Communication Magic: Yes/No/Yes
Yes, we dream of a beach house.
No, we can’t afford to buy a beach house.
Yes, we can rent a beach house for a week!
Years ago my husband kindly paraphrased the lessons from a book I can’t even remember the name of on how to say NO. He said, no need to read the book, here is the gist:
Yes. No. Yes.
Little did he know that he had supplied me with perhaps the most useful and versatile communication skill ever.
I use Yes/No/Yes to: say ‘no;’ to set boundaries; to avoid Rabbit Holes in tricky conversations, in contentious interviews, with derailing questions at public events; it is the best way to disagree without offending others; it anchors us in what we need while keeping the door open to further conversation and collaboration, and it combines self-respect and respect for others.
How does it work?
YES—Acknowledge
NO—Set a boundary
YES—Offer alternatives
Here are some examples.
Rabbit Hole:
(Yes) I hear your complaint and it is totally valid.
(No) I’m sorry I don’t have time to address it in this talk, but…
(Yes) let’s meet after the event for a few minutes.
Disagreement in Team Meeting:
(Yes) I understand why you’d like to go with the cheaper components.
(No) However, the vendor is unreliable and the quality is really low.
(Yes) I’m happy to work with you to do more research until we find a vendor that has both a lower cost, is reliable, and has the quality our clients deserve.
Setting a Boundary:
(Yes) I really love you.
(No) Right now, I really need time alone.
(Yes) When I’m through this hard patch, can we find a time to really hang out?
This week, try it out! And let me know how it goes!