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Welcome to Voices in Local Government. My name is Joe Superville. Today's topic is
Effective Communication with Staff, Council, and Residents. Our guests are Professor
Mark Ziegler, Senior Lecturer and Director of First Year Experience Programs at
Florida State University, and Desiree Casanova, Assistant to the County Administrator,
Sarasota, Florida. Thanks for joining.
Eway, Joe.
All right. Mark has taught students and professional audiences about communications for
decades. His session was a hit at the Florida City County Managers Association last
spring. Mark usually encourages more aggressive language and greetings from former
students, but I'm not totally comfortable saying that. Maybe we can bleep it later,
but that's an Inside secret at Florida State, Joe. - Yeah, we'll leave it at that
for now. And Desiree, you were actually at that session. So thanks for the idea and
thanks for making this episode happen. - No, thank you. I'm really excited. - And
Desiree's role inside the County Manager's Office will kind of help us connect Mark's
expertise back to specific local government setting. So for the audience, we're gonna
start with what versus how, then focus on communicating the right way to the right
audience, and then go through a few listener questions submitted by the audience and
ICMA staff at the end. So what versus how? You know we hear that better
communication it's kind of a cliche but unless there are specific actions or habits
to form it doesn't really mean much. So Mark can you start us off by explaining
two or three ways professionals can communicate better? I actually think in order to
do that, you got to start with three somewhat philosophical things in order to
explain why you would do it. Yeah, the skills come from it, but I think you get
the philosophy down, then a lot of times the skills take care of themselves. Okay.
Not always, because you sometimes still have to point it out for people to don't
make the connection. There are three things that guide how I communicate. And it has
since, well, I'll tell you the date. It was January 12, 1989. First time I read
this. When we communicate with anyone, that event has a past,
a present, and a future. So what I mean is, is that our conversation right now
does not exist in isolation. All the messages that you've received, Joe, and you
Desiree, in your life impact how you receive what I'm saying right now. And same
with me, everything that I've heard, said, experience that I've had impacts how I
send and receive messages. And then the other, the first time I read that, I
thought, wow, that helps explain a lot of things. That's why some student, some
person I might talk to, if it's a student, might be untrusting. Next student, I
say, how you doing? How's school going? And they're like, thank you, Mr. Ziggler.
It's going really well. How's week going, that they've been burned by someone or
more than someone along the way. And the other thing is, is that every interaction
we have that influences whoever's in that conversation, their communication from there
on out. So I remember the first time I heard that, I thought, "Gosh, I need to be
clear, fair, judicious, kind to every single person that I interact with because I
could be just nasty because I'm having a short, I'm short tempered or I'm having a
bad day and what is that impact? That impact is potential that a freshman student
withdraws from school or they, I put them in a bad mood and they get in an
argument and they break up with a boyfriend or their girlfriend or they call their
grandmother and yell at their grandmother because I was short with them. And it's
not that we have some, we walk around with this self, you know, the self
importance, look how important I am, but you just don't know how what we say and
what we do will impact the people that we interact with. So I'm always trying to
realize that I don't know their story. They don't know my story, and I need to
judiciously enter into those interactions. The second thing that covers pretty much
how I approach communication is this idea that participation in communication is
continuous and simultaneous. And what that means is we cannot not communicate.
So we might get really mad at someone and ghost them or not respond to their
email, but we are still communicating, always. ways. So we don't respond to a
Christmas card or if we they send a text and we're really busy in a meeting and
we don't respond. Sometimes they'll take their own message from that. And so I think
recognizing that fact particularly with social media because we might think we're
asleep at night and someone is looking at Instagram, they're looking at whatever we
might have put on X, maybe an old Facebook post and we're communicating even when
we're not there and not engaging. Social media has changed that whole idea of you
cannot not communicate. The final thing is realizing the roles that people are
playing when they are in a conversation. And I think about this all the time.
I have this student in class, young man, he's freshman, good kid, good Good young
man. I'm gonna call him a kid and I was at the gym the other day And I had on
my t -shirt and my camo hat And I'm working out and he was at the machine next to
me and I just kind of popped him I'm like tie what up and I just slapped him on
the shoulder and he looked at me and His first thought was who's the old guy
popping me on the shoulder and then he looked at me like Professor Ziegler and he
started he started to stand up straight and like going to student mode and I said,
"Hey, I'm just gym guy right now." So, you know, you're trying to figure out the
role that someone is playing. Even when a student comes in, I know they're a
student, but are they playing the role of questionnaire? Are they coming in to
complain? Are they coming in for assistance? Are they, you know, trying to figure
out what that as in knowing the role that I'm supposed to play, but then also
still playing the role of I'm Mark. And so when you have a bunch of hats,
particularly in local government and citizens, 'cause you may have a citizen that
comes to you as a citizen, a homeowner, and they may be, I mean,
someone really well -known nationally, internationally, or a leader in their church,
or, you know, so you don't really know. And so figuring out, sometimes you ask,
you know, what is the purpose of your question? You know, I'm aware of your career,
what can I do for you today? Or, you know, knowing everything that you can and
kind of negotiating those roles. And those roles are negotiated really intrinsically,
implicitly, you don't really say, hey, I'm gonna be a professor today, you be the
student. You just kind of you feel it out and really good communicators know how to
feel that out Yeah, and so because of that
General communication the why or the how you know whichever one we're at right now
I'm always trying to get the person to tell me about themselves, you know, hi I
mean the first thing I wanted to ask you Joe is I know you had you in class
because of your email But Where do you live? You know, what do you do? How did
you get to this? And I wanted to do the same thing with Desiree. My first thing
was, I know people in Sarasota. So I first asked if she knew Tom Knight, who's a
good friend of mine. We grew up and he's a county commission candidate and was a
former sheriff. And then I said, you know, I have a friend. I haven't seen her in
42 years. Her name was Carolyn Brown. I knew she worked in Longboat Key. I knew
Longboat Key is in Sarasota. And she's like, yes, she just retired. I said, I heard
that, I reached out to her. So to find what we have in common, I mean, that's
just the most important thing. That's one of the things that I think social media
does a good job of. Is it helps us sometimes do the groundwork that we used to
have to do. And it sounds like social media creeping, but you know, where are they
from? To who do we know in common? Can I throw that name out? Because a lot of
times if we can make the personal connection, it can diffuse the anger immediately.
So that's one thing. And then what's your story? Tell me about you. Why are you
here? How long have you lived in town? What is your work? Do you have family in
town? Just trying to figure out all the things that they may have gone through.
And the other thing, which is I don't know how to teach it, is paying attention to
the Mm -hmm probably 80 % I mean the range is 67 to 93 % of what it communicated
It's not what they say, but how they say it and so you can pick up on someone
who's emotional You can pick up on someone who's angry. They may be grinding their
jaw. They may be agitated I always find a way and and and try to say it,
you know You're really upset today, and I'm here to try to help you deal with that
or I can tell that you're really angry and there may be good reason, but I need
to better understand that. So, I mean, that's empathy. Trying to put yourself in the
position of the person who's communicating and looking at the situation through their
eyes. And it's really lacking in society now. It's probably worse than it's ever
been. I don't want to get into why, but we're really disconnected.
I think it's post -COVID and I think it's the political divide and I think that all
the information technology has people thinking that things are moving too fast. We
don't have the control that we used to have. I think in many ways we've lost our
sense of community in some areas. We don't work for the greater good. I mean
they're just a myriad of things that we're dealing with and I really don't of how
people deal with it in a leadership, particularly public leadership,
public service sector. It's difficult. The mayor of Tallahassee is a good friend of
mine, and the lead county administrator of Leon County is a really good friend of
mine. I've had all three of his students in class, and we talk all the time about
how his job has increasingly gotten
and harder. And almost to where he says, you know, I'm just here to serve the
public. I'm here for you and they're cynical about that. Yes, you are. Even trying
to make the connection. People will will wave someone off. And so it's very
difficult. And I don't know that I have the answers. Well, we have a specific
question later about some of the politics stuff. But you said it too, that past
present future, if people residents have been, in their mind, burned by government on
any level. In the past it makes it harder, even if that local government or that
city county manager is not the one who did it. Right. Or even if they come in
with that idea, they might not have been burned by government, but they read a
bunch of stuff online, or they distrust government from the outset, or they heard of
something that happen to a neighbor. So they come in with that. You know, there's,
it's really, I always like to leave my garbage at the front door when I go into a
conversation and not just make assumptions when we jump in. We're in such a fast
-paced thing that let's get in, get it over, get done, that we don't take the time
to get to know our neighbor across the street or across the table or, you know,
sitting at a panel and I got the microphone at an open air of grievances at the
End of the County Commission meeting. We come in with swords of blazing and I don't
know and we don't even welcome the positive things like the way we set it up. Come
tell us your problems as opposed to let's have a night where people come in and
say good things about our community. the only thing that gets the clicks, the only
thing that raises the ire is to take people off. And so that's what we lead with.
- Desiree Mark mentioned kind of wearing multiple hats and understanding your role
within a given conversation. As your job there, assistant to the county manager,
you see it all, you're on the inside and you're communicating across, maybe down the
chain, up the chain, even with counsel. So how do you, how do you figure that out
for yourself? Mark kind of, I think I agreed it was kind of intuitive. There's not
like a set of written rules, but how do you, how do you navigate that? Yeah,
there's definitely not a set of rules. And Mark gave some really great points that
I want to touch on. And the first is that he mentioned, making sure that we as
humans are listening to other people's stories. It's a human to a human, right?
There's, There's not really a hierarchy in that sense. And as a local government
person and public servant, you have to serve the people with that open heart.
And you have to really just understand somebody's coming to us for something. They're
trying to vent about something. They're trying to have us listen about something. Or
they're just trying to get something resolved, right? And have us be a problem
solver. And in order to do that, we have to listen and we have to listen
effectively to them. And no matter what chain that is, that can be me to another
colleague, up or down vertical, horizontal, and then us to residents, us to council,
us to commission members, because at the end of the day, somebody is usually trying
to just make something better, make their community better, get something done that
is going to better their lives or the community's lives. So I think it's really
important to just start with that and just make sure that as two humans we're
listening to each other and we're trying to understand one another. Most arguments
happen in communication when people don't listen to understand, they listen to
respond. And when we can actually come to an understanding and say, what is going
on? How can we help you? And going back to Mark, who are you? Where do you live?
What's important to you? And why into you. And why is this Okay, now what are we
goi when we go in with that m times residents who are a level of anger,
of resete with government can kind even if it's one level um Oh,
wow, you know, they 'r I'm angry, but they're no They're trying to resolve to to
help me. And it's kind of like they they go high you go low right in terms of
calmness. So that's kind of my my response for that part.
I also wanted to touch if it's okay to that we're advocates we're advocates for our
community and the thing is most of the time and in terms of residents so to say
for this example they might think that we're just here to collect our funds and to
charge them all these taxes and to do all these things but we have to be advocates
for them. We have to show them that we are residents also sometimes of the same
community or of other communities and the struggles and the differences and the ideas
and everything that they're going through we also go through them right. We're
residents too whether it be of the community that we're we're serving or of a
different community that we live And it goes back to that human aspect of, we
understand where you're coming from. We understand if your water bill's too high, if
there's a pothole, if the light's not working, that affects us too, right? 'Cause we
drive on the road, we need clean water and we need, you know, green spaces as well
and things like that of that sort. But I just wanted to mention that as well
because I feel that that was important for the topic too. - Yes, and you said it,
Mark, how can someone be listener. I think, I think most of us have kind of heard
or understand active listening and kind of confirming what you heard to let them
either say yes or no, that's not what I meant. Here's what I meant. So you could
do that without interrupting, but I don't want to say tricks, but how can someone
just listen better? I'll go back to January 1983, Dr. George Hood at Stetson
University. I'm sitting in this class a second week of January. And He said we
talked about active listening. We talked about paraphrasing. We talked about all those
things But he said how do we when we're under the gun and we're sitting there and
it's a high -pressure situation Are there some things that we can just tuck in our
mind and it will help us and I remember him writing it on the board s Oler solar
but with a knee and It's five things that you do Nonverbally that communicate to
the other person that you're there and you are taking in what their message is and
it absolutely works. And I have to use it sometimes if the atmosphere gets ramped
up a little bit. So the S as in Sam means square off. So I can be turning to
someone, someone can be to my left and they'll say, "Can I talk with you, Professor
Siegler?" Absolutely. And I can turn my head that the best thing to do is turn and
shoulder to shoulder. That tells them that I'm not busy and I've got time for them.
If I just turn my head, you know what they'll say, I know you're busy, but could
I have a moment of your time? But if they say, Professor Ziegler, and I turn, they
say, I have a question, because I've let them know that they're important right
then. Square off. Next one is open up. A lot of times what we do is we'll cross
our arms. I'm crossing my arms right now. Sort of it sets up of posture. I'm
putting on my armor, you know, or even we'll go like this, or sometimes with the
legs, we'll cross a leg, and that can even indicate the same thing. So open up.
That's what the O is. The L is this, and this one always works. When the person
starts talking, let them begin talking, and then the L means, just lean in a little
bit. So act really interesting. You can kind of fold your hands and lean in a
little bit when they start talking. And they're like, wow, I'm being heard. All
right. And the other thing you're saying is I really care about what you're saying.
So just to lean in a little bit. The next one's a square off open and lean in
eye contact. You got to really look and sometimes in political settings.
When the political milieu is there and it often is the people you're talking to are
always looking for someone more important to talk to. So I'm saying this to the
citizens who may be listening to this and to the administrators or government
officials who may be listening to this. If that that resident when they're talking
to you at that particular point is the most important person in that particular
moment and if you see the mayor come in or you see the big benefactor of the
library walk in and you divert your eyes from that person they all of a sudden
feel small again and unheard. So even if you have a friend say I need to speak to
you Mr. Administrator, you can go you can just hold your hand up put your finger
and point to the resident say talk into Gladys right now and then go right back to
Gladys then she feels empowered and you've sent the message so that square off open
in lean in eye contact and then here's the hard one relax because sometimes when we
go into these conversations, we go in already like it's gonna be, I'm gonna be, I'm
taking, I'm gonna get attacked. So to take a deep breath and to not be so rigid
or to, you know, clench your jaw or to, you know, all those things that we do.
Now you can laugh, but I've had students use that in big interviews when they're
trying to get a job, and the interview is going very poorly, and that that word
will pop into their head. They'll square off, open up, lean in, eye contact, and
relax. And I've had students come back to me and say, Mr. Jiggler was in this
interview, and it was failing. I couldn't even think, and I did that, and the
interview turned. It just turned, because for some reason, that sent a signal to the
person who was interviewing me that I was settling in. And they've asked me before.
20 minutes in, everything turned. What did you do? And he'll use, he said, in the
G, he, they'll say, S -O -L -E -R, freshman speech. The other thing I've had is
people that may be going on a date. Okay? And the date's going very poorly. This
is someone they're interested in. And they can't think of anything. Square off, open
up, lean in, eye contact, and relax. And it works. And this applies to digital
meetings too, which is what we're doing right now, but maybe people think they can
kind of get away with this stuff, but I don't know, even even when the phone is
off screen, people know when your eyes are doing something else. Do you know what
your voice changes if you engage in this? And what was interesting just watching the
two of you right now is when I said those things, you started engaging in those
behaviors. So as soon as I said, square off, both of you moved your chairs. - Yeah.
- As soon as I said, open up, you both nodded and kinda, and when I said, lean
in, you both got closer to the screen. And then the eye contact, which is really
hard, 'cause I'm looking at you, but I'm really not. So when you're in digital
settings, you have to look at the camera, and that's how it's eye contact. That
part's tricky.
But it just makes such a big difference. And if 80 % of what we're communicating is
the non -verbal, then I want all the non -verbal stuff to line up. Because the worst
thing we can do is square off, open up, lean in, eye contact, and relax. And
inside, we're contorted, closed, not looking at you and distressed.
Because if that's what we're feeling inside that our words will conflict with what
we're doing non -verbally, and there's nothing that is worse than a mixed message. If
you send the mixed message, the person walks away and say, "God, just like any
politician I've ever dealt with." Well, just party line. It's got to be congruent.
I mean, it comes from practice. I think administrators who have been in these jobs
for years and years that they're really good at. I mean, I've watched Vince long
and he's just he's magnificent and our mayor you know they're just really really
good at it and you know we've had a lot of controversy within Tallahassee and at
the conference I got to speak with some of our folks and thanked them I said I
just want to thank y 'all because y 'all been you know you've really kind of risen
above the politics but everything you're dealing with are political squabbles And how
do you do it? I remember asking one of our main folks in Tallahassee, I remember
he said very clearly, "Well, I do it 'cause I love Tallahassee." And I'm just so
honored. Even I'm on the fire line, I'm just so honored 'cause I love our town.
And I remember walking away and reading stuff about this person. I'm like,
use the name. Reading about this person. And I thought that they were a lightning
rod for conflict. And from the way he said that. I thought, no, they're not the
problem. It's very clear that they're not the problem.
I don't know. And earlier you said silence,
whether it's ghosting, not replying to a text digitally or even in person, that will
convey some communication either way. But if and when is silence an effective tool
that is fair to use? If you're angry, you don't want to respond in anger.
Alright, so don't and that's one thing that email really does. Yeah, especially on
an email, write it but don't send it, right? Yeah. And then think of it the next
day. Yeah, that and I mean let's let's think about it. Before we had all these
technological communicative devices, you'd have two neighbors and they would be talking
about something and maybe complaining, and that was it. It just went into the ether
and they knew it was going on, but now both of them go and they send off a nasty
email to a representative or a commissioner or a head of the HOA,
you know, the Homeowners Association, and so that ranker or that discord just gets
put into the system. I think that's one of the reasons why we're so stressed out,
the stuff that used to just happen, maybe in private conversations, it's now on the,
it's on the networks. We could do a zing in the newspaper and people write just
terrible things there and then people thumb up, thumb down, you know, you click,
click, click, click and it just, it just goes on and on and I, I just think it's
such a, such a root of our discord in our discourse is all the grievances.
And if you say something really kind and uplifting, people don't trust it any.
Like what are you up to? I'll tell you the other thing about communication. I was
going to say this earlier. After I'd have a conversation who someone comes into the
my office or whatever, I am holding up. Y 'all can't see this. I've got a bunch of
stamps and I've got a bunch of postcards. It's a box of cards box of stamps. I
follow up on every conversation with a postcard. I've already written them for today
from conversations over the weekend and it's just to follow up. Thank you for coming
in. I want to let you know that I called the supervisor and shared some of the
ideas that you shared with me. I hope to have a meeting with him on Wednesday and
I'll be getting back with you and keep up with that because you know what they do
is they get that card and you know what now they like you Now they like you like
Desiree is that you've responded and you have followed up and then on Wednesday You
call them back and you say I had the meeting now. This is harder because it really
requires more work You've got to actually follow through on what you said that
you're gonna do. Yeah So that and anyway, that's where I that's where I was right
then and because they just people need to be seen and they need to feel that
they're being heard and a card indicates that in so many tangential ways as opposed
to nodding and smiling and then we walk away and it's like it's over. No
communication event is over so keep it going keep it open and let the citizens know
that you actually are really there not just saying it. Yeah so - Yeah, so, Deseret,
maybe not actual stamps and postcards, 'cause that might be a tall order, but how
can the local government reply, not only to complaints, but inquiries,
or whatever it might be, and I know each department might have some version of
customer service, which is a tough job, those people do a great job, but how can
the local government do that effectively without the just relying on the generic
automated reply that literally says do not respond or this this email box is
unattended so how how does Sarasota handle that? Yeah so I really like Mark's
comment of being seen and being heard that's every single resident we want them to
feel that from the start to the finish for whatever type of topic that they want
to talk to our county staff about so I think one of the first things that we had
mentioned silence so an automated response is that's what they're getting they're
getting something that's automated it's generic it's not going to have their name on
it and it's just going to be here's a response to your question or concern and
nobody else is going to respond back to it and do not reply back because nobody
will and so it's hard with those right because people don't feel seen and they
don't feel heard and they just feel like well I just got the same message that
other hundreds of people got what we try to do here at Sarasota County is email
people individually, email residents. So one time we had a tree ordinance where one
Facebook group unfortunately had some misinformation on something that was occurring at
one of our commission meetings and our county administrator Jonathan Lewis had asked
me to specifically email back each and every resident. And that was probably over
400 different residents. So I emailed them that day all until the night and I wrote
my email stating their name, explaining what information was misunderstood, what was
going to be discussed at the meeting, that it was about about some grand tree oaks,
and kind of where that misunderstanding happened, and that we are in favor and that
we are sustainable and we are conserving areas and land. And so many people
responded back to me and said, "Thank you so much for just taking the time to
email me individually." I could have easily sent an automated response to everybody
saying this is the misinformation please don't respond back this is actually what
we're doing and this is what the commission feels. But no I took the time based
off of our leadership to do that and I really did feel that people really you know
responded well to that. There was also some other instances when I was helping with
the emergency rental assistance program a few years ago where we were giving money
as a government to different residents who weren't able to pay their rent and their
utilities, just based off of COVID and some other just times of life where it was
just really hard for people and it still is. And calling them made such a
difference. They're like, really, you're calling me? And I'm like, yeah, this is my
personal number. It's my work phone. Will you call me whenever you have a question?
I'll call you back. And they were just so happy for that. They, again, they felt
seen and they felt heard and they said, "Wow, like, you're just taking the time out
of your day." And I'm like, "Because you're important, because each and every one of
you are important. Of the 400 plus thousand residents that we have, each and every
one of you are special and are important, and we're going to make sure that you
feel that." And when you take that time to write to them specifically, to email
them promptly, just like Mark said, and follow through with what you say, they
respond way differently to that. They can differently to that. They at something,
they can d and we can agree to disag as staff and as a resident you're taking the
time, t that part, right? They ca the topic, but they can' you took the time to
emil and you took the time to I think that that's the o is when you say that you
'r if you say you're going
call them back on a specific day. It better be on your calendar. It better be on
your, in your brain, wherever it is that you store your information to remind you
of things, but that's what matters to residents because when you say you're going to
do something you have to, it's not only a form of integrity for the organization,
but it's a form of integrity for yourself. And if you can't live up to that
expectation, then you're not doing your best. And then that's not what we do at
Sarasota County. We always do our best and we always make sure that our residents
know that we are giving them our full attention.
- Mark, as a leader, is it best to keep a consistent communication style,
especially when you're kind of talking to a group and then maybe a smaller group
and then individuals? Or do you tailor your communication frequency style method to
different individuals based on what works for them? and if so, how does a leader,
whether they're leading the whole local government or maybe just a team of five
people, how do they even figure out what's best or what each individual person needs
to hear?
That's a hard question. But here's how I would approach it. And again,
I'm working from my perspective and then I'll try to dive into if I was in a
particular situation. When I'm a lecturing 200 students or even if I'm giving a talk
with 500 people in the crowd, I try to be very authentic, genuine who I am.
Then when they meet with me afterwards or come up and ask me questions, my goal is
always that they don't perceive me any differently. So they don't think I'm up there
just playing a role. And then if they come into my office and we meet, that they
still think I'm the same person, even though I may be a little relaxed. That being
said, you have a history with different people, and so you will soon learn what
will work and what won't work. I have thousands of examples that I use in class
about that, but this one, just to give you an idea of what I'm talking about, I
gave a student an A minus on a speech one time, and she was
unhappy. And she walked into my office and she slammed that down on my desk and
said, "I gave an A speech and this is unacceptable." And she was very authoritarian
and she was pointed and she was coming at me. And finally I said,
"Why don't you sit down? Let's start over. Sit down. I want to tell me your name."
You know? And then I said, "Well, tell me your background." You know before we
discuss this I want to know you because you're in a big class So she was the
daughter of two military colonels mom and dad and Everything was declared.
You're up at 07 30 you oatmeal's at 07 4 5 and it was very root nice They told
her what to do and she did it and so what happened was was it Before I got that
information, I was saying, "Well, let's figure this out. Let me show you what I was
showing you." And she saw that as a weakness. When I finally got the story,
I said, "I appreciate you coming in. The grade is what it is,
and it stands. It is an A minus." And you know what she said? "Thank you very
much for your time, Mr. Z." Another student would come in with the same thing, and
they would have thought he is so rude. But she thought I was being rude when I
was skirting around and not being forthright and trying to get what her ideas were.
She saw that as weak and rude. And when I said the great is what it is, it will
stand. She respected that. The directness. Yeah. I was laughing earlier too, because
if if Colonel Superville is listening, I grew up that way. But it wasn't so strict
necessarily. But I I developed this, I don't wanna say obsession, but efficient and
give me the same way, give me the info, let's move on. I don't necessarily want a
lot of that fluff and I've learned that I react poorly when there is too much
fluff, but that's part of the question. Is that on me or is that on the person
doing it? How do we work that out?
- Both parties in a communication event have responsibility for the event. And
sometimes we go into a public speaking situation where there are 75 citizens and the
commission and the head county administrator speaking and we think the head county
administrator is in charge. Everyone in that room is in charge of the success of
that meeting. All right, so if I go into a class or if I sit in the back and
I've got out my phone and I'm looking at my friend and I'm rolling my eyes
everything that they say that I'm undermining the potential success of the
conversation. Just in my nonverbals I'm putting out there discord unrest etc as
opposed to sitting there nodding giving the person who's speaking my respect and
support and the same is true of the county commissioners up there if they're looking
at their fellow county commissioners out of the corner of their eye you know and
like Oh my God, here he goes. Or they're looking out at a citizen they talked with
and they're looking at him, you know, with a knowing. Yeah, here he goes again.
- Yeah, the same old guy who's been there every meeting to complain about the same
thing, yep. - Right. And so I think everyone at the things got to go in there with
a sense of we are here to work on this problem, not we are here to point out
more problems. Because that's another thing that we deal with in in our public
conversations now and particularly when it comes to county government is you have a
lot of folks out there they just want the problems. A lot of times they're not
interested in a solution they just love the ranker and so they just like to stir
the pot and um you have some people that get mad when the solutions come up
because they're just trying to go to because that's what motivates them. You know
where I learned that, and I don't mean to be disparaging, but my dad was a Baptist
minister. Joe, you probably remember this. And he used to say that to me all the
time, that there are people that are drawn to public settings, whether that's
religious or governmental, they're drawn to that because the negativity is what fuels
their, fuels what they do, and they love to stir the pot. Probably half of dad's
ministry was trying to get people out who were just there to cause problems and not
be a part of the Community now you can't throw people out, but you got to
recognize that some people are just that way and You and you you reach the point
where you've got to draw the line and say I've done every and to say to them I
have had so many conversations with you I've offered many things that I think might
help, no matter what is offered, does it seem to help. And I just think that you
need to find someone else to talk to. We've not gotten anything done, and I'm not
doing a good job with my family because I'm worried about what you're going to say
next. And I've done all I can do, and I'm done with these conversations. Desiree,
how do you adjust your communication in the professional setting, Whether it's your
boss if it's an equal or as you said earlier, maybe a diagonal different department
Especially in your role because you you often maybe have the weight of the county
administrator behind you because you're kind of Pushing things forward on their
behalf, but you're not You don't necessarily have the individual authority behind it.
So how do you? Customize what you're saying how you're saying it depending on who
is going to Yeah, I think the biggest thing first off is to treat every single
person no matter their position with respect So that's what I like to start off
initially with that and then you do have a great point You know, I'm the assistant
to the county administrator, but I am not the county administrator nor the deputy or
one of the the regular assistance I had that little to in my name and it does
make a difference because although I have the backing and the projects that are
asked of me from that leadership team, it's not me, right? And I don't have the
authority to always make certain decisions or actions to be put in place. So I
think always, again, going with respect and then just being clear, you know, I was
asked to do this project on behalf of X person, whoever that may be. I'm looking
to get it accomplished by this deadline. Can you please, yeah, can you please let
me know if that's something that can be accomplished and I look forward to hearing
back from you and always just being kind, you know what I mean, not every single
person, no matter if it's diagonally, horizontally, vertically, or, you know, might
agree with you, but just to know that you are doing your best and that sometimes
things are asked to get done and maybe they weren't my idea and maybe they are
just needed to get done from a higher level, but they still need that respect
behind it. And maybe we don't have all the information or the background or things
that they would like, but it still, again, needs to get completed. And so just
having that professionalism, I think, is a big key role on that, no matter what it
is and no matter who it's for. So I think that's one of the biggest things. And
then obviously never utilizing power, you know what I mean? Because just because I
work in administration and I work for the county administrator doesn't mean that
anything that I might be asking for is more important or less important. You know
what I mean? So just making sure that every task is given with the same equal
opportunity as they say or equalness, equity on that just so that every single
department because we are really big doesn't feel that one is being valued more than
the other. And then I did want to touch on what Mark was saying about Just
speaking to different individuals, and it goes back to your question, Joe, each
person isn't the same. And if we talk to each person the same exact way, sort of
say like a robot or something, it wouldn't be beneficial and it wouldn't be
productive. And each way that somebody understands information and receives information,
and even the tone that you give it to one person versus another, really does make
a difference in how they perceive, understand, and respond to what you're saying. And
that goes both in staff, like me with colleagues, me in the county administration
setting with other departments and then also with residents. At Sarasota County,
we do something that's really great. So I wanted to share it. It's called the
people map and it's a personality test, kind of similar to the Myers -Briggs thing.
And so we do this where we have all new employees and current employees take this
test to see if they're one of the four core personality types. So it's going to be
leader, people, free spirit, and /or task. And normally you have one minor one and
then one major and then one minor. But sometimes you might be equal. And that's the
thing too, is that we go into this trying to understand how does this person
operate? Are they brought up by people in the military? Are they not brought up by
people in the military? Do they prefer direct answer? Do they prefer fluff? Do they
prefer 10 minutes of conversation about how your day is and how everything is going
unrelated to work and then to ask for the task? Or do they first want the task
and then to ask how your day is? And that's really has helped us in our
organization a lot. It helps people understand a little bit. And we tend to use it
as a joke. You know, so sometimes if I do ask for something because I'm a leader
task with one point away from people. I'll be like, I'm so sorry. That's the task
coming out of me, you know, but, but please, whenever you can get to it, I really
appreciate it because I am results driven and I do need something to get done
timely. And that's just how I work, but it's not that you're diffusing it. Like
Mark said earlier, you're diffusing and taking their guard down, helping them take
their guard down. Exactly. And it's all again about understanding, understanding that
although I am a person and I like to to receive and get information very directly
that doesn't mean that the receiver is the same type of person may they might be a
free spirit and want to get to it when they can get to it or like to be asked
about it in a different route and so that's the part of understanding what other
people are conversing with them genuinely talking to them to then be able to get
whatever the outcome is that we both need.
Myers -Briggs 40 years. I know exactly what you're talking about and there are people
that make decisions with their heads And the next person comes in and they make all
their decisions with their heart and you know how you can tell They'll tell you
they'll say here's what I think And or they'll say here's how I feel about that.
That's how you know That's how you know So there's all these little clues that you
can pick up on the other thing I was thinking about a second ago was we're talking
about all of this follow -up communication, etc. And what can happen in an
organization is if Desiree buys into that and she's doing it all the time, then her
workload will triple, quadruple, because people will go to her.
Alright, and so then she'll feel overtaxed or the other people will feel like
they're not being effective. It's really important that leadership if they start
pulling out all these ideas about follow -up and notes and Individual emails that
everyone does it Because if it just becomes one person then what you end up with
is the old adage. No good deed goes unpunished Because in Desiree now every time
there's an email thing that goes out They'll say Desiree remember that time you set
those 400 emails out. We need you to do that again. We'll see you next week. Yep.
And then there you go. But everyone's got to be committed to that. Yeah. Or
Desiree's got to have the ability to say, "Guys, we have one of those blow -ups and
there are five of us. If each of us do 80, we can be done in the next couple of
hours." Yep. And then get everyone to do it. And they know that it's important
because the county administrator said it, "We're going to serve our citizens best
this way." And they're like, "I'm in." That wraps up part one with Mark and
Desiree. Part two is audience questions on effective communication.
Voices in local government is back with part two, audience questions on effective
communication with Mark Ziegler and Desiree Casanova.
How do you balance between concise efficiency that may leave information out compared
to giving more context and details but risk becoming the too long didn't read fully
listen to email or meeting monologue or in my case, rambling podcast questions. So
Mark, get us started with that basically saying how much information is the right
amount, especially if I'm talking to a manager, city county managers, who's really
busy. Somewhere in the middle. I am Aristotle's golden mean.
I mean, I it's so interesting. We're either so far to the left or so far to the
right on everything. Go down the middle and so what you'll know how some people
might need more details and you might say hey I'm gonna hit the high points for
you right now. I'm open to longer conversations later But here's where I know right
now if that person said give me the details now Then I know that I can go with
it or if they say that will be perfect I can get the specs later So you take the
cues from them and you know the people to whom you're to whom you're speaking or
I'll even ask, do you want the short story, the long story? Because if I can't
ascertain what they're looking for, they'll say, I want the long story. I'm like,
you got a half an hour. Yeah, come on in. Let's discuss it. If they say I want
the short story, I'll say, essentially, here's what I'm dealing with. A, B, C, D,
when you want details, let me know. I got time. Yeah, I have a tendency to go too
long. So I've, I've tried to start doing that where I give the one paragraph intro.
And And if you want to keep going, here's it below, get to it later, get to it
whenever. Going back, even when I sent you the invite for this podcast, I was like,
"I don't know how much information to share or not. I don't want him to stop
reading and delete, but I don't want him to be confused what I'm asking." So, as
an example, I hope I split the difference. - I laughed, I laughed. And then I told
Ernie Sims that a student dropped his name, an old student dropped his name today
in an email. Ernie's one of our coaches now. Yeah, I would say good old Ernie.
There was a story. He made a huge defensive play to win a prime time game on ESPN
and was interviewed on field by Aaron Andrews and not the smoothest of interview.
But you know, who am I to judge? We're all 19 at the time and you kind of
coached them up in class the next day in front of 300 people. And sure enough,
whatever it was a month, six weeks later, he was in the same position and was
noticeably Now, let me tell you. - And good for him. You know, top 10 NFL draft
pick later and successful guys. So congrats to him. - And you know what's interesting
about that? I knew I could do that with Ernie. - Yeah. - Because if that had been
someone that was really hesitant and self -conscious and really knew that would be
humiliating, but Ernie laughed. - No, yeah, he was in it. We weren't laughing at
him. We were laughing with him when he got it. - Yeah, and I asked him beforehand.
I said, "Ernie, can I talk about your interview and make everyone better. He's like
open book. Interesting. I think I figured you did and I remembered vividly it was
one of those things where we almost couldn't believe like this professor just calling
out the big big superstar in front of everyone but it's an impression. You got to
be careful with that because I did it to Dalvin Cook one time and he handled it
really well but they were people in the class that thought I was mean to Dalvin
Cook and they went on to social media and said, "Our professor was so disrespectful
to Dalvin Cook." And I wanted to say, "Dalvin knew I was going to do it." So the
next class period I had to say, "Dalvin, tell him about the other day." He goes,
"Folks, it's all good." I went upset. He went upset. We have a history, you know?
So, yeah. - And again, you're, forget the class. You're helping them with what they
needed to - Right, it wasn't about the-- - Very conservative careers in the future.
They need to understand how to talk to the media, talk to fans, the whole thing.
- Correct, correct. - All right, next question. What is the best way to respond when
someone answers one of your questions or requests in an email or text but ignores
others? Does the answer change if it's a boss versus a customer or a resident
appear compared to a report or a boss? Desiree, why don't you go first on this
one, especially given the nature of your job there? Yeah, no, that's a great
question for sure. Always going back again to respect and professionalism. And
oftentimes, especially when we get those long emails, there could be so many
questions in there that somebody just genuinely forgot to respond to it or was
answering the others in depth that they didn't get to one of the questions that was
asked. What I like to do is just always say thank you so much, you know, we're
always thanking everybody for responding, for promptly responding, for providing any
information. If possible, could you please let me know the response to this extra
question or I see that this number wasn't addressed yet? Did you have an answer on
that one yet? You know, just, hey, just tapping them on their shoulders, so to say
virtually in this case, in an email, just to remind them that a question was missed
and that I look forward to their response. But there's no need to be rude or to
be, you know angry at it because it happens all the time. I know I personally have
forgotten to answer a part of a question that just had so many and so just kind
of letting them know and then most of the time I want to say like 98 % of the
time they respond oh my goodness I'm so sorry I thought I responded to that portion
um actually I'm still looking on it or looking into it or um I do have an answer
for you and then they'll say it you know but just being clear you know hey we
missed this thing um you know what was the response response for it? Yeah, I'll add
to that one. That can be an indicator on what is important to that person,
especially if they're the boss. So listen to what they said, take care of your
individual, your follow up. Then when you let them know your portion is complete on
that part, that's a good chance to then ask on the other. So I agree on that one.
Mark, why don't you take this one? Is there a good way to offer a reset if you
have a professional relationship that seems like every conversation is tense or
awkward? Yeah, I asked for a reset. Just straight up ask. I'll say it,
can we start over? They're both both sides are thinking it. And one way to do it
is to get away. Say, listen, last week was really rough. Let's go to Starbucks or
wherever. Let's go get a coffee. We've had a great working relationship and I want
to fix it. Or I even go in and say, "We got off on the wrong foot. We're not
seeing eye to eye. I'm not comfortable with this. Kim, what can I do? Sometimes I
will go into a meeting and I'll sit by someone who I had an argument with at the
last meeting to see how they're doing." And if, you know, that's an implicit asking
for a reset, but sometimes I'll say, "I don't like what happened the other day.
I've been able to sleep. And can we fix it? Where can we fix this? - And also
maybe, is it fair that the other person isn't necessarily stressed out or even
realizes that it's a problem? Maybe it's just one -sided, so. - Some people have
really good sense of, you know, they're very into,
well, they actually have great emotional intelligence and they know how they have
self -awareness, they know how it's impacting them, but it's very regular that
sometimes you interact with someone and they might not even know that that was
contentious. You felt it inside and they might think that they were just, both of
you were communicating very clearly. And I have gone up to someone and said, "I
really hated that conversation the other day. I hope that we can clear the air."
And they'll say, Is it that bad? - Yeah. - And so I think to bring it up,
then it's a perception checker. And they'll say, well, it wasn't really that bad to
me. And I'm like, well, whoo, I feel good relief. If I'm ever, you know, if you
ever feel that way after you and I've talked, then you bring it up to me like I
just did with you. You know, sometimes we don't have conversations about the
conversation. - Yeah. - And we just let it go. And then we go back and we go over
in our mind, trying to figure out what happened. And I just bring it up. I say
there's an elephant in the room. Let's discuss. - And I just want to touch on that
because we were talking about silence earlier. And that's one of the factors that I
personally think that silence is a killer. When you don't talk about things and you
don't try to acknowledge them if they were good or if they weren't. Because if you
don't let it out and just try to explain it genuinely, then we don't know because
now we're in silence and it could be two people angry at each other, one person
not angry and the other person is angry or vice versa, but we didn't communicate,
so we wouldn't know. - Yeah, right. All right, this one is kind of what we touched
on at the very beginning and we're not gonna solve this today, but the question
from an audience member says, public trust in institutions and governments feels like
it's trending downward faster than ever. After encountering thousands of skeptical
students over the years and finding ways to authentically connect with them by the
end of the semester. What strategies help you overcome your audience's existing
resistance or misconceptions? And I'll preempt a little bit. You did mention how to,
or just be your genuine self. That's kind of step one. But anything to add on kind
of winning over that skeptical audience, whether it's a student or a resident or
whatever the audience is.
Consistency, stories, and be human. I did a whole thing at this talk,
and I didn't even know I was gonna go to this when we were in Orlando and I was
speaking at the conference. But I felt like there were a handful of people when I
was talking about empathy and transparency, that I could, let's see them looking at
me like you don't know what I'm dealing with. And so I went to, I had four or
five different stories written down that I wanted to share that were explaining why
I was seeing it that way. My dad would take my sister and I to the nursing home
and the reason I was doing it was I was telling that I was talking about empathy
and the importance of seeing things through our friends, our fellow citizens, our
eyes and so what instead of just saying empathy is important I tried to tell some
stories about how my parents helped us develop our empathy the time when I was
throwing dirt at my friend when I was three um the time that we stopped on the
way to Perry for the holidays and got Christmas gifts for the prisoners working on
the side of the road on Christmas Eve and my dad explaining to us how we're really
excited about tomorrow, but these people are, they're having a terrible time right
now, and we just need to show them some community love. Getting off the bus one
day, and my friends were kind of kidding me, 'cause there were these people in our
front porch, they were homeless men that dad had found on 41, and he was washing
their feet, getting McDonald's hamburgers, and getting them new shoes, so that they
wouldn't be on the hot tar. If I was telling because what it what it will do is
it will allow the person who may be a little cynical to know where I'm coming from
because more often than not they saw things like that growing up and they've just
forgotten some of those things. It is also the case that sometimes people see you
as wow what a what a weakling. What do you mean stop it on the thing? Like, and
I've had people come up to me, is that for real? You know, and I'm like, it
absolutely is for real. Why would I make that up? But the personal stories about
why I see the world the way I see the world. And then I will say to an audience,
the reason I tell you these stories is, I wanna hear yours. I'm telling my story,
my story is not the important part. The important part is if I share mine, you'll
think of yours and maybe you'll come up to me and explain to me why you see
things the way that you see it. And it takes a lot of time, it takes a lot of,
I mean you just have to be committed to others to do that. - I did want to ask,
I had to get at least one FSU question in there. So Bobby Bowden, the Hall of
Fame FSU coach must have been doing something right all those years, communicating to
his players, to the media, behind the scenes to staff, other coaches, and even the
school admins. Maybe more, most importantly, the parents of the recruits just in
those living rooms. So Mark, what do you think made Coach Bowden a successful
communicator specifically in his leadership role? When you talk to him,
you felt like you had known him your entire life. So he was good at everything you
just explained, really, like making those personal connections and being vulnerable and
telling stories. - He just, you just, his eye contact, his presence,
the way if you were talking to him, there was, he was, Coach Bowden was not
looking for anyone more important. I have so many players who I hear from and talk
to just felt like he was a father figure, that he really cared about him, you
know? And I think it had to do a lot with his follow -through. I also think he
always surrounded himself with like -minded individuals that had the same kind of
follow -through. So for instance, Ms. Hall, his administrative assistant for his entire
career, often followed up on the kinds of things. And Coach Bowden would tell him,
"Hey, Sue, I met with this blah, blah, blah. Can you do blah, blah, blah?" And she
would follow through on the thing. So his follow -through was really great. He didn't
forget conversations. He followed through with letters and cards and you know you
just felt seen and heard and you felt like he was taking care of yeah it was he
was masterful at that. Yeah and it sounds like obviously Mark you are the same way
in your position in Desiree you're doing it inside local government and helping the
county administrator and other executives do it as well so Professor Ziegler Desiree
thanks for your time today as we as individuals and local governments strive to
communicate more effectively. Thank you. Thank you, Joe. Thank you. Appreciate it.
Guest Information
Mark Zeigler, Senior Lecturer and Director of First-Year Experience Programs, Florida State University
Desiree Casanova, Assistant to the County Administrator, Sarasota Florida
Takeaways
- Effective communication requires understanding the past, present, and future of interactions.
- Empathy is crucial in communication, especially in local government settings.
- Nonverbal communication can account for a significant portion of the message conveyed.
- Follow-up communication is essential to show that you value the conversation.
- Personalized responses can significantly improve public trust in government.
- Active listening involves not just hearing but understanding the speaker's message.
- Tailoring communication styles to the audience can enhance understanding and cooperation.
- Silence can be detrimental; addressing issues directly is important.
- Building trust takes time and requires consistent, genuine interactions.
- Stories can be powerful tools to connect with skeptical audiences.
Chapters
Introduction to Effective Communication
Philosophical Foundations of Communication
Understanding Roles in Communication
Empathy and Active Listening
Nonverbal Communication Techniques
The Power of Follow-Up Communication
Personalized Responses in Local Government
Tailoring Communication Styles
Balancing Conciseness and Detail
Addressing Missed Questions
Resetting Professional Relationships
Building Trust in Institutions
Lessons from Coach Bobby Bowden
Resources from ICMA Learning Lab
Self-Paced Online Course: Communicating with Elected Officials, Staff, and the Media
Free On-demand Webinar: Improving Trust and Transparency with Better Public Communications