Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! Evan Signature
Evan Carmichael Top Header
Share for a Cause









Put An Issue On the Table

Written by: Margie Warrell

Article Overview: Every day we find ourselves having to work through issues that come up in our relationships. Opportunities to express your concerns or opinions are never too far away. But, do you act on those opportunities or shy away from them? What is the one thing you should do to improve the quality of those relationships?

Free Download - Work Worth Doing Caren Merrick By Margie Warrell
Name: Email:

Put An Issue On the Table

Sometimes we make the assessment that it's really not worth our energy to put an issue on the table. We decide instead to just work around the issue or the person. But other times we do need to speak up and assert ourselves. Of course there is always some risk involved with that - risk of an awkward conversation, of causing offense, ruffling feathers or being criticized ourselves - but the question is, what's the cost to you when you don't speak up? * If there is something you genuinely want to say, chances are there is someone who genuinely needs to hear it.

If there is one crucial lesson I have learned very early on in my relationship with my husband, it is that if there is something on my mind that is causing me to feel upset in some way, however insignificant or petty I think it is, then it's crucial to find a way to share it in a way that doesn't lay blame, but lays an issue on the table... to discuss and to resolve. It's also my professional experience that when an issue is causing a person some grief (whether frustration or resentment) and there is something they genuinely want to say, then chances are there is someone who genuinely needs to hear it.

While being interviewed on a local TV station recently, the conversation ended up on just this topic (as I've begun to learn, whatever topic I prepare for an interview, it always heads another direction). There are obviously a lot of nuances that need to be taken into account before embarking on what I call a "courageous conversation" -- too many for the interview and too many for this article. But one important thing you must always think about before entering into a sensitive or difficult conversation (or with a sensitive or difficult person!) is to first identify the highest intention you have for the conversation. What is it that you are ultimately hoping to achieve from it that will serve both you and the person you are speaking to?

* The intention you have for your conversation will determine the result you get from it.

Too often our ego, with its insatiable need to be right and come out the winner (or to avoid looking wrong or being cast a loser), will have us going into a conversation for all the wrong reasons. We want to let the other person know they are a dim-wit or perhaps just a self-absorbed narcissist. Or maybe we aren't quite that mad, and we just want to put them back in their spot.

If you find yourself going in to a conversation for anything remotely resembling these reasons, then one thing is guaranteed; the conversation is not going to produce a positive result in the longer term. However, if you put your ego in its box and get clear about the higher purpose you are trying to achieve from the conversation (one that resonates with you and reflects the level of integrity you are committed to living with), then what you say and how you say it will produce a completely different result.

As I wrote in my most recent book, the intention you have going in to a conversation (however difficult or contentious) will have a profound impact on the way someone responds to your words. So, who is it that you need to have a courageous conversation with? What is the higher intention you have for the conversation? How can you approach the subject in a way that doesn't make the other person wrong, but that simply seeks to express your concerns and ultimately resolve the issue?

* Quality relationships (at work or home) grow from quality conversations.

Your relationships exist in conversation. The quality of your conversations directly impacts the quality of the relationships you have. While speaking up about sensitive issues may never be easy, just know that you have all the resources you need to speak up, do honor to what is true to you and in the process, be of service to the other person. So please, don't tiptoe around any issue that has come to mind as you read this (particularly if it's one you've been festering on). Make the decision to assert yourself, to reclaim the power that your doubt and fears have been wielding and, with the highest of intentions, to put that issue on the table.

Related Articles
  The bad table
  Financial news
  Winning Business from Client Requests for Proposals (RFP)s.
  Authentic Communication: Dealing with Moose-on-the-Table
  The Only Ways to Build a Strong Brand

Home > Women-Entrepreneurs > Margie Warrell > Put An Issue On the Table
Article Tags: feathers, frustration, grief, intention, local tv station, nuances, professional experience, relationship, resentment, risk, something on my mind

About the Author: Margie Warrell
RSS for Margie's articles - Visit Margie's website

Margie Warrell; thought leader in human potential, master life coach, international speaker, media contributor and best-selling author of Find Your Courage. Take the Courage Quiz, watch Margie’s TV interviews (TODAY show, Fox, CNBC) and sign up for her free LIVE BOLDLY! newsletter. Then order your personally autographed Amazon best-seller book Find Your Courage.

Click here to visit Margie's website
Dashed Line

More from Margie Warrell
Trust Where Is It Lacking In Your Relationships
Got More Answers Than Questions
What Changes Are You Avoiding In Your Life
How To Sidestep the Effects of Stress
How to Stay Up When Your Job Search Has You Feeling Down


Related Forum Posts
Contingency Planning and Disaster Recovery: A Small Business Contingency Planning and Disaster Recovery: A Small Business - Contingency Planning and Disaster Recovery: A Small Business Guide Donna R. Childs, Stefan Dietrich 2002 "Among the countless tragic lessons of 9/11, an overlooked but important discovery was the lack of preparedness among small and midsized businesses for responding to disaster. While most of the media attention was naturally devoted to...., the very existence of thousands of small businesses was determined by whether or not they had adequate insurance, sufficient technological support, and viable disaster contingency plans." (People who live in hurricane prone areas need this as well...and who knows when a fire might not strike...) Table of Contents 1. Preparation 2. Response 3. Recovery 4. SAmple IT Solutions Basic safety practices Okay, the TOC isn't [i:2fu76idt]too [/i:2fu76idt]helpful, but there's lots of valuable info in this book, as to ensure that [i:2fu76idt]your [/i:2fu76idt]losses won't be catastrophic. How people cope with suddenly seeing their homes and all their possessions gone, what kinds of insurance to get, etc. etc.
Treasure Hunt: Inside the Mind of the New Consumer Treasure Hunt: Inside the Mind of the New Consumer - Treasure Hunt: Inside the Mind of the New Consumer Michael J. Silverstein 2006 From the inside jacket: "Today's consumers can seem impossible to understand, and even harder to please. For instance, the average mall shopper will spend about $100, then leave when she hits that limit. SHe'll probably buy shoes rather than clothing, because she doesn't want to think about her dress size. And the store most likely to get her money isn't the one with the nicest display or the deepest discounts - it's the one closest to her parking spot." Okay, ladies here at evancarmichael.com? Do you follow this generalization? I myself go to bookstores, and nowhere else. Being self-employed in a home office, I don't need to buy new clothes, but I confess I did buy a new pair of bike shoes recently... The Introduction states: "This book tells the story of how middle-class consumers around the world are reshaping the consumer-goods market by trading down to low-price products and services, trading up to premium ones, and avoiding the boredom and low value that increasingly characterizes the middle. These consumers, mostly women, are better educated, have more disposable income, and are buying with more sophistication than ever." Table of Contents 1. The Bifurcating Market 2. The New Middle-ClassConsumer 3. Cheap is Good 4. Spanning the Poles 5. All Treasure, All the Time 6. When the Calculus Shifts 7. In A Pickle 8. Nickels and Dimes 9. Left in the Dust 10. Taking Action
Book: Secrets of Six Figure Women Book: Secrets of Six Figure Women - Secrets of Six Figure Women: Surprising Strategies to up your earning and change your life Barbara Stanny, 2002 Jacket: Maybe you've noticed - a subtle trend is gathering steam. Quietly and steadily, the number of women making six figures or more is increasing, and it continues to rise at a rate faster than for men. From entrepreneurs to corporate executives, from white collar executives to free lancers and part timers, women are forging careers with considerable financial success. Through extensive research and hundreds of interviews, including dialogs with more than 150 high earners whose annual incomes range from $100,000 to 7 million, Stanny discovered that ...they all had certain traits in common: 1) a profit motive 2) Audacity 3) REslience 4) Encouragement 5) Self-awareness 6) Non-attachment 7) Financial knowhow She amplifies on these in the book itself. Table of Contents Intro: Welcome to the era of the six-figure woman 1. The Queen in the Countinghouse 2. The Lowdown on low earners 3. Raising the bar 4. Strategy 1: The Declaration of Intention 5. Strategy 2: Letting go of the ledge 6. Strategy 3: Get in the Game 7. Strategy 4: Speak Up 8. Strategy 5: The Stretch 9. Strategy 6: Seek Support 10. Strategy 7: Obey the rules of money 11. Claiming our power Appendces: Resources and websites Tips for getting out of dent Investing Basics: Wealthbuilding 101
Books for Women Entrepreneurs Books for Women Entrepreneurs - There's a thread for good books in the Resources folder, but it doesn't target books for businesswomen particularly, so I figured I'd start such a thread here. It doesn't matter how successful you are in your business - it's always possible to learn something new. In subsequent posts I give Table of Contents and brief descriptions for various titles - most of them devoted to the businesswoman - and sometimes a review. If anyone else has read a review, or has read the book and found it useful, please comment! 1. The Old Girl's Network 2. Mother's Work 3. The 7 Greatest Truths About Successful Women 4. Pitch Like A Girl 5. Workplace Warrior 6. Treasure Hunt: Inside the Mind of the Modern Consumer 7. Contingency Planning & Disaster Recovery 8. She Wins, You Win 9. Napoleon On Project Management 10. Why Good Girls Dont' Get Ahead, But Gutsy Girls Do 11. Comeback Moms: How to Leave Work, Raise Children, and Restart your Career even If you Haven't Had a Job in Years 12. The One Minute Millionaire 13. Talking From 9 to 5 14. Soloing: Realizing Your Life's Ambitions 15. 101 Best Home Based Businesses for Women: Everything You Need to Know About Getting Started on the Road To Success 16. Work With Passion: How to Do What You Love for a Living. Revised and Expanded 17. Fail-Proof Your Business: Beat the Odds and be Successful 18. Confidence: How Winning Streaks and Losing Streaks Begin and End 19. Women Don't Ask: Negotiation and the Gender Divide 20. Millionaire Women Next Door: The Many Journeys of Successful American Businesswomen 21. Start Small, Finish Big: Fifteen Key Lessons to Start - and Run - Your Own Successful Business 22. Rewired, Rehired or Retired: A Global Guide for the Experienced Worker 23. The Martha Rules: 10 essentials for achieving success as you start, build or manage a business 24. The Essentials of Entrepreneurship: What it takes to create Successful Enterprises 25. Net Ready: Strategies for Success in the E-conomy 26. The Promotable Woman 27. Leave The Office Earlier: The Productivity Pro shows you how to do more in less time and feel great about it 28. The Work At Home Balancing Act: The professional resource guide for managing yourself, your work, and your family at home 29. Secrets of Six-Figure Women


Recommended Article for You close

  The bad table

Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.

Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva. Over $50,000 raised and counting - Please keep sharing! Learn more.



Featured Article


Bottom Footer
Share for a Cause












Newsletter

Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Name:
Email:
Popular Articles

ROSI Return on SUNK Investment

Ways to Improve Your Landing Page Conversions

SEO and the Entrepreneur

Suggestions

Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.