A simple solution to fix workplace miscommunication | Melissa M. Mikus - podcast episode cover

A simple solution to fix workplace miscommunication | Melissa M. Mikus

May 13, 202612 min
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Summary

Melissa M. Mikus uncovers the hidden costs of workplace miscommunication, revealing how it leads to wasted effort, frustration, and significant financial losses for businesses. She introduces a surprisingly simple, no-cost solution: a "communication style tag." This tag helps individuals specify their preferred communication methods and optimal working conditions, fostering clearer interactions, building trust, and creating more effective teams by making communication styles visible and actionable.

Episode description

Leadership expert Melissa M. Mikus breaks down why most workplace friction isn't about personality clashes or bad intentions — it's about not knowing how to effectively communicate. Her solution? A small, visible and easy tweak that anyone can implement right away.


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Transcript

Intro / Opening

You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hugh. If you've ever overanalyzed a one-line message from a friend or a colleague before, today's talk is for you. Turns out most of the time when a receiver of a message spirals out about whatever the text said, the other person has no idea they sent anything remotely confusing.

Employees and executives, 86% of them blame workplace failure on ineffective communication. And US businesses alone lose$1.2 trillion a year as a result of miscommunication. That's leadership expert Melissa M. Miku. In this talk, she shares a surprisingly simple fix, something she calls a communication style tag. It's a few lines that tell the people you work with how to reach you and how to get the best out of you. No app, no training, no cost. Just clarity.

When we tell people how best to work with us, we not only increase communication effectiveness. We build trust, we move faster. We feel less strained and we build teams that actually work. That's coming up right after a short break. Amazon has everything for every kind of birthday, whether that's a three tier cake stand. Happy birthday! Comet balloons for your son's space theme party? Or gifts like a karaoke machine for that friend who never stops. Have it!

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The Pervasive Problem of Miscommunication

And now our TED Talk of the Day. So I'm sure everyone here has been on the giving or receiving end of a workplace communication failure. Is that fair? Well, I want to share a time when I sent a message to my team that created countless hours of wasted effort, a few sleepless nights, and maybe even some tears. That message was sure. Yep, that's it. One word, four letters, no punctuation, no emojis, just sure. I bet you were expecting something a little bit more controversial or spicy.

So here's what happened. My team was working on an important presentation for an upcoming board meeting and right on deadline the project manager Charlie sent me an email with a presentation and said, are we okay to send this to the board chair for feedback? I reviewed the presentation that evening while simultaneously making dinner, but I was delighted. It was spot on, key messages, graphics, so much so that I didn't even have any feedback.

But as water is boiling over on the stove and my dog's trying to sell chicken off the counter, I just forgot to respond to the email. The next day, Charlie sends me a quick flash. Are we okay to proceed? I was on another call, but I didn't want to delay my response further, so I just said sure. Well, the next morning, I checked my inbox and I have this detailed email from Charlie with a whole new presentation attached, and I was confused.

I called him up on the phone and I said, Hey Charlie, what's going on? Defeated, he admitted that he interpreted my shore to mean, meh, this is okay, I guess. That simple sure spun out my entire team. And that's just one small example of miscommunication, but think about the bigger one.

How many times have you or your team gone down the wrong path on a project or felt frustrated by lack of progress or maybe even spent hours or days in a disagreement that wasn't even a disagreement in the first place? So you're not alone because employees and executives, 86% of them blame workplace failure on ineffective communication. And US businesses alone lose one point two trillion dollars trillion dollars a year as a result of miscommunication.

So this isn't just about being nice and diplomatic. Miscommunication is expensive. It hurts employee morale, it stalls progress, and it increases turnover.

Introducing Communication Style Tags

So I want to provide a simple solution to address this. It's minimal effort, we all like that. You can do it today, and it's low cost, maybe even free. Are you ready? The best way to enhance communication effectiveness is to tell people how you best communicate and how best to communicate with you. It's pretty simple. But how do we do this in real time and in a way that the information is accessible to those that we engage with?

So most of us have an email signature, a social profile, an internal directory profile that typically includes name, title. Contact information? What if we normalize adding another highly visible piece of information? A communication style tag that covers two critical pieces of information. One, how we best communicate.

Email, phone call, text, Slack, and any workplace norms you've set for yourself like working hours or protected focus time. And two, how we show up as our best selves or avoid getting tripped up. For example, my communication style tag thrives best in morning meetings. Provide detailed context in advance for fastest decision making. Now, I want to share another story, communication mishap, if you will, that'll show how I brought this into play with my team.

Few years ago, I joined a fintech startup and my first task was to put together a strategic roadmap for the CEO. I didn't know much about the product yet, but lucky for me, brilliant woman named Kate on my team had worked at the company since day one, and I thought I should talk to Kate. Now I'm an extrovert, I love a brainstorm. Getting a

So I throw a meeting on Kate's calendar, roadmap discussion, very detailed I know, and I wait for the meeting. I show up, I start excitedly spewing ideas left and right, and I am met with total blankets. I don't know if Kate is disinterested or totally terrified of me, but I awkwardly end this meeting and leave a bit frustrated.

But later that day, Kate sends me an email, and that email has five very well thought out, brilliant ideas that she brought to the table. I realized that this spontaneous brainstorm was in my communication comfort zone, not so much for Kate.

This was a turning point for me. To be a leader of highly effective teams, you need to invest in understanding their communication styles and share your own as well. So I got them together at a team meeting and I asked them to create their communication style tag. Now, we can't accommodate everybody's preferences 100% of the time, but the information is knowledge that gives us power to make better choices and to adapt if possible.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, Kate is an introvert. She prefers Asynchronous communication so that she can thoughtfully process her idea. Kate's communication style tag is email for fastest response during the day, prefers written comms to enable thoughtful, clear responses. Then there's my colleague Mike. Mike would never respond to the messages I would send him on our internal messaging system. He would just ghost me. He wouldn't respond for days, hours, sometimes just not at all.

So I catastrophized the situation and I said, What's wrong with me? Does Mike not like me? Does he think my questions are silly? Like, what is going on here? Turns out Mike's an extrovert. He has to turn off Messenger during the day. Otherwise he would just chit-chat with colleagues all day long. It wasn't me. Mike's communication style tag is text for urgent matters, adaptive to communication styles, but prefers live interaction. Most extroverts do.

Crafting Your Tag and Widespread Adoption

So that's just two examples. By now I hope you're starting to think: what is your communication style tag? Think about the two key ingredients and how they apply to you. How do you best communicate? Is it over email, live phone calls, text, etc.? Do you do your best thinking in the morning like me, or do you protect Fridays for focus time?

How do you show up as your best self? Do you need time for thoughtful written responses like Kate? Or do you respond better to visual cues and prefer live interaction or video? I'll give you a few more rapid-fire examples, see what resonates. My colleague Kelly, she was ghosting meeting invites until I asked what was going on. She told me that an agenda-less meeting gave her anxiety, so she just didn't show up.

Well, we fixed that. Kelly's communication style tag is checks email twice daily, agenda is required. An analyst, Matt, would balk at shorthand messages over Slack or Teams or other shorthand communication tools. He lived in detailed spreadsheets and 1500 word emails. Maths communication style tag, email deep diver, full context only. My friend Liz loves a voice memo.

You send her a text message, she is sending you back a voice memo. Her communication style tag is voice memo enthusiast, send brief messages for quick updates, avoid long text. And then a project manager I worked with, Lewis. He would hold daily stand-ups with his team, but he refused late afternoon meetings. He needed that time to think.

His communication style tag is morning meeting Maven, books everything before lunch, afternoons are for thinking. So if you're a team leader, a manager, or just somebody tired of workplace friction, go first. Create your communication style tag, normalize it with your teams, and do it in a highly visible way so that people have this information on a day-to-day basis.

Share it with your clients, your colleagues, your friends. The more people that adopt this change, the more effective it will be. Think about how it could apply to your personal life. My partner Charles turned to me a couple months ago on a Sunday evening and said, I got an email invite for us to go on a whitewater rafting trip. We have to RSVP tonight. Are you in? Well, I had about a million questions. Is this a glamping trip? Are there showers there? Who's actually going on this trip?

Now, he should probably know me better by now. That's a whole other TED talk, but Maybe this subtle reminder that I need advanced context to make fast decisions would be better for our relationship too. And this isn't just a nice idea. This information is data. Data helps you make better informed decisions, which drives better outcomes. And when we tell people how best to work with us,

We not only increase communication effectiveness, we build trust, we move faster, we feel less strained, and we build teams that actually work. So what's your communication style tag? Thank you. That was Melissa M. Mikus at Ted at B C G in the U.S. If you're curious about Ted's curation, find out more at TED.com/slash curation guidelines. And that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team and produced

Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonsika Sungmarni Vong. This episode was mixed by Christopher Fazy Bogan. Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Balarazzo. I'm Elise Hugh. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed. Thanks for listening. McValie breakfast meals are five dollars plus tax every day. bagel with cream cheese product or breakfast burrito. Cardiologist Sandeep Jahar says heartache isn't just a figure of speech.

uh heartbreak or grief. It's sort of the organ on which our emotions are most deeply rooted. Heartache changes us. That's next time on the TED Radio Hour from N. Subscribe or listen to the Ted Radio Hour wherever you can.

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