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Showing posts with the label follow-up questions

What Makes a Follow-Up Question Powerful?

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What Makes a Follow-Up Question Powerful? The second question reveals whether the first was genuine. Framing the Question Most conversations do not stall because no one asks a question. They stall because the first answer is received as a finish line rather than a clue. A powerful follow-up question shows that an answer was heard, finds what is still missing, and turns vague language into something a person can understand or act on. That matters in a performance review, a conflict, a customer call, an AI prompt, or an ordinary conversation with someone who wants to feel less alone in what they just said. The Power Is in the Connection A follow-up question is powerful when it is tethered to the answer just given and moves the conversation one useful step further: from claim to example, feeling to need, problem to constraint, or agreement to action. There is a difference between asking another question and following up. “What do you like to do outside work?” followed by “Where did you g...

How does asking follow-up questions improve relationships?

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How does asking follow-up questions improve relationships? February 21, 2025 | Active Listening, Communication, Conversation, Curiosity, Happiness, Personal Development, Question a Day Question a Day How Asking Follow-Up Questions Improves Relationships: The Science of Better Connections Strong relationships aren’t built on grand gestures or poetic declarations (though those don’t hurt). They thrive on  trust, understanding, and great communication —and at the heart of that communication is one often-overlooked skill:  asking follow-up questions . This simple but powerful technique can  turn small talk into deep conversations, build emotional intimacy, and even repair strained relationships . Below, we’ll explore how follow-up questions can transform your connections and provide  practical strategies  to use them effectively. What Are Follow-Up Questions? Follow-up questions are inquiries that expand on what someone has just said, demonstrating  active list...