Fortune | FORTUNE 09月23日 03:02
职场晋升:沟通连接胜过强硬说服
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

哈佛商学院教授艾莉森·伍德·布鲁克斯的研究表明,职场成功者并非最强硬,而是最有效的沟通者,他们优先考虑连接而非说服。布鲁克斯博士强调,成功的关键在于关注他人需求并设法满足,这不仅适用于谈判,也适用于求职和升职。她建议采取“学习心态”,通过提问了解他人期望,并据此提供价值。面对面试焦虑,应将其重塑为兴奋感,并采用清晰的框架来回答“请介绍一下你自己”。最终,职场成功源于从自我推销转向服务他人。

💡 **沟通连接是关键**:布鲁克斯教授的研究颠覆了传统的职场成功观,指出最有效的策略不是强硬和坚持,而是建立深厚的沟通连接。成功的职场人士是那些善于理解并满足他人需求的人,他们通过建立信任和合作关系来达成目标,而非仅仅依靠说服力。

🌱 **采用“学习心态”以获取支持**:在寻求加薪或晋升时,布鲁克斯建议采取“学习心态”,通过提问来了解上级或组织真正看重什么。例如,询问“您认为哪项最重要?”或“什么能让公司变得更好?”。通过主动了解并满足他人的需求,可以让自己变得不可或缺,并为自己的诉求建立更有力的依据。

🌟 **重塑焦虑为兴奋,自信表达**:在面试等高压情境下,布鲁克斯建议将焦虑感转化为兴奋感。她指出,焦虑和兴奋是高唤醒度的情绪,试图压抑焦虑往往适得其反。通过积极地告诉自己“我很兴奋”,可以改变心态,将挑战视为机遇。回答“请介绍你自己”时,采用“先职业后个人,各两点”的结构,能展现出条理性和自信。

🤝 **人脉拓展在于真诚关系**:对于求职者而言,建立人脉并非只是为了“炫耀”自己,而是要创造有意义的连接。通过对信息访谈保持真诚的好奇心,即使是短暂的交流,也能建立起牢固的关系。这种以他人为中心的方法,有助于在竞争激烈的就业市场中脱颖而出。

For a generation entering a tough labor market, the path to landing a dream job or securing a promotion can feel like a high-stakes battle. The common advice suggests being bold, decisive, and unyielding. However, Harvard Business School professor Alison Wood Brooks, who created and teaches one of the university’s most popular courses, argues for a radically different approach rooted in 15 years of behavioral science research.

Brooks’s core message is that the most successful people are not the most forceful, but the most effective communicators who prioritize connection over persuasion.

“When we think of a good negotiator, this really tough, rigid, persuasive person comes to mind,” she explained on the Mel Robbins Podcast in April. “When we actually study people negotiating in practice … often the best negotiators are people who are just great communicators … who figure out how to figure out what other people need and then figure out how to actually deliver what other people need.”

Brooks told Robbins about her background, her recent book Talk: The Science of Conversation and the Art of Being Ourselves, and about her core message to people seeking advancement in their careers: you get ahead by focusing on the other person.

A master communicator

As a behavioral scientist with a PhD from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton school of business, she has studied emotions, how people feel, and specifically how people talk about their feelings in the context of negotiations.

Brooks was recruited by Harvard Business School on the back of this research to teach a course on negotiation. After four years of teaching this, she created a course that focused more broadly on becoming a better conversationalist in every area of one’s life.

Much of her research, she explained, led her to counterintuitive solutions, including on how to ask for a raise.

Instead of marching in with a list of demands, adopt a “learning mindset” and ask questions. She suggested initiating casual conversations to understand what your manager truly values. Ask things like, “Which of these things is most valuable to you?” or “What could make this organization better?” By learning what your boss needs and then delivering it, you become invaluable and build a much stronger case for a raise.

“It’s not weak to ask,” Brooks said, noting it’s smart to understand if your boss is even in a position to grant your request.

For those on the job hunt, this approach of focusing on the other person is equally critical. With many jobs filled through networking, Brooks emphasized that networking is about creating meaningful relationships, not just dazzling contacts. She urged young professionals to approach informational chats with genuine curiosity.

“You don’t need any more than five minutes to make a meaningful connection,” she pointed out.

Reframe your anxiety

Once in a job interview, nerves can often sabotage performance, but Brooks suggested reframing anxiety as excitement. Anxiety is a high-arousal emotion, and trying to calm down is often a fruitless battle against your body’s natural response, she argued.

“Instead of thinking about the 100 ways that it could go wrong, I’m going to focus on how it could go well,” she said.

Saying “I’m excited” out loud has been shown to improve performance because it shifts your mindset from threat to opportunity.

And to answer the dreaded “Tell me about yourself” question, she offered a simple, confident framework: “I’m going to share two things with you about my professional experience and then two things about my personal life.” This structure makes you appear prepared and articulate while giving you a clear path to follow when nervous.

Ultimately, Brooks’s advice boils down to shifting from self-promotion to service.

“Think about what other people need and then deliver it to them … the more people that you can give what they need, the more people there are in the world who are poised and ready and excited to give you what you need back,” she concluded.

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. 

Fortune Global Forum

returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of business.

Apply for an invitation.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

职场晋升 沟通技巧 人际关系 心理学 职业发展 Career Advancement Communication Skills Interpersonal Relationships Psychology Professional Development
相关文章