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Coaching for Leaders

539: The Path Towards Trusting Relationships, with Edgar Schein and Peter Schein

Coaching for Leaders

Dave Stachowiak

Education, Business, Management, Self-improvement, Careers

4.81.6K Ratings

🗓️ 9 August 2021

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Edgar Schein and Peter Schein: Humble Inquiry Edgar Schein is Professor Emeritus of MIT's Sloan School of Management. He is the recipient of the Distinguished Scholar Practitioner Award from the Academy of Management, the Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Leadership Association, and the Lifetime Achievement Award in Organization Development from the International OD Network. Peter Schein is COO of the Organizational Culture and Leadership Institute. He provides counsel to senior management on organizational development challenges facing private and public sector entities worldwide. He is a contributing author to the 5th edition of Organizational Culture and Leadership and co-author of Humble Leadership and The Corporate Culture Survival Guide. The pair co-founded the Organizational Culture and Leadership Institute and have written several books together, including two in the Humble Leadership series. They’ve recently released the second edition of Humble Inquiry: The Gentle Art of Asking Instead of Telling*. In this conversation, Edgar, Peter, and I explore the four relationship levels and invite leaders to move professional relationships from level 1 to level 2. A key entry point for this is to artfully reveal some of the things we tend to conceal. We discuss some practical steps to take — and the benefit for leaders and organizations. Key Points The four relationship levels: Level –1: Domination/exploitation Level 1: Transactional (professional distance) Level 2: Personal (openness and trust) Level 3: Intimacy We all conceal things. A useful way to build a relationship is for people to open up more of their concealed selves. A relationship is dance — improv if you will. We need to be willing to share the mic with the other party. Open-ended questions like, “What’s different today?” can help people to show up in the way they want to. Traditionally, we expected the person with more status to take the first step. That doesn’t necessarily need to be the case. Notice your own motivations, interventions, and contributions to the relationship. Resources Mentioned Humble Inquiry: The Gentle Art of Asking Instead of Telling* by Edgar Schein and Peter Schein The Organizational Culture and Leadership Institute Interview Notes Download my interview notes in PDF format (free membership required). Related Episodes The Path of Humble Leadership, with Edgar Schein and Peter Schein (episode 363) How to Ask Better Questions, with David Marquet (episode 454) Your Leadership Motive, with Patrick Lencioni (episode 505) Discover More Activate your free membership for full access to the entire library of interviews since 2011, searchable by topic.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Historically, and even until recently, a lot of people's professional relationships were

0:06.1

transactional.

0:07.1

Today's guests say that not only should we take the human step to connect better, but

0:11.6

that it's essential for today's leaders.

0:14.3

Ed Shine and Peter Shine return to help us so long on the path towards more trusting

0:19.2

relationships.

0:20.5

This is Coaching for Leaders, Episode 539.

0:24.3

Produced by Innovate Learning, Maximizing Human Potential.

0:34.3

Greetings to you from Orange County, California.

0:37.2

This is Coaching for Leaders, and I'm your host, Dave Stahovak.

0:42.1

Leaders aren't born.

0:43.6

They're made.

0:44.6

In this weekly show, helps you discover leadership wisdom through insightful conversations.

0:50.8

And speaking of conversations, that is a skill that every leader needs in order to

0:56.5

be effective at being able to influence, but also, of course, have been able to listen.

1:02.0

And the more we can gain trust through conversations, the better we're going to do as leaders

1:09.2

that will be able to serve others and to serve our organizations.

1:13.3

Today, I'm so glad to welcome back an expert duo who will help us to build trust through

1:19.4

our conversations.

1:20.4

I'm glad to welcome back to the show award-winning father and son duo Edgar Shine and Peter

1:26.7

Shine.

1:27.7

They're renowned in the organizational development space.

...

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