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Power Up! Listening Skills for the 21st Century
highgain.com

TABLE OF CONTENTS
SECTION 1 1 Introduction
SECTION 2 2 The Value of Listening
2.1 At Work 2.2 In Life
SECTION 3 4 Why Don�’t People Listen?
SECTION 4 5 How and What We Teach
4.1 HighGain�’s Systems Approach
SECTION 5 8 Ways to Improve Listening
With Our Programs
SECTION 6 11 About HighGain
SECTION 7 12 Appendix
Contact Information, Creative Commons License

1. INTRODUCTION
Greetings,
Thank you for your interest in our work.
This booklet describes our approach to improving individuals�’
listening skills. It may be one of the most important booklets
you�’ll ever read.
Individuals over the years have told us that as a result of taking
our programs they have improved their personal and work lives,
become fascinated with the process of communication, and
moved their listening to much deeper levels. The results have
changed their lives.
�“Listening looks
easy, but it�’s not
simple. Every head
is a world.�”
�— Cuban Proverb
These types of insights are confirmed by considerable research
reported by the International Listening Association.
I hope you enjoy reading this booklet, and I look forward to
showing you how excellent listening can help you achieve your
life goals.
Respectfully,
Richard Anstruther Founder and CEO
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2. THE VALUE OF LISTENING
2.1 AT WORK June Rokoff, Senior Vice President for Software Development
at Lotus (now an IBM subsidiary), credits her success in turning
around the company�’s position in the software industry to
building a team that listens.1 In fact, listening is number one
on IBM�’s list of critical management skills. James Houghton,
CEO of Corning Inc., places a similar value on listening,
identifying listening as essential to quality.2
There is an expanding awareness in business of the value of
good listening skills. To ignore this important tool in today�’s
competitive business environment can lead to costly errors,
wasted time, an absence of teamwork, unsatisfactory service
and misunderstandings at all levels. As the old saying goes,
�“It pays to listen.�”
�“Genuine listening
ability is one of
the true forms of
competitive
advantage.�”
�— Feargal Quinn CEO Superquinn Supermarkets Ireland
Yet, despite its importance, listening is often at the bottom of
the hierarchy of communication skills taught at the workplace.
Most people have far more training in reading, writing, and
speaking than they do in listening�—even though all of us
spend far more time listening. A study by Wolvin & Coakley
in 1991 found that most experts agree that people spend about
9% of waking hours writing, 15% reading, 30% speaking, and 45%
listening.3 For executives, studies show that time spent listening
is even higher�—55% or more on the average each day.
More than 35 general business studies conducted over the past
few years demonstrate that listening-centered communication
improves results.4 The studies demonstrate that: �“Every person
I work with knows
something better
than me. My job
is to listen long
enough to find it
and use it.�”
�— Jack Nichols Painter
Schools devote too little direct instruction into listening as
part of their language arts curricula even though it is a
basic skill required of all employees in the workplace. (U.S.
Department of Labor, What Work Requires of Schools, 1991)
Ineffective listening throughout organizational structures
results in low morale, high absenteeism and turnover, low
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productivity, lack of upward communication, and ineffective
horizontal communication. (Brownell, 1994)
Employee listening ability has a definite impact on their
productivity. (Papa & Glen, 1988)
46% of those who quit their jobs did so because they felt
not listened to and were therefore unappreciated. (U.S.
Department of Labor, 1999)
Effective listening is a skill that needs to be developed as
a prerequisite for successful practice of the more �“active�”
skills of speaking and writing. (Goby & Lewis, Nanyang
Technological University, 2003)
�“The significant
problems we face
cannot be solved
at the same level
of thinking we were
at when we created
them.�”
�— Albert Einstein Physicist
2.2 IN LIFE Whether you are a diplomat, emissary, life coach, salesperson,
teacher, counselor, peace worker or someone�’s partner, your
communication ability will improve in both subtle and distinct
ways. Some of the benefits you will realize are:
Enhanced Insight �— You will learn much more about managing
tricky communications. For example, in emotional or highly
charged conversations you will learn to better understand the
other person�’s motivations.
Better Rapport �— Every great talker has to have a listener;
people will appreciate you in ways you�’ve never considered;
you can become quite popular in the process of listening well.5
�“At the bottom
of things, most
people want to
be understood
and appreciated.�”
�— The Buddha
Greater Esteem and Trustworthiness �— If you are trustworthy,
people will confide in you, care for you and hold you in high
regard. It is interesting to note that neurologists report that
the same areas of the brain activated when we are in love are
activated when we have been listened to.
Expanded Personal Growth �— Your newly acquired skills can act
as a basis of inquiry into other forms of listening�—to yourself, to
the natural world, and to the spiritual world.
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3. WHY DON�’T PEOPLE LISTEN?
There are many reasons why we don�’t listen; some are cultural,
some psychological and some physiological. Based on years of
experience, we have identified the Top 10 reasons why people
don�’t listen. They are:
1. American culture places a great deal of emphasis on talking
(witness the rise of blogs and YouTube).6
2. Most of us think we listen well already, yet our research has
shown that people can only identify 1-2 great listeners from
their entire lives.7
�“Listening is a
magnetic and
strange thing,
a creative force.
The friends who
listen to us are
the ones we
move toward.
When we are
listened to, it
creates us,
makes us unfold
and expand.�”
�— Karl Menninger Psychiatrist & Founder of The Menninger Clinic
3. Boredom: the average person talks at rates of 125-175 words
a minute, yet we can listen at rates of up to 450 words per
minute. With this large processing gap, we drift off and think
of other things while listening.8
4. We confuse listening and hearing.
5. We think good listening takes too long. Good listening
actually minimizes useless distractions and enables you
to hear the message correctly the first time.
6. We are an action-oriented culture, with a strong emphasis
on getting the job done. We frequently act before we fully
understand.
7. Less than 2% of us have had formal educational experience
with listening. Most �“communication�” courses are about
expression.9
�“Easy Listening
exists only on the
radio.�”
�— David Barkan International Listening Association
8. We project our thoughts and views onto others, assuming
they feel the same way.
9. We confuse listening with agreeing. Listening is about
understanding and not necessarily agreeing.
10. We make assumptions that the speaker has all the power
and that the listener is in a passive mode. Good listeners
have most of the power and control, because they help
the speaker tap into the depths of his or her wisdom and
experience in order to better verbalize it.
�“Listening is the
hardest of the
easy tasks.�”
�— Harvey Mackay Entrepreneur & Author
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4. HOW AND WHAT WE TEACH
All of HighGain�’s programs are steeped in adult learning
practices and include these four critical steps:
Awareness of current listening patterns
Practice of newly acquired skills
Constructive feedback from the facilitator and other
participants
Creation of a realistic plan to integrate new listening skills
into daily work �“If speaking is
silver, then
listening is gold.�”
�— Turkish Proverb Our training programs target differing levels of listening
development. Our experience shows that each participant
begins at a unique listening level. Therefore, the challenges
to listening integratively range in difficulty from basic to
complex, depending on the individual.
Our programs range from brief introductory overviews to
sophisticated trainings that take place over several days. Unlike
many traditional listening courses, which extend for only a few
hours and essentially teach �“faking�” skills, HighGain�’s programs
and program delivery options offer participants the opportunity
to embody the skills of listening conveniently and easily.
�“To say that a person
feels listened to
means a lot more
than just their ideas
get heard. It�’s a sign
of respect. It makes
people feel valued..�”
�— Deborah Tannen Professor of Linguistics, Georgetown University, & Author
Built into our range of programs and options is a natural
flexibility, making them easy and accessible to anyone
motivated toward, or responsible for, improving listening
skills, for themselves or their team.
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4.1 HIGHGAIN�’S SYSTEMS APPROACH We take your business seriously. We know that listening works
and that it can greatly improve results. We take a systems
approach, which assures that your organization listens better to
customers and to each other. We will show your company how to
become a Listening Organization.
�“Listening�—and
responding�—to
suggestions from
employees and
customers was
the key to
winning.�”
�— Wainwright Industries 1994 Baldridge Quality Award
Listening performance gains are hard to realize without the
sustained efforts of everyone involved. To imbed the listening
strategies and skills into the fabric of a work group or an
organization usually requires a cultural change. Once a company
becomes a Listening Organization, it acquires a powerful
competitive advantage.
Organizations that listen well on all levels are able to apply this
new performance capability to improve key business results such
as:
Enhanced customer service
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�“Many �‘active listening�’ seminars are, in actuality, little more than a shallow
theatrical exercise in appearing like you�’re paying attention to another person.
The requirements: Lean forward, make eye contact, nod, grunt, or murmur to
demonstrate you�’re awake and paying attention, and paraphrase something
back every 30 seconds or so. As one executive I know wryly observed, many
inhabitants of the local zoo could be trained to go through these motions,
minus the paraphrasing.�”
�— Robert Cooper Author Executive EQ
Increased sales revenue and market share
Improved productivity, quality and teamwork
Strengthened trust and relationships with customers and
coworkers
�“Listen,, Ask
and Speak Up.�”
�— Operating Principle Honda Motor Company
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HighGain takes a comprehensive systems approach to helping
your work group or organization build the Listening Organization.
This approach includes:
The development of a Listening Protocol that serves as the
listening standard and cultural beacon for the company. �“I think the
one lesson
I have learned
is that there
is no substitute
for paying
attention.�”
�— Diane Sawyer Television Anchor
System Components for performance development to assure
the long-lasting effects of the listening improvement effort.
These Components are:
In-depth Analysis
Customized Skill-Based Programs
Coaching Skills for Supervisors and Managers
Follow-up Enhancements
Mechanisms for Assessment, Feedback and Reinforcement
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5. WAYS TO IMPROVE LISTENING WITH OUR PROGRAMS
HighGain strives to make our listening knowledge available in
multiple formats for easy access by anyone.
LISTEN UP �— This very popular, one-day program includes the
Listening Assessment, an introduction to HighGain�’s CORE�™
listening model, an assortment of fundamental actions, skills
practice and a plan for skill implementation. Contact us for
group pricing information. �“95% of salespeople
talk too much and
listen too little.�”
�— Sales Board survey �— 16,000 customers and 300 salespeople in 25+ industries
�“We convince by
our presence.�”
�— Walt Whitman Poet
BEST LISTENING PRACTICES �— This is a comprehensive
introduction to the subject of listening. Includes two self-
assessments, 28 best listening practices grouped into 6 key
categories, and interactive study on the �“Inner Game of
Listening.�” Contact us for group pricing information.
LISTENING YOUR WAY TO CLARITY �— This two-day program
takes our one-day Listen Up program into wider and deeper
application, with the addition of memory improvement and
flexibility techniques, assertive communication know-how,
dynamic feedback and a self-designed, customized action plan.
Skills practice is considerable. Offered as an onsite program.
Contact us for group pricing information.
CORE LISTENING: The Hidden Power of Selling �— Especially
designed for those in sales and related fields, this program is
founded on the philosophy that good listening is the ultimate
positioning tool. It is delivered in either a 1-day or 1.5-day
format and trains participants toward �“total attention�”
management and the 7 Keys to Sales Mastery. Highly
participative, engaging, well paced and fun. Offered at
your business site. Contact us for pricing information.
TEAM LISTENING KIT �— This program is ideal for small client-
based companies or small groups working together in businesses
or in public service. Its novel approach is designed to cut the
cost of training while bringing the essence of listening to small highgain.com
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teams and organizations. It includes our MOREAR® Assessment
revolving around the 6 key aspects of listening, a 14-page
interactive guide, and other aids to help small groups reach
their listening goals. Dental, medical, realty, architectural
offices, citizen-activist groups, or any other group that is
working together will find this program a worthy investment
of time and money. Offered online or onsite. Price varies with
size of team. Contact us for information.
�“No one ever
listened themselves
out of a job.�”
�— Calvin Coolidge 30th U.S. President
LISTENING ASSESSMENT �— This self-assessment tool is where all
our programs begin. Developed over 18 years and acclaimed by
high-ranking analysts in the field of Listening Training, it is
designed to assist you in assessing your perception of your own
skills. Used for both online and onsite programs. Available at
highgain.com.
�“90% of life is
showing up.�”
�— Woody Allen Writer & Actor
360º LISTENING ASSESSMENT �— This tool expands the above
self-assessment by including the observations of others who
know you well. It is designed to counter the inherent bias in
self-assessments. Offered online as well as onsite. Contact us
for group pricing information.
�“You have to be
present to win.�”
�— Sign in a Las Vegas Casino
PROGRAM COMPONENTS Each full-length program includes:
A complete syllabus, including an extensive bibliography
A Participant Manual
Posters to remind you of the key components
A self-designed, customized Action Plan
A wallet-sized skill card that summarizes the key components
Certificate of Completion
And we guarantee that each full-length listening program
provides the following core skills:
Presence. Learning to be present with the speaker. Excellent
listeners find a way to clear their mind before the meeting or
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interaction. People can sense this in a moment, and it sets the
tone for the entire conversation.10 11 12
Encouragement. Allowing the other to speak, and fully com-
plete their thoughts before offering advice or interjections.
Learning to tolerate pauses. Confirming the speaker has
finished before moving into the speaker�’s role.13 14
Confirmation. Demonstrating an understanding of the message
by summarizing the key components of the information. Simply
saying, �“I hear you�” does not work.
Empathy. Listening for the emotion in the message (most
messages have them) and building a vocabulary of feeling
words.15 16 Emotions are often the unspoken part of a message
the speaker is conveying. Understanding the emotional content
is key to fully comprehending the underlying meaning.17
�“Education is the ability to listen to almost
anything without losing your temper or your
self-confidence.�”
�— Robert Frost Poet
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6. ABOUT HIGHGAIN
Richard Anstruther, Certified Listening Professional, founded
HighGain in 1980, and many of the nation�’s largest corporations
have benefited from HighGain�’s innovative listening programs.
We were the recipients of the 2004 Listening in Business Award
bestowed by the International Listening Association.
Our proven training and coaching methods have produced
measurable results, time after time, with such companies as
AT&T, Dell, Federal Reserve Bank, Johnson & Johnson, The New
York Times and VISA.
All of our trainers are accredited Certified Listening Professionals
(CLP) from the International Listening Association. �“The human
mind is like an
umbrella. It
functions best
when open.�”
�— Walter Gropious German-American Architect
Our MOREAR® Assessment is the driver of all of our work.
Validated by experts, our Assessment draws on the work of
Thomas F. Gilbert, learning theorist and author of Human
Competence: Engineering Worthy Performance (1978).
�“Gilbert believed that peak human performance is teachable,�”
explains Anstruther, �“and that the difference between excel-
lence and mediocrity amounts to a few skills the excellent use
that can be isolated and taught. Interestingly, he found this to
be true across many disciplines.�” �“The saddest
part about being
human is not
paying attention.
Presence is the
gift of life.�”
�— Stephen Levine Author
Our programs have been informed by the works of Carl Rogers,
Virginia Satyr, Fritz Perls, Genie Laborde, the founders of NLP,
Richard is currently working on additional, innovative ways to
teach advanced listening.
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7. APPENDIX
1 Glen Rifkin. Profile, The �“Iron Lady�” Keeping Lotus on Track, New York Times, January 23, 1994 2 Andrew D. Wolvin. Listening In the Quality Organization, Finger Lakes Press, 1999, p. 7 3 Andrew D. Wolvin. Listening In the Quality Organization, Finger Lakes Press, 1999, p. 16 4 Andrew D. Wolvin and Carolyn Gwynn Coakley. �“A Survey of the Status of Listening Training in Some Fortune 500 Companies,�” Communication Education, Volume 40, No. 2, April 1991
�“Courage is what
it takes to stand
up and speak;
courage is also
what it takes to
sit down and
listen.�”
�— Winston Churchill British Prime Minister
5 Richard Anstruther�’s observation is that listening is nothing short of a secret weapon in conversation 6 New York Times, November, 2006 7 HighGain participant observations, 1988-2006 8 Carver, Johnson, & Friedman, International Listening Association�’s website, listen.org 9 Gregg. listen.org, 2006 10 Andrew Wolvin & Carolyn Coakley. Listening, McGraw-Hill, 1996, pp 222-225 11 Rebecca Shafir. The Zen of Listening, Quest Books, 2000, pp 37-79 12 Thich Nhat Hahn. Peace Is Every Step, Bantam Books, 1992 13 Genie Laborde. Influencing with Integrity, Syntony, 1987, pp 27-43 14 James Kouzes & Barry Posner. Encouraging the Heart, Jossey-Bass, 1999, pp 79-82
�“If the person
you are talking
to doesn�’t appear
to be listening,
be patient. It
may simply be
that he has a
small piece of
fluff in his ear.�”
�— Pooh�’s Little Instruction Book, inspired by A.A. Milne
15 Carl Rogers. On Becoming a Person, Houghton Mifflin, 1961, pp 331-337 16 Vincenne Waxwood. Linking Listening and Empathy, Paper presented at the ILA Annual Conference, March 2001 17 Antonio Damasio. Descartes�’ Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain, Penguin, 2005
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CONTACT INFORMATION CREATIVE COMMONS LICENSE
CONTACT INFORMATION HighGain Inc. 2150 Blucher Valley Road Sebastopol, CA 95472-5306 USA 001.707.824.9669 Pacific (GMT �–8 hours)
Power Up! 2010 v1.6 © 2010 HighGain Inc. All International Rights Reserved
CREATIVE COMMONS LICENSE
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