Tuesday, May 26, 2020
How to Answer a Question when You Dont Know the Answer
How to Answer a Question when You Donât Know the Answer At some point during your work week, someone is going to ask you for information you donât have. There are some people (I donât happen to be one of them) who hate to say âI donât know.â For some reason, it makes them feel stupid, or out of touch. I never worry about that. I know lots of things, so missing an answer at any given time doesnât make me feel dumb. In fact, itâs why I almost never use âI donât knowâ by itself; I think of it as an incomplete sentence. âI donât know, but Iâll find outâ is my idea of a complete sentence. Jodi Glickman is the author of âGreat on the Job: What to Say, How to Say Itâ and she offers readers a step by step guide to success by saying the right things. Glickman offers scripts for getting things done at work, asking for help and managing priorities. Theyâre good scripts; as a manager, I can vouch for her expertise in guiding workers toward more successful outcomes. Hereâs her formula for success when you have to answer a question that you donât have the answer to. Step One: Tell them what you know. In fact, thatâs a great opening for this script: âHereâs what we know right now: we have 45 confirmed attendees and most of the board has indicated that theyâll come.â Step Two: Tell them what you donât know. âI donât have a list of which board members have absolutely committed yet, and which ones will be calling in via conference call.â Step Three: Tell them how youâll figure it out, then how youâll close the loop. âIâll get the final list this afternoon from Joan â" sheâs making her last calls today. Then Iâll email you the RSVP list.â As Glickman writes, âWikipedia was founded on the notion that nobody knows everything, but everybody knows something.â Donât feel bad that you donât have every detail of every project stored in your brain. Being transparent and proactive will help your (client / boss/ team member) be patient while you get the answer. If you really donât have any data, general information can be helpful: âThe trend has been up over the last month, but Iâm not sure where we ended the week. Iâll get the sales figures and call you back this afternoon.â âLast time I looked, about 75 percent of the report was finished; Iâll check on the last portion and call you by the end of the week.â One thing Glickman (and I) warn against: guessing or making up something so you sound like you know more than you do. If you have a good feel for the information (last time I looked, it was almost finished) say so. If you really have no idea, donât guess. Having to correct a figure may be disappointing and may also be hard to do. You risk your (client / boss / team member) passing on the inaccurate information to a number of people; that may mean that two conflicting pieces of data are circulating out there. Having a good reason for not knowing the exact answer can actually help your case. âI know we did well last month (sales were up five percent) and weâre running a new coupon campaign this week. I thought Iâd check on this monthâs numbers after the campaign finishes Friday.â Glickman thinks that the best formula always starts with the positive (what we do know) and sandwiching any negative (what we donât know) with a positive finish (Iâll get back to you.) Starting with the negative risks losing your (client / boss/ team member) if they are prone to getting stuck on negatives (âWhy wouldnât you have the latest figures? The report came out a week ago!â) If you should know the answer, but simply donât, Glickmanâs advice is to fall on your sword early and get right to Step Three. âI just havenât had time to get to the numbers, but Iâll do it right now. Iâll have the answer for you in an hour.â
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