If you think culture changes just because the boss sends an
email, think again. It’s really shaped by the daily conversations among your
team—like the tough talks, the “what’s going well” updates, and even those
awkward moments when everyone pretends they didn’t see the coffee spill.
Communication is like the GPS, but the actual conversations
are what drive the car. And let’s be honest, sometimes the car takes a few
wrong turns.
When teams actually talk things through, they can tackle
pretty much anything—even the mystery of who keeps stealing lunches from the
fridge. But if conversations go sideways or never happen, everyone gets stuck
in a loop, like binge-watching a bad TV show.
The way we talk can make or break results. The funny thing?
Most leaders were taught to lead conversations like they’re starring in a
one-person show, not to help the group actually talk. No wonder things go sideways!
If you want your culture to change, you have to change up
your team’s conversations. But here’s the kicker: most leaders have no clue how
to do that. Nobody taught them how to help people talk; they got lessons in
taking charge instead.
Business schools love folks who make quick decisions.
Companies promote people who seem confident and can talk a mile a minute. But
the best conversations? They want you to slow down, listen up, and notice the
stuff nobody’s saying out loud—like who’s secretly dreaming about lunch.
When teams dodge the real issues or wrap up meetings with
everyone nodding (even though half are thinking “I have no idea what we just
agreed on”), you get conversational debt. And over time, it bogs everything
down—kind of like running through molasses.
Making conversations better isn’t just the boss’s job.
Everyone has to pitch in. But leaders are still super important—they create the
vibe and show everyone how it’s done.
So, let’s dive in! Today I want to zoom in on what leaders
can do and share five real ways to spark better conversations. Whether you’re
the leader or just cheering them on from the sidelines, these tips are for you.
Five Ways Leaders Can Make Team Conversations Way Better
1. Read the Room—It’s More Than Just Words
Think of leading a
conversation like air traffic control. You’re not actually piloting the
plane—you’re making sure nobody crashes into each other. In team talks, you’re
juggling all kinds of signals: how fast people are talking, who’s looking
nervous, and who’s suddenly way too interested in their coffee cup.
If you only listen
to the words that come out, you’re missing half the action. Watch for what
people aren’t saying, and pay attention to their body
language —like the classic “I’m fine” with a grimace.
Spot the weird
stuff. Does your team stare at you before they talk, like you’re the parent
giving permission? Do they side-eye each other when someone makes a suggestion?
Catch those nervous grins and speedy nods—they’re dead giveaways!
Don’t just follow
the conversation thread. Keep an eye on the vibe. Are interruptions building
up steam, or just derailing everything? Are people quiet because they’re
thinking—or because they’re secretly plotting their escape? Is the hype legit,
or is everyone faking it?
Quick check-ins at
the start, plus a halftime pause, can help you catch the drama before it turns
into a soap opera.
These
signals are super easy to miss when you’re talking. Reading the room takes
some serious focus—and a lot of patience. Don’t jump to conclusions. Watch the
energy, notice who’s vibing with whom, and look for that gap between what
people say and what their faces are doing. That’s where the juicy stuff
happens.
2. Catch the Backward
Talk Loops
Ever been on a team
call that feels like you’re stuck going round and round in a roundabout, never
actually getting off? You’re moving, but you’re still in the same spot—like
binge-watching episode 1 of a show for hours.
Teams get stuck
thanks to three classic “backward” moves:
1. Avoidance—parking
the tough stuff or pretending it’s not happening
2. Blame—focusing
on who dropped the ball instead of picking it back up
3. Groupthink—everyone
agreeing so fast it’s like a synchronized swim team
These feel
harmless—blame sounds like a “solid review,” avoidance is “let’s not go there,”
and groupthink is “yay, alignment!” But that’s how you end up circling the same
roundabout for weeks.
Start by checking
where your team’s at:
- Blame: “Which old drama
keeps popping up?” (Like the post-mortem that’s really a blame game about
missed deadlines)
- Avoidance: “What do we
keep shoving under the rug?” (Like the customer problem nobody wants to
mention)
- Groupthink: “Where do we
all nod super fast and pretend we’re totally on board?” (Like the strategy
meeting where everyone left with their own secret plan)
Call out the
pattern, right in the moment:
- In meetings: “Looks like
we’re back in the blame lane—how do we turn this bus around?”
- Planning: “This feels
kinda groupthink-y. What aren’t we saying out loud?”
- When stuff’s ignored:
“We’re dodging the real topic. What do we actually need to talk about?”
3. Quit Filling Every
Awkward Silence—Let It Breathe!
Silence gets a bad
rap. Leaders think it means people are bored—or asleep—so they scramble to fill
it up.
But silence is like
a dramatic pause in music—it makes everything better. If you never get a break,
it’s just noise. Let your team’s chat breathe and see what pops up.
Silence =
thinking time. Some folks need a minute to process before talking. If you
fill every pause, you’ll cut off their best ideas. Next time, count to seven in
your head. (Yes, seven. It’ll feel forever.) What comes next is usually gold.
Quiet doesn’t
mean “I agree.” Don’t assume silence means everyone’s on board—they might
just be biting their tongue. Ask for the real stuff: “What’s bugging you?” or
“What doesn’t work for you?” Don’t treat quiet like a thumbs-up.
Silence helps the
shy folks. If your workplace is all about who talks fastest, the quieter
types get drowned out. Give everyone a couple of minutes to jot down their
thoughts before sharing. It’s like a cheat code for introverts—and lets
everyone join in.
Silence might always
feel weird, but it’s not wasted time. Think of it as the soil where real ideas
grow.
4. Turn Backward Talk Into Forward Talk
The real magic isn’t
kicking off the conversation—it’s knowing how to steer it away from potholes.
Backward Talk is all
about the past: “We tried this,” “Not my circus,” “We’re broke,” or “Let’s not
go there.” Sure, maybe true—but those lines just slam the brakes.
They don’t end the
conversation—they just stop it from moving. Time to flip that script.
Forward Talk is
about opening doors. When someone says “We need more data” or “That’s not gonna
work,” treat it as a cue to reframe—don’t jump straight to debate mode.

Want to practice Forward Talk? Start flipping those
closed-door phrases into open-ended questions.
5. Dissent Is Good—Stop Chasing Fake Agreement
Consensus is
overrated . Trying to force it just makes your team’s thinking flabby.
The worst meetings
aren’t the ones with drama—they’re the ones where everyone nods, then rants
privately on Slack. You get fake buy-in and real confusion.
This happens when
leaders treat agreement like a gold star. Someone shares an idea, and suddenly
everyone’s watching the boss for cues. Disagreeing feels risky, so nobody does.
A facilitative
leader flips the script and makes dissent cool—not present agreement. Ask,
“What’s the strongest reason not to do this?” Give people space to challenge
ideas and openly disagree. You won’t always change the plan, but you’ll make
better decisions. Normalize “I don’t agree, but I’ll commit.” It’s way better
than the silent treatment.
The goal isn’t a
group hug—it’s real ownership. Different results, different conversations.
When dissent is
expected, honesty happens in the room—not after. Your team’s conversations get
real, and your decisions get sharper.
The chats your team
dodges aren’t gone—they’re just hiding, quietly messing with everything. So,
nope, you don’t need to be a pro facilitator. Just read the vibe, notice the
loops, let silence do its thing, flip backward talk into forward talk, and make
disagreement safe.
Your team will thank
you. Or at least stop avoiding eye contact at the coffee machine.
The Executive Role
Setting the tone for healthy conversations isn’t just a
nice-to-have—it’s a necessity for executives who want their company to thrive.
When executives openly model respectful, honest, and inclusive dialogue, it
sends a clear message about what’s valued and expected. This creates
psychological safety, where people feel comfortable sharing ideas, raising
concerns, and even disagreeing without fear of backlash. When that sense of
safety exists, innovation and trust naturally follow.
It’s just as crucial for executives to engage in healthy
conversations with other executives. When they communicate openly and with
mutual respect, it breaks down silos and encourages collaboration across the
organization. These top-level interactions set an example for everyone and show
that even tough topics can be handled with integrity and care. This ripple
effect helps shape a culture where healthy dialogue is the norm, not the
exception.
But when leaders fail to set this tone, cracks start to
appear in the culture. If conversations are tense, dismissive, or avoided
altogether, people pick up on it fast. Teams might start withholding
information, avoiding tough topics, or simply going through the motions without
real engagement. Over time, this can lead to mistrust, low morale, turnover and a
culture where people keep their heads down instead of contributing their best
ideas. In short, the absence of healthy conversations slowly erodes the foundation
of even the strongest organizations.
Ultimately, fostering a culture of open, healthy dialogue is
a leadership responsibility that pays dividends across every level of the
organization. By valuing honest conversations and encouraging respectful
dissent, leaders not only strengthen trust and collaboration but also pave the
way for innovation and long-term success. The foundation of a thriving team
starts with making every voice heard and every conversation count.
Wishing you continued growth and success,
Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
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