Rent Real Estate

Effective Listening In Homeowner Associations

When to speak and when to listen is a challenge we all face. In daily conversations, the greater gift is the ability to listen. In community associations, board members and property managers deal with irate homeowners that can make the blood boil. The urge to strike back is natural. The person yelling at you is not only a shareholder in the association you serve, but also believes passionately in what has caused their anger. That person is owed a full and fair hearing. Your role in any exchange is to remain calm, listen attentively and discover the key to the conflict before you commit to any action. Effective listening is the key to dealing with different personality types within the community. Listening without jumping to conclusions can be mastered by even a type-A personality eager to cut to the bottom line. Listening means really concentrating on what another person is saying and not just waiting for your turn to speak. Listen with both your eyes and ears. Let your body language show that the person speaking has your full and undivided attention. Show that you care about their problem. Remember back in school when the English teacher stressed the importance of the Five W’s in compositions: who, what, when, where and why? Successful communication includes these same elements: Who is responsible? What is the issue? When did it start? Where is action is expected? Why is it being brought to your attention? While the issue will often be emotionally charged, the effective listener focuses on the facts, not the emotion. Try this technique. Patiently listen while the person is speaking, nodding your head and saying, "Uh-huh" and "Mmmm." After the person has finished, pause and repeat back what has just been said. Then ask if you understood correctly. By restating the key elements of the conversation, you are clarifying their position while showing that you are listening without agreeing with what has been said. (There are occasions when no amount of diplomacy will win the day. When that happens, it’s best to revisit the issue after a reasonable "cooling-off"period.) Now that you have softened any anger with your superb listening skills, it’s problem solving time. Choose your words carefully. Once spoken, an ill word cannot be retrieved. The word "but" acts like a roadblock to alternatives. Negotiate resolutions making the homeowner part of the process. Restate the key points discussed and what you both agree on as the correct course of action. Effective listening separates winners from wannabees. Hear what I’m saying? For more information on this subject, see www.Regenesis.net.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Canadian Timeshare: A Worldwide Travel Vehicle
"The timeshare industry initially had some reputation problems that started in Florida where [condominium] conversions were the name of the game," said Gloria A Collinson, President of the Toronto-based Canadian Resort Development Association (CRDA). "In Canada, we overcame this by commencing the building of purpose-built just for timeshare and legislation was introduced so fly-by-nights were no longer acceptable. When the Association was formed 25 years ago, one of its purposes was to offset the bad reputation."
Popular Articles
poundstillpayday

NO SEC Charges Will Be Filed Against Homestore
Three former Homestore executives plead guilty to criminal and civil securities fraud charges, and offer to repay monies earned through the exercise of stock options for the period. The SEC also says it will not pursue any charges against Homestore.

Ask Dr. Real Estate: How Do I Work With Seasoned Citizens?
Question: I recently got a listing of a classy little older home in a great neighborhood from a very nice widow lady. I"ll call her Mrs. Wiggs. My broker actually referred her to me, since she was a long time friend of the family and I"m the most experienced agent in our office. She had lived in the home for over 30 years and she and her late husband had raised their family in it. I choked up on my first tour of the home when she showed me the pencil marks on the wall where she had measured the heights of each of her children on their birthdays.