Tag Archives: language

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positive language

Positive Language is a Different Story

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Are you choosing positive language? If so, has it made a difference? Have you had to change your language to change your outcomes? Did that work?

When you don’t know what else to say, what do you bring up?

Of course, the answer is easy. You bring up the weather.

I’m sick of this rain.

It’s too hot, too humid, and I can’t stand it.

It’s so cold, I can’t wait until spring.

These might all be stories. Perhaps they aren’t made up and perhaps they are only moderately dramatized.

Either way, it is something that you’re telling yourself and probably others.

The language affects mindset and mindset affects what happens next.

Talk at Work

What happens at work?

There is pressure to perform. Pressure from the boss, your colleagues, and perhaps the customer.

Often the concept is, do more, be more efficient, and never ever sacrifice quality.

There are two choices.

The first is, you can tell yourself a story that will signal some relief.

I need to finish this project and get it out of the way.

If I give this to the boss at the end of day, I won’t have to make more changes until tomorrow.

If the customer doesn’t use this feature, they won’t notice.

The other choice is to hunker down. Be resilient, committed, and give yourself feedback (self-talk) that applies more commitment to the future outcomes.

I’m not rushing through this project, it’s too important.

My best work happens when I look at my work with fresh eyes, I’m going to re-read this in the morning before giving it to the boss.

Getting this last feature just right makes it more valuable even though not every customer requires it.

The difference is in the story you tell yourself.

Is your language positive?

Positive Language

What you look for is what you get. The story that you are telling yourself right now is that story that you’ll seek to see unfold.

When there is pressure to perform you can find your way through or grind your way through. Either might work to energize you.

One way may relieve stress, the other may create it. One way or the other, you’ll find the way to get to the next step.

Anger or embarrassment springs one person into action. For others it is an energy zapping confidence reducer.

You see the story in the way you choose to believe, or for the outcome that you want to create.

Using language that connects you with the desired (positive) outcome is good, but it always depends on how the story is told.

Even when you’re telling it to yourself.

-DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and culture expert. He is a five-time author and the founder of Appreciative Strategies, LLC. His business focuses on positive human performance improvement solutions through Appreciative Strategies®. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.


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effort mindset

Effort Mindset is Part of Your Language

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Do you have an effort mindset? Don’t confuse effort with labor or effort with strenuous. More than anything, putting in the effort suggests a connection with the goal.

What is the fastest way to change the concept of what you can or cannot accomplish?

You change your perception of what will happen next.

There is often discussion about winners and losers, about those who did and those who didn’t, and those who had success and those who failed.

Being determined that you can, is much different from creating an expectation that you can’t.

I can’t add that to the report because I don’t have that data.

The team didn’t finish the project.

We didn’t hit the sales goal for this month.

What if you had more time? More time to seek the answers to the questions, more time on the project, or a few additional days to hit the sales number?

Effort Mindset

Deadlines sometimes signal it is over, done, finished. While a deadline is a deadline, it doesn’t mean the goal is entirely out of reach, forever.

In business, everything is a race against the clock.

Sometimes a deadline provides a reason to quit. Once the deadline is approaching or missed, it invites the opportunity to throw up your hands and call it over.

What if you changed your language?

I need a few more data segments and I will have the report ready by the end of the day Tuesday.

The team is totally immersed in the project. The end results will be better than expected.

We didn’t hit the sales goal yet, but by Tuesday we’ll surpass last months results.

Language is a powerful component of both motivation and culture.

How you talk, the words you choose, and the future that you predict may be the cultural shift that you need.

Many people quit because they believe it is over.

Many successful people see things a little bit differently.

They just haven’t finished, yet.

-DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and culture expert. He is a five-time author and the founder of Appreciative Strategies, LLC. His business focuses on positive human performance improvement solutions through Appreciative Strategies®. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.


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language matters

Language Matters Because It Builds Culture

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What is the language of your workplace? Is there optimism, excitement, and energy? Language matters because it sets the tone and shapes the environment for everything that happens next.

“Good Morning,” is different from, “Ugh, here we go again.”

“I’m ready, let’s go,” is different from, “I’m not awake yet.”

We never know exactly what each day will bring. Yet we have a choice to decide what we will bring to each day.

What are your contributions to culture?

Building Culture

Every workplace has a culture. Every organization, business, and group effort have language behind their energy.

What is the language of your workplace? It is energizing or creating fear? Does it inspire confidence or get hung up on doom and gloom?

We are people, people with personalities, emotions, and feelings. We leap forward with inspiration or make a choice about fighting or retreating during fear.

Today you will make a choice about what you see. You’ll look for the opportunity, or describe a problem that cannot be solved.

You will believe that what is unfolding is happening for you, or to you.

Most of that belief will develop from your language. Tell yourself either you can, or you can’t. You will be correct.

Language Matters

Belief is powerful. Our belief systems are often created from the language that surrounds us.

Your team and your organizational culture are built by this belief.

Suggest that there is nothing good about this day. Chances are you’ll have a hard time finding something. It is a self-fulfilled prophecy.

Think carefully about what you’ll say today. It will guide what happens next.

-DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and culture expert. He is a five-time author and the founder of Appreciative Strategies, LLC. His business focuses on positive human performance improvement solutions through Appreciative Strategies®. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.


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