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You are here: Home / Articles / Facilitation Skill # 5 – Active Listening

by Carl S. Carlson Leave a Comment

Facilitation Skill # 5 – Active Listening

Facilitation Skill # 5 – Active Listening

“Seek first to understand, then to be understood.” – Stephen Covey

A good listener tries to understand thoroughly what the other person is saying. In the end the listener may disagree sharply. However, before voicing disagreement, the active listener wants to know exactly what the other person is saying and why.

What is active listening?

Merriam-Webster defines “active” as “characterized by action rather than by contemplation,” and “listening” as “hearing something with thoughtful attention.”

Active listening is a habit, as well as the foundation of effective communication. A good listener is able to repeat in his own words what another person has said, satisfying the person that they are understood. This does not mean agreeing with what the other person is saying. Ask clarifying questions in order to ensure full understanding of the other person’s intention.

Why is active listening important?

Every person who is on an FMEA team is there for a reason. They represent an expertise that is needed on the FMEA team. When they provide their input, the team leader and the entire team should listen to what they are saying. This is basic respect. If you are not listening to what is being said, you are disrespecting the person who is talking, and their contribution is not taken into account.

How should active listening be applied during FMEA meetings?

In the first article in the FMEA facilitation series, I mentioned that one of the roles of an FMEA facilitator is to help the team members do their best thinking. By actively encouraging team members to listen to each other, the opportunity for deep discussion is possible. Here are a few ways to use active listening during FMEA meetings.

  1. The FMEA team leader should actively listen to anyone on the FMEA team who is talking. To be certain you understand what they are saying, you can put the concept in your own words and ask if you have it right. Be a good role model by actively listening to each person when they are talking.
  2. Each FMEA team member should actively listen to anyone who is talking. You can use the same technique of putting what is being said into your own words to be sure you understand. You can also ask clarifying questions.
  3. The team leader should insist that people listen to each other. First, by not allowing interruptions, and second by asking team member A what is being said by team member B in their own words.

What scenarios should be avoided?

The FMEA facilitator must intervene if people are talking over each other or if people are clearly not listening to each other. One of the values of an FMEA team is the discussion that occurs around important issues. When people are not listening to each other, the FMEA results are not beneficial.

Tips

Management consultant Peter Drucker says, “The most important thing in communication is hearing what isn’t said.” Part of listening is to create an environment where people feel free to offer their views. Engage the entire team by asking probing questions and listening to what people have to say.

Next Article

FMEA involves a series of decisions that help to bring about a safer and more reliable design or process. In the next article, I will focus on the best ways for FMEA teams to make decisions and get the best possible FMEA results.

Filed Under: Articles, Inside FMEA, on Tools & Techniques

About Carl S. Carlson

Carl S. Carlson is a consultant and instructor in the areas of FMEA, reliability program planning and other reliability engineering disciplines, supporting over one hundred clients from a wide cross-section of industries. He has 35 years of experience in reliability testing, engineering, and management positions, including senior consultant with ReliaSoft Corporation, and senior manager for the Advanced Reliability Group at General Motors.

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Articles by Carl Carlson
in the Inside FMEA series

[popup type="" link_text="Logo Info" ]

Information about FMEA Icon

Inside FMEA can be visually represented by a large tree, with roots, a solid trunk, branches, and leaves.

- The roots of the tree represent the philosophy and guiding principles for effective FMEAs.
- The solid trunk of the tree represents the fundamentals for all FMEAs.
- The branches represent the various FMEA applications.
- The leaves represent the valuable outcomes of FMEAs.
- This is intended to convey that each of the various FMEA applications have the same fundamentals and philosophical roots.

 

For example, the roots of the tree can represent following philosophy and guiding principles for effective FMEAs, such as:

1. Correct procedure         2. Lessons learned
3. Trained team                 4. Focus on prevention
5. Integrated with DFR    6. Skilled facilitation
7. Management support

The tree trunk represents the fundamentals of FMEA. All types of FMEA share common fundamentals, and these are essential to successful FMEA applications.

The tree branches can include the different types of FMEAs, including:

1. System FMEA         2. Design FMEA
3. Process FMEA        4. DRBFM
5. Hazard Analysis     6. RCM or Maintenance FMEA
7. Software FMEA      8. Other types of FMEA

The leaves of the tree branches represent individual FMEA projects, with a wide variety of FMEA scopes and results. [/popup]

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