?
  • What are your options?
  • What will you do?
Question: What action steps will you take to ensure that you consistently refrain from giving advice?

Use the GROW process

The GROW process is a user-friendly process you can use to coach others (Goal • Reality • Options • Will do).  

Use LIFE skills

When coaching, listen, inquire, focus, and encourage.

The coach's heart

Christian coaching flows from the heart, from beliefs about empowering others. 

Use coaching to empower others

If you want to empower others, use a coaching approach.

How often do you use restatement to encourage others?

I like getting encouragement. I like it more than getting critiques. Encouragement feels better and actually results in me working more effectively.
 
I believe in the power of encouragement, so I want to encourage others. One way I encourage others is by listening to what they say. And one way I demonstrate that I’m listening is by restating what the other person has been saying. Through restatement I show I’ve been listening and that I want to understand. For example, I might say, “If I understand correctly, you’re saying that ___. Is that right?”
 
Question: How often do you use restatement to encourage others?
  • Consistently?
  • Usually?
  • Sometimes?
  • Rarely?
Strive to consistently use restatement to encourage others. To encourage others, say things like: So what I think I hear you saying is ___. Is that right?
 
Question: What action steps will you take to ensure that you consistently encourage others through restatement?
 
*To learn more about encouraging others, click here.

How often do you focus others on developing SMART action steps?

What helps me get my goals accomplished? Developing my own action steps, action steps that I’m motivated to take and that are SMART. I don't have the same success rate when someone else develops the action steps and when the action steps are not SMART.
 
I’m sold on developing my own SMART action steps. And when I work with others, I work to focus them on developing their own SMART action steps.
 
Question: How often do you focus others on developing SMART action steps?
  • Consistently?
  • Usually?
  • Sometimes?
  • Rarely?
Make sure you consistently focus others on developing SMART action steps. What helps me do this consistently is asking questions like:
  • Specific: What do you mean by ___?
  • Measurable: How will you know when you’ve achieved your action step?
  • Attainable: How doable is this?
  • Relevant: How will this action step help you achieve your goal?
  • Timebound: When will you do this?
Question: What action steps will you take to ensure that you consistently focus others on developing SMART action steps?
 
*To learn more about focusing others, click here.

To encourage coaching, get staff to ask questions

Want to encourage coaching in your organization? One way I encourage coaching is by developing sets of questions to be used in meetings and workshops. As a result of using sets of questions in meetings and workshops, staff have shifted toward asking questions and away from giving advice.

In the planning sessions I'm facilitating today, participants are using the following sets of questions to help others reflect:

Set 1
  1. What’s your mission?
  2. What’s it take to carry out your mission?
  3. What’s already been accomplished?
  4. What helps you?
  5. What hinders you?
  6. What are your options?
  7. What will you do to achieve your goals?
Set 2
  1. What is your mission? What are your goals?
  2. How would you categorize progress on your goals? Why?
  3. To what extent do your current action steps help you address your goals?
Set 3
  1. What topics did you talk about in your tactical meeting?
  2. What action steps are you going to take before your next meeting?
  3. What did you learn by trying out different roles?
  4. What will help your team work together better?

How often do you ask open-ended questions?

Reflection is powerful. Reflection helps me identify my goals, better understand my current situation, and consider what I can do to move forward on my goals. I regularly take time to reflect and to encourage others to reflect.
 
How can you help others reflect? By asking open-ended questions. By asking questions like “What are your priorities?” and “What can you do to pursue God’s calling?”
 
Question: How often do you ask open-ended questions?
  • Consistently?
  • Usually?
  • Sometimes?
  • Rarely?
Make sure you consistently ask open-ended questions. What has helped me to do this is:
  • Reading books on open-ended questions, like Bobb Biehl’s Asking to Win.
  • Developing a set of go-to questions, for example: What’s your goal? What’s going on? What can you do? What will you do?
Question: What action steps will you take to ensure that you consistently ask open-ended questions?
 
*To learn more about asking questions, click here.