Great advice thank you. I would add that face to face in person communication should be top of the list too. Social media, emails and reports all create barriers.
Imagine walking around a corner and almost bumping into someone, and we both apologise (usually).
Do the same in a car?
That’s the difference between face to face in person and media.
Loved this breakdown of the difference between talking more and communicating better.
I do think, though, that if I had to pick a side, overcommunicating still beats undercommunicating, especially early on, when trust and clarity haven’t been built yet.
Great advice thank you. I would add that face to face in person communication should be top of the list too. Social media, emails and reports all create barriers.
Imagine walking around a corner and almost bumping into someone, and we both apologise (usually).
Do the same in a car?
That’s the difference between face to face in person and media.
Love the inspiration on your example! Thanks for improving this, Steve!
Loved this breakdown of the difference between talking more and communicating better.
I do think, though, that if I had to pick a side, overcommunicating still beats undercommunicating, especially early on, when trust and clarity haven’t been built yet.
But long-term, structure > noise.
Spot on! 👆🏻