(SHORT
NOTES FROM TEAM MANAGEMENT: Developing Your Team at http://www.mindtools.com)
At work, most people deal daily with others who need their help,
support, advice or expertise. John
Heron's framework provides a model for analyzing how you deliver help. His model identifies six primary categories
or styles of helping intervention.
Heron’s
Six Categories of Intervention
|
|
Authoritative - means that the person
"helping" (often a manager or supervisor) is giving information,
challenging the other person or suggesting what the other person should do
|
|
Prescriptive
|
·
explicitly direct the person you are
helping by giving advice and direction
·
Give advice and guidance
·
Tell the other person how they should
behave
·
Tell them what to do
|
Informative
|
·
provide information to instruct and
guide the other
·
Give your view and experience
·
Explain the background and principles
·
Help the other person get a better
|
Confronting
|
·
challenge the other person's behavior
or attitude
·
Challenge the other person’s thinking
·
Play back exactly what the person has
said or done
·
Tell them what you think is holding
them back
·
Help them avoid making the same
mistake again
|
Facilitative - means that
the person "helping" is drawing out ideas, solutions,
self-confidence, and so on, from the other person, helping him or her to
reach his or her own solutions or decisions
|
|
Cathartic
|
·
help the other person to express and
overcome thoughts or emotions that they have not previously confronted
·
Help the other person express their
feelings or fears
·
Empathize with them
|
Catalytic
|
·
help the other person reflect, discover
and learn for him or herself
·
Ask questions to encourage fresh thinking
·
Encourage the other person to
generate new options and solutions
·
Listen and summarize, and listen some
more
|
Supportive
|
·
build up the confidence of the other
person by focusing on their competences, qualities and achievements
·
Tell the other person you value them
(their contribution, good intention or achievements)
·
Praise them
·
Show them they have your support and
commitment
|
No comments:
Post a Comment