
đ When Turning Your Back Opens Your Mind đđ Struggling to get honest feedback? Try listening without the urge to respond.
đ Struggling to get honest feedback? Try listening without the urge to respond.
Ever felt like you were missing somethingâeven while listening closely?
I recently moderated a peer coaching session for WHU Kellogg MBA senior leaders, and one exercise left a lasting impression. Each leader presented a real-world challenge they were facingâthen turned their back to the group and just listened. No eye contact. No facial cues. No interruptions.
At first? Uncomfortable. Awkward. Strange. But thenâsomething shifted.
đĄ Without the usual visual distractions, leaders stopped filtering feedback through their own assumptions. They couldnât clarify, defend, or redirectâthey just had to llisten and absorb.
It reminded me of the active listening for understanding exercise I recently did. After sharing their case, these leaders shifted from listening to respond to listening to understand. No pressure to fix or explainâjust space to hear whatâs really being said.
And hereâs what I learned:
đč Silence Can Be a SuperpowerâResisting the urge to speak allowed insights to land deeper. Like in art, whatâs unsaid often holds the most meaning.
đč Blind Spots Become Visible â Without body language to rely on, leaders heard things theyâd previously missed.
đč Filtering is Key â Too much feedback can overwhelm. The real skill? Shifting to feedforward. Shifting focus from what went wrong to suggestions and insights that focus on whatâs next â for future success.
This experience underscored that leadership isnât just about making decisionsâitâs about creating space to truly hear whatâs beneath the surface. And when that input includes feedforwardâit becomes even more powerful.
So Iâll ask you:
đ Who gives you honest, agenda-free feedback?
đ What happens when you listen with full presenceâwithout planning your reply?
Iâd love to hear your thoughts. đ