Friday, December 27, 2019

The best ways to respond to an insult, according to Steve Jobs

The best ways to respond to an insult, according to Steve JobsThe best ways to respond to an insult, according to Steve JobsWhile we wait for AI gatekeepers to be adept enough at detecting and sending trolls back to the murky waters of 4chan where they belong, digital trolls are a reality all people on the Internet must tolerate in the meantime.Some trolls cant be reasoned with. But for the ones that can, how should you respond to a freshly hurled insult?Steve Jobs, for one, seems to have nailed the art. In a recently recirculating 1997-era video of him speaking atApples Worldwide Developers Conference, Jobs is taking questions from the audience when he gets thisrather unsavory tidbitthrown at himIts sad and clear that on several counts youve discussed, you dont know what youre talking about. I would like, for example, for you to express in clear terms how, say, Java and any of its incarnations addresses the ideas embodied in OpenDoc. And when youre finished with that, perhaps you ca n tell us what you personally have been doing for the last seven years.Pretty rough, right? Jobs infamous response to this low blow-dealing troll, however, properly shut him down. And hiscommunication schabloneis one we can all pull from.Anticipate criticisms of your stanceAs someone who studiedPublic Relationsand now works in the industry,it seems pretty clear to me that the answer Jobs weaves into his response to the troll was preplanned. Before this conference, Jobs had been barraged with similar questions, so this was very much in the realm of what he should have expected. Simply put, its easier to respond to opposition when youve prepared for it.Dont react immediatelyAt the time of the comment from the troll, Jobs was already fidgeting with a water bottle. So when the insult was finished, he took a swig from his bottle, looked down, and paused to gather his thoughts to locate the proper answer. He didnt make any pronounced nonverbal or verbal responses, but instead looked thoug htful (though, mind you, the insult in this video harkens back to what feels like a bygone era of civil discourse).Give a broad opening line that feels favorable to the troll, but qualifiedThis was the first sentence of his prepared answerOne of the hardest things when youre trying to effect change is that people, like this gentlemen, are right, in some areas.See how it seems like hes agreeing with the troll, but qualifies it so in reality hes not. Its always a good idea to start with a more friendly response, even if you totally disagree with the other persons stance.Answer the question you want askedThe question Jobs got was about a specific programming language and his personal life. However inappropriate the latter was, Jobs did not specifically answer either, but instead ended up answering the more favorable, general question of Are their mistakes that were made when you decided to make a big change in the company, and who is the ultimate decision-maker in a tech company engine ers or customers?This is a pretty classic political maneuver, and still incredibly effective. The answer plays to the familiar old geschftlicher umgang adage thatthe customer is always right.And as we have tried to come up with a strategy and a vision for Apple, um, it started with what incredible benefits can we give to the customer? Where can we take the customer? Not, not starting with lets sit down with the engineers and figure out what awesome technology we have and then how are we going to market that. And I think thats the right path to take.Acknowledge the fallibility of you and your team - then support bothYou should be your own biggest cheerleader - humble brag, anyone? The wealthier you are, the more you can pay others to generate excitement about you to others (that is, after all, the essence of public relation campaigns), but in the beginning, its just you and your team.Admit mistakesthat were made, talk about the lessons that came from them, but then move on and discu ss why you and your team are hardworking and deserving of support and the benefit of the doubt.Im sorry that OpenDocs a casualty along the way. And I readily admit there are many things in life that I dont have the faintest idea what Im talking about, so I apologize for that, too. But theres a whole lot of people working super, super hard right now at Apple.Jobs finishes strong in his response by pointing out there are people working long shifts well past midnight to crank out the application programs they think fit with their companys values, and that hard work is deserving of support and praise. Its almost an intrinsic value to reward hard work and give serious teams the benefit of the doubt. Jobs plays on this innate understanding, winning over the audience.Well find the mistakes, and well fix them. And I think what we need to do is support that team going through this very important stage as they work their butts offThis post originally appeared on Fairygodboss, and was syndicat ed with permission.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.