good.
Bridging questions are intended to encourage people to talk when they don’t
want to. They coax information, glean detail, and assess intent and capability.
They are intended for the colleague, the customer,
the neighbor, the parent, the
child—the suspect—who shuts down, harbors a grudge, or is thinking of doing
things he or she should not do.
Bridging questions are a calculated and clever way to get people to tell you
things. Sometimes I have used this approach unconsciously, when I interviewed
people who were
glued to their talking points, suspicious of the media, or caught
up in scandal or wrongdoing. All of them were on edge, defenses raised. Few
were inclined to offer information willingly. So I needed to wend my way to the
relevant parts. I needed to make it easier for them to speak, holding back on the
central point or toughest question until we had built
a certain rapport and the
moment was right. If I’d understood more about this line of inquiry—and the
research that’s gone into it—I might have gotten a few more scoops and stories
out of those interviews.
The principles behind bridging questions support a specific and clear
outcome: getting a closed person to open up. Your prospects are enhanced if
you:
Know what you’re after. Be clear about what you want to pursue and the nature
of the problem. Have a focus and a destination in mind.
Avoid triggers. Don’t start with accusations or questions that prompt
defensiveness. Go instead for conversation. You
want to open a channel of
communication. You’re in this for the long haul.
Don’t accuse, ask. Start with the person’s grievance and inquire about it. What’s
wrong? What’s unfair? Then ask about rationale and motivations.
Affirm and validate. Walking someone across a bridge takes them farther than
pushing them off a cliff. You want answers, background, and insight, so you
want to encourage discussion. Guide and affirm. Offer rewards.
Look for small
ways to move across the bridge. The main thing is to get your subject talking. Be
patient. This may take a while.
Get Them Talking
In this chapter, I introduce you to someone whose experience, insight, and work
offer a travel guide to the toughest and most reluctant human terrain. He teaches
how to question the most vexing characters. Though the examples he offers are
extreme, the tactics are not. If you’ve ever tried
to get answers from someone
who won’t open up or who you think is harboring secrets or sitting on some bad
stuff, you know how important these questions can be.
Dostları ilə paylaş: