Facilitator Speaker Notes — Difficult Conversations & Meeting Facilitation ========================================================================== Generated: 2026-07-09 ############################################################ ## Difficult Conversations & Meeting Facilitation (11 slides) ############################################################ --- Slide 1: Why Difficult Conversations Cannot Be Avoided --- Set the stage. Open the "Difficult Conversations & Meeting Facilitation" session by introducing this slide — "Why Difficult Conversations Cannot Be Avoided". Briefly explain why this topic matters to the managers in the room and what they'll be able to do differently by the end of the deck. Invite people to keep a notepad handy for questions. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. The Cost of Avoidance. Small issues become large ones. Performance gaps widen. Trust erodes. Escalations increase. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the cost of avoidance" from their own team before moving on. 2. Your Team Deserves Candor. Avoiding conversations signals either that you don't notice or that you don't care — neither builds confidence in leadership Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "your team deserves candor" from their own team before moving on. 3. Early Conversations Are Easier. A 10-minute check-in today prevents a 2-hour termination conversation six months from now Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "early conversations are easier" from their own team before moving on. 4. The Data. Managers who address issues promptly have higher engagement scores, lower turnover, and fewer formal HR complaints Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the data" from their own team before moving on. 5. Remember. Conflict is normal; escalation is a choice. Coach for resolution first. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "remember" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Ask: "How does this show up in your team today?" — let two or three people respond. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered why difficult conversations cannot be avoided, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 2: The PODC Framework — Difficult Conversations --- Transition in. Move into "The PODC Framework — Difficult Conversations" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. P — Prepare. Know the facts. Write down key points. Anticipate how the employee may react. Choose the right time and a private setting Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "p — prepare" from their own team before moving on. 2. O — Open. State the purpose clearly and calmly: "I want to talk with you about [topic]. This is important, and I want us to work through it together." Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "o — open" from their own team before moving on. 3. D — Discuss. Share your observations using SBI (not judgments). Listen actively. Ask open-ended questions. Allow the employee to respond fully before problem-solving Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "d — discuss" from their own team before moving on. 4. C — Close. Summarize what was discussed. Define clear next steps with owners and dates. Document within 24 hours. Express confidence in the employee where appropriate Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "c — close" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Pose a quick scenario and ask the group how they would apply this principle. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 5–6 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered the podc framework — difficult conversations, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 3: Scenario Practice — The Late Employee (Phase 1 Leader Lab) --- Transition in. Move into "Scenario Practice — The Late Employee (Phase 1 Leader Lab)" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. Scenario. Alex has been arriving 15-25 minutes late 3 times in the past two weeks. Strong performer generally, but recently seems disengaged. No prior documentation. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "scenario" from their own team before moving on. 2. Manager Goal. Address the tardiness directly but constructively — understand root cause while making expectations clear Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "manager goal" from their own team before moving on. 3. Employee Prompt (Alex). Dealing with a childcare change at home. Slightly defensive at first but open if the manager approaches with empathy Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "employee prompt (alex)" from their own team before moving on. 4. Key Debrief Question. Was documentation or HR escalation appropriate here? (Answer: Document the coaching conversation; HR escalation appropriate before formal corrective action) Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "key debrief question" from their own team before moving on. 5. What NOT to Say. "Everyone has noticed you've been late." — bringing others into it escalates defensiveness and may feel like public shaming Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "what not to say" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Invite a participant to paraphrase the key idea back to the room to confirm understanding. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered scenario practice — the late employee (phase 1 leader lab), let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 4: Meeting Facilitation — Running Effective Meetings --- Transition in. Move into "Meeting Facilitation — Running Effective Meetings" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. Only Meet When Necessary. If it can be an email, make it an email. Every meeting needs a clear purpose and desired outcome Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "only meet when necessary" from their own team before moving on. 2. Prepare Every Time. Send the agenda at least 24 hours in advance. Arrive ready to facilitate — not dominate Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "prepare every time" from their own team before moving on. 3. Balance Airtime. Use round-robin techniques for brainstorming. Actively draw out quiet voices. Do not let dominant personalities control the room Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "balance airtime" from their own team before moving on. 4. Use the Parking Lot. Off-topic ideas go in the "parking lot" — captured but not pursued during the meeting. This respects everyone's time Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "use the parking lot" from their own team before moving on. 5. End on Time. Respecting the end time signals that you respect your team's time — and models the behavior you are teaching Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "end on time" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Ask for a show of hands: who has faced a situation like this in the last month? Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered meeting facilitation — running effective meetings, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 5: Scenario — Meeting Disruptor (Phase 1 Leader Lab) --- Transition in. Move into "Scenario — Meeting Disruptor (Phase 1 Leader Lab)" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. Scenario. Jordan frequently interrupts, dismisses ideas with sarcasm, and dominates team meetings. Multiple team members have expressed private frustration. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "scenario" from their own team before moving on. 2. Manager Goal. Give direct behavioral feedback in a private 1:1 — without attacking Jordan's character or undermining their confidence Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "manager goal" from their own team before moving on. 3. Employee Prompt (Jordan). Unaware others find this disruptive — sees it as passion and engagement. Initially defensive: "I just care about getting things right." Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "employee prompt (jordan)" from their own team before moving on. 4. Observer Focus. Did the manager use observable behavior, not vague judgments? Was feedback tied to team impact, not personal preference? Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "observer focus" from their own team before moving on. 5. Key Insight. High performers need feedback too. Allowing disruptive behavior to go unaddressed signals to the rest of the team that results excuse behavior. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "key insight" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Ask: "How does this show up in your team today?" — let two or three people respond. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered scenario — meeting disruptor (phase 1 leader lab), let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 6: Duty to Act — Harassment & Sensitive Reports --- Transition in. Move into "Duty to Act — Harassment & Sensitive Reports" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. The Duty to Act. Once a manager knows or should know about potential harassment or discrimination, the company is legally on notice. You MUST act. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the duty to act" from their own team before moving on. 2. Escalation Protocol. Intake → Document Objectively → Route to HR Same Day → Prevent Retaliation Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "escalation protocol" from their own team before moving on. 3. What to SAY. "I hear you, and I take this seriously. I want you to know that I am required to involve HR — not to get anyone in trouble, but to protect you and make sure this is handled correctly." Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "what to say" from their own team before moving on. 4. What NOT to SAY. "Are you sure that is what they meant?" / "Let me talk to them myself first." / "I promise to keep this just between us." Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "what not to say" from their own team before moving on. 5. Confidentiality ≠ Secrecy. You can keep details private, but you cannot refuse to report legally actionable behavior. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "confidentiality ≠ secrecy" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Pose a quick scenario and ask the group how they would apply this principle. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered duty to act — harassment & sensitive reports, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 7: Communicating Organizational Change --- Transition in. Move into "Communicating Organizational Change" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. The "Why, What, What's Next" Framework. Always explain why the change is happening, what is specifically changing, and what happens next for the team Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the "why, what, what's next" framework" from their own team before moving on. 2. Silence Is Worse. When managers go quiet during change, employees assume the worst. Rumors fill the vacuum. Anxiety spikes. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "silence is worse" from their own team before moving on. 3. Be Honest About Uncertainty. "Here is what I know, here is what I don't know yet, and here is when I will have more information for you." Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "be honest about uncertainty" from their own team before moving on. 4. What NOT to Say. "I am sure everyone will be fine." / "Nothing will change for our team." — false reassurance destroys credibility when the reality hits Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "what not to say" from their own team before moving on. 5. After the Announcement. Create space for team emotions. Schedule individual check-ins. Monitor for disengagement and address it proactively. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "after the announcement" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Invite a participant to paraphrase the key idea back to the room to confirm understanding. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered communicating organizational change, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 8: Body Language & Receiving Feedback — The Hidden Communication Layer --- Transition in. Move into "Body Language & Receiving Feedback — The Hidden Communication Layer" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. Nonverbal Communication Dominates. 93% of communication's impact comes from nonverbal cues — your posture, eye contact, facial expressions, and tone carry far more weight than your words alone (Darlene Price) Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "nonverbal communication dominates" from their own team before moving on. 2. What Open Body Language Looks Like. Uncrossed arms, forward lean toward the speaker, steady eye contact, genuine expressions. In a difficult conversation, your body either reinforces trust or destroys it. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "what open body language looks like" from their own team before moving on. 3. The Empathy Signal. 96% of employees want their employers to demonstrate empathy — yet 92% say it's undervalued. In every difficult conversation, pause to acknowledge feelings before moving to solutions: "I can hear this is frustrating — I want us to work through it together." Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the empathy signal" from their own team before moving on. 4. Implementing Team Feedback. If you ask for feedback and don't act on it, your team loses faith in your leadership. Close the loop: let people know what you heard, what you're changing, and what you can't change yet — and why. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "implementing team feedback" from their own team before moving on. 5. The Credibility Test. Your verbal message and your nonverbal behavior must match. A manager who says "I'm listening" while staring at their phone fails the credibility test instantly — and that impression lingers long after the conversation ends. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the credibility test" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Ask for a show of hands: who has faced a situation like this in the last month? Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered body language & receiving feedback — the hidden communication layer, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 9: Phase 1 Do/Don't — Conversations & Facilitation --- Transition in. Move into "Phase 1 Do/Don't — Conversations & Facilitation" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. DO. Prepare facts and impact using the SBI framework before every difficult conversation Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "do" from their own team before moving on. 2. DO. Address issues as close to the event as possible — do not let things fester until the review cycle Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "do" from their own team before moving on. 3. DO. End every difficult conversation with a clear, agreed-upon next step and document within 24 hours Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "do" from their own team before moving on. 4. DON'T. Use "you always" / "you never" language — it is accusatory and undefendable Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "don't" from their own team before moving on. 5. DON'T. Hold meetings without a clear purpose — if there's no agenda, there's no meeting Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "don't" from their own team before moving on. 6. DON'T. Investigate harassment complaints on your own — route to HR immediately, same day Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "don't" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Ask: "How does this show up in your team today?" — let two or three people respond. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered phase 1 do/don't — conversations & facilitation, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 10: Manager vs. HR — Who Owns What? --- Transition in. Move into "Manager vs. HR — Who Owns What?" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. Manager Owns. Day-to-day coaching and feedback, setting expectations, initial attendance/tardiness conversations, team conflict mediation (first attempt), recognition and engagement Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "manager owns" from their own team before moving on. 2. Escalate to HR. All harassment/discrimination reports (same day), accommodation and FMLA requests (within 24 hours), formal corrective action (before issuing), termination decisions (before any action) Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "escalate to hr" from their own team before moving on. 3. Gray Area Rule. When in doubt, document it and call HR. There is no penalty for asking. There is a significant penalty for guessing. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "gray area rule" from their own team before moving on. 4. Manager is NOT the investigator. Your job is to receive the complaint, document what you heard, and route it to HR — not to determine what happened or who is right Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "manager is not the investigator" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Pose a quick scenario and ask the group how they would apply this principle. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 5–6 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered manager vs. hr — who owns what?, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 11: Phase 1 Debrief — Your Leadership Commitments --- Bring it home. This is the final slide — "Phase 1 Debrief — Your Leadership Commitments". Use it to consolidate the key messages of the session and connect them back to the participants' day-to-day work. Slow your pace here and make eye contact. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. 30-Day Commitment. Implement at least two new communication behaviors — e.g., send agendas 24 hours in advance, adapt style with one specific team member Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "30-day commitment" from their own team before moving on. 2. 60-Day Commitment. Have at least two structured feedback conversations using the SBI model, documented afterward Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "60-day commitment" from their own team before moving on. 3. 90-Day Milestone. Complete L1 Certification. Measure your communication effectiveness rating with your team. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "90-day milestone" from their own team before moving on. 4. Personal Reflection. "What is the most difficult conversation I have been avoiding? What is the first step I will take this week?" Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "personal reflection" from their own team before moving on. 5. Program Promise. You will not get every conversation right. But with practice, you will get better every month. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "program promise" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Invite a participant to paraphrase the key idea back to the room to confirm understanding. Wrap-up. Aim for 6–7 minutes. Recap the single most important takeaway, point participants to the quiz and scenario exercises for this module, and thank them for their engagement.