How To Become A Supercommunicator | Charles Duhigg
Вставка
- Опубліковано 3 лип 2024
- Get Kudos for free and double your credit card rewards → save.onelink.me/4iKP/erika
Use code “ERIKA” and earn $20.00 after your first eligible purchase!
#77: Charles Duhigg is a former columnist and senior editor at The New York Times, author of the bestselling book ‘The Power of Habit’ and a Pulitzer prize-winning reporter. In this episode, we discuss his new book ‘Supercommunicators’, and how anyone can train themselves to become just that.
You’ll also learn:
• The definition of a super communicator
• How to get into a deep conversation by asking three questions
• The toughest conversations people encounter
• The three components that take part in any conversation
Get Charles’s book ‘Supercommunicators’ here: erika.com/supercommunicators
I’m running a free “Save $1,000 Challenge” to teach you creative strategies to save money. It’s 5 days long and starts on Monday. Grab your free spot here: Erika.com/go
Thanks for tuning in and come back every Tuesday for a brand-new episode! Prefer to listen on the go? Listen wherever you get your podcasts. www.erikataughtme.com/follow
Did you enjoy the episode? Please leave us a review here: erika.com/review (just scroll to the bottom and tap on “leave a review”) It really helps the podcast, even just a sentence is perfect!
Follow the podcast @erikataughtme across platforms.
Connect with me on Instagram at / erikankullberg and / erikataughtme
For more information, go to www.erikataughtme.com/
Get on my personal finance & investing course priority waitlist here. erika.com/3D-money
Get my Mastering UA-cam course, to learn how to grow a UA-cam following and monetize it. erika.com/mastering-YT
For more of my free resources: erika.com/all-links
00:00 - Intro
02:45 - What makes some people better communicators?
13:44 - Charles’ Dreams and Ambitions
19:56 - The toughest conversations that people encounter
26:47 - What do people need to do differently from the manager and employee’s standpoint?
39:35 - Emotional intelligence and communication skills
48:43 - Misconception around communication
50:45 - The importance of meaningful conversations for well-being and success
53:13 - Charles Taught Me
I learned a lot from this podcast. Thank you
How To Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie, first published 1936. You don't need more.
That title has always creeped me out. 'What can I get from this interaction? How can I get this person to do what I want them to do?' Am I seeing this wrongly?
@notreallydavid Not really. Look at the original copyright (1936). It was a book for people who wanted to rise in corporate America at that time. A bit of a spoof on it was "How to Succeed In Business Without Really Trying", a Broadway musical of mid-20th century America.
I want this channel to be going for a long time so please take care of urself
Love, love, love Anita and her NDE story! ❤❤❤❤
Enjoyed learning from this one. Look forward to reading the book. Thank you.
Thanks erika
Awesome video, really like how he mentioned alot of great communicators either wanted to or had to become that from their own natrual abilies.
Love the book Power of Habit I will be getting this book
Hi Erika, I saw a video where you interviewed Codie Sanchez. Where can I find the podcast?
In regards to this subject about communication, I would say it's rather idealistic to communicate in the various ways shared. The boots on the ground experience for most people is not as he and psychologist present it. It's way too mentally taxing and requires a level of self-awareness and in some situations emotional maturity, that quite frankly, is not where most people are in these two areas. Also, in many instances it can come off as being fake, insincere, condescending, not a genuine conversation, especially when you're ASKING permission from the other person to share your thoughts and ideas. In real, organic conversations, I think most people don't ask for permission to ask a question or share whatever it is that's on our mind, except in school or other structured environment.
As a pedant, one communication tip I'd offer to the world is never to use the newish and widespread, but ugly and undistinguished 'in regards to' - that plural is fingernails on a blackboard. 'Regarding' is what's needed, or sometimes just 'about'.
(But everything up to that first comma could be cut, and should be. I've done a lot of editing, _and_ I've just been diagnosed as autistic. Yay!)
Please kick me All best.
What a great podcast
Dude, but we're not some kind of higher species--but HUMAN.
Mahalo!!! You are blessed!!! May I sub?