Storytellers and Prognosticators: Lessons in Communication Style
Every other Friday, my team holds a retrospective meeting. One issue
that came up in our most recent retrospective was a particularly
contentious user story estimation meeting that had occurred a few days
prior. Voices were raised, people were interrupted mid-sentence, and
sarcasm was liberally deployed. This was a specific isolated incident,
and I am very proud of my team that we were able to quickly own, discuss
and remedy the situation. We are a better team of communicators as a
result.
After the retrospective, I thought about different communication styles,
and I tried to come up with different personas for the different types
of communicators on my team. So far, I've broken the communication
styles down into these general personas:
Storytellers love to talk about the past. Their goal is
to remind everyone that experience is the best teacher. They are the
archive of a team's experiences, reminding everyone of past obstacles
and past triumphs. By trying to couch everything in terms of previously
encountered situations, storytellers sometimes have trouble recognizing
changed circumstances. You can recognize a storyteller by phrases like
"Do you remember when..." and "Last time this happened..."
Prognosticators are in some ways the opposite of
storytellers. They love to talk about likely outcomes and visions of the
future. Their ideas tend to be expressed as innovative approaches to
problems and as warnings about potential pitfalls. Prognosticators can
sometimes derail a conversation by making predictions based on erroneous
assumptions. They can be recognized by phrases like "Something we need
to watch out for..." and "It's possible that..."
Prognosticators and storytellers tend to feed off each other, with the
latter talking about how a current situation is similar to the past, and
the former talking about how the current situation is different. When
they get on a roll together, it may be difficult for the other personas
to break into the conversation. Both must be careful to not take the
conversation off tangents and drive it away from productive outcomes.
Inquisitors communicate by asking questions (the
Socratic method.) Their strength is getting others to think about what
they are saying by asking for clarification, and by steering the tone
and direction of the conversation to discover new possibilities.
Inquisitors are excellent at keeping storytellers and prognosticators on
track. It is important that inquisitors remember to contribute
knowledge instead of always asking questions to which they already know
the answers, otherwise they risk looking condescending. Inquisitors can
be recognized by phrases like "What if..." and "What did you mean by..."
and "Have you considered..."
Evaluators are good listeners. Unlike the other
personas, which tend to drive conversations, evaluators do not speak
often, and when they do, they tend to be soft-spoken. Evaluators are
good at judging ideas objectively and combining multiple points of view
into one cohesive vision. It is important that evaluators do not let
themselves get talked over, and that they do not completely hold back
from contributing; inquisitors can help draw an evaluator into the
conversation. Evaluators can be recognized by phrases like "That's an
interesting thought..." and "I was thinking about..."
Most people are more comfortable in one, or a combination of two, personas. I call this their base communicator.
These are not discrete communication styles. Elements of any one may be
combined with elements of another, and no person is purely one persona
or another. From day to day, even within the course of a single
conversation, people flow in and out of these different personas.
In conversation, especially in larger groups, it is important to
recognize which persona is speaking. Remember that familiarity breeds
complacency! As team cohesion grows, you will soon learn to recognize
each team member's base communicator, and when that happens it is even
more important to pay attention to what they are saying and how they are
saying it. Just because you know someone's general communication style,
you cannot assume that they will always communicate that way in every
circumstance.
(Note: Opinions expressed in this article and its replies are the opinions of their respective authors and not those of DZone, Inc.)






Comments
Lund Wolfe replied on Sat, 2013/03/09 - 3:56am
Ideally, everyone is all four types at once so anyone can makeup for the needed type in any particular situation. All four are equally essential.
The storyteller is the voice of experience warning of the kinds of bad or good changes that the team has made before, why it was done or why it was rejected, and will likely repeat in the future.
The prognosticator offers up possible solutions, which is the whole point of the conversation.
The inquisitor points out to the team flaws in the logic or reasoning or missing/conflicting/ambiguous information needed to make a fully informed judgement. Otherwise, you end up saying, "it seemed like the right thing to do at the time".
The evaluator is the judge or summarizer with the wisdom and experience to make the judgement call and pick the solution, assuming the previous three jobs have been done well.
Josh Adell replied on Mon, 2013/03/11 - 11:17pm
in response to:
Lund Wolfe
Everyone should be able to fulfill any role, ideally. In practice though, people's personalities win out; quiet people tend to be quiet, loud people tend to be loud. The best you can hope for is that the team is well-rounded enough to have each personality covered by at least one person. It's not so important that every team member can communicate in each style; it's more important that the team as a whole covers each style.
Thanks for your insights!