Tuesday 3 January 2012

Raj Shekhar_BLP032_Consulting_03Jan’12


Dealing with Resistance

At each moment of truth with your client there is transfer of emotions & feelings, which changes if expressed directly. Behind the resistance are feelings. The most effective way to deal with resistance is to encourage the client to be authentic by behaving authentically. Defending methodology will always keep the storm alive. So it is better to let the client talk more about their concerns, let the storm pass and try to get to why your methodology is correct. The consultants can understand the real issues and can respond effectively once the client’s concerns are stated directly. The 3 steps for handling resistance are:

1.      Pick up cues, describe yourself and identify in your mind what form the resistance is taking
2.      Find the neutral language by stating, in a neutral & unpunishing way the form of resistance
3.      Let the client respond to your statement about the resistance

These will ensure that the client takes the responsibility of his actions. The consultant needs to be on their toes instead of taking bull by its horn and should never take anything personally. Dealing with resistance is harder than actually doing data collection and much harder than coming up with good ideas for implementation. The meat of consultation is dealing with resistance.

From Diagnosis to Discovery

There are 2 primary purposes of discover phase:
1.    To develop independent and fresh way of looking at things &
2.    to create a process that leads to client commitment, ownership and action

It is better to define our talk as a process of discovery and dialogue more than as an act of diagnosis and prescription. We cannot ignore that we are dealing with human systems, and human systems are not amenable to technical solutions. The relationship aspect of the discovery process becomes decisive, regardless of the special expertise or worldview of the consultant.
The stance we want to take is that we can be a guide through a process of discovery, engagement, and dialogue, in which our clients will find an answer to their question and launch an implementation that will be enduring and productive. It may seem like playing with words, but it makes a difference in what we do and what we leave behind.

The action orientation makes the assumption that client readiness to accept your input is as important to discovery as the technical analysis of the problem to be solved.

It is important to do the following things in discovery phase:

o   Ask questions about the client's own personal role in causing or maintaining the presenting or target problem.
o   Ask questions about what others in the organization are doing to cause or maintain the presenting or target problem.
o   Plan the data collection jointly with the client. Involve your client in interpreting the data collected.
o   Recognize the similarity between how the client managed you and how they manage their own organization.
o   Condense the data into a limited number of issues.
o   Use language that is understandable to people outside your area of expertise.
o   Distinguish between the presenting problem and the underlying problem.
o   Elicit and describe both the technical problem and how it is being managed.

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