I See What You're Saying

Michael Reddington

Truly becoming a great listener and influential communicator requires people to embrace the universality of the human experience. Join Certified Forensic Interviewer Michael Reddington as he speaks with experts from across the spectrum of human communication to explore how they’ve learned to listen and influence others within the context of their lives and careers. Business leaders, investigators, military leaders, scientists, social workers, athletic coaches and beyond all join Michael to share their experiences, perspectives and ideas. Every episode provides listeners with new skills, perspectives and techniques for unlocking hidden value in all of their high impact conversations and relationships.

  1. 24 jun

    Learn How Great Leaders Become Great Speakers | John Bates | Ep. 173

    What if the reason your best ideas keep falling flat has nothing to do with the quality of the idea? In this episode, Michael Reddington sits down with John Bates, a globally recognized leadership and executive communications coach who has worked with organizations including NASA, Intuit, and Johnson and Johnson. John has delivered multiple TED Talks, coached executives and leaders on every continent, and built a career around one core conviction: communication is not logical. It is biological. This conversation will fundamentally change how you think about every high-stakes conversation you walk into. John breaks down why the ancient part of your brain makes decisions before your logical brain even gets a vote, why trying to establish your credibility usually destroys it, and why the most powerful thing a speaker can do is stop talking about themselves. John unpacks the neuroscience behind why people say yes, yes, yes and then no, how to build emotional credibility before you say a single persuasive word, and the difference between vulnerability that connects and vulnerability that costs you. If you lead people, sell ideas, or speak in front of any audience at all, this episode will give you a new framework for what it actually means to land your message where it counts. What You'll Learn in This Episode Why communication is biological and why logic alone will almost never win a high-stakes conversationHow the paleomammalian brain makes decisions before the logical brain even registers themWhy the yes, yes, yes, no pattern in sales and negotiations is not a lie but a missing emotional connectionWhat emotional credibility is, why it needs to come first, and how to establish it fastHow insightful vulnerability builds trust faster than any credential or accomplishmentWhy your credibility is already established before you walk into the room and trying to prove it only hurts youThe difference between curating for your audience versus dumping everything you know on themWhy saying "I told you so" is proof you failed to communicate, not proof you were rightHow to reframe public speaking anxiety by shifting your attention from yourself to the people you are servingWhy the best ideas, candidates, and products often lose because communication broke down, not because they were wrong Chapters (00:00) Why Communication Is Biological, Not Logical(04:24) How the Paleomammalian Brain Makes Decisions Before You Do(08:08) The Yes Yes Yes No Problem and What It Really Means(13:25) What Emotional Credibility Is and Why It Has to Come First(16:59) Origin Stories and the Power of Insightful Vulnerability(22:06) "Don't Insult the Listening" and the Lesson of Trusting Your Audience(26:56) Why Communication Is a Function of Leadership(28:33) Taking Responsibility for What People Hear, Not Just What You Say(33:05) How to Make the Complicated Simple by Curating, Not Dumping(41:37) How to Beat Public Speaking Anxiety by Serving Instead of Performing About the Guest John Bates is an executive leadership communications coach, keynote speaker, and entrepreneur who has spent over 15 years helping leaders, teams, and organizations communicate in ways that actually move people. His clients include NASA, Intuit, Johnson and Johnson, Boston Scientific, and Accenture. He has delivered multiple TED Talks, been featured in media around the world, and built a global practice around the idea that great communication is not about saying the right things. It is about making sure the right things land. John coaches one on one, works with small and large teams, and produces free training content through his newsletter and website. Links and Resources JohnBates.com - https://www.johnbates.comExecutiveSpeakingSuccess.com - https://www.executivespeakingsuccess.comJohn Bates | LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnbates Sponsor Links: InQuasive: http://www.inquasive.com/Humintell: Body Language - Reading People - HumintellEnter Code INQUASIVE25 for 25% discount on your online training purchase.International Association of Interviewers: Home (certifiedinterviewer.com) Podcast Production Services by EveryWord Media

    54 min
  2. 17 jun

    Small Moments and Key Phrases to Forge Strong Business Relationships | Amy Reczek | Ep. 172

    What if the biggest thing standing between you and your next closed deal isn't your pitch…it's your communication pattern? In this episode, Michael Reddington sits down with Amy Reczek, founder of Sales and Presence and author of Connect to Close, her second book on building genuine relationships in sales and leadership. Amy works with sales and leadership teams to equip them with the skills necessary to build trust, navigate complexity, and guide the decision-making process forward without the old-school scripts that get in their own way. Amy and Michael cover the full spectrum of intentional communication: from interrupting the patterns holding you back, to recognizing the micro moments that change the course of a relationship, to deploying her BREW methodology as a practical framework you can apply to any conversation. If you've ever felt like you were talking at someone instead of with them, this episode will show you exactly what to do differently. What You'll Learn in This Episode Why your communication patterns are probably more outdated than you think -- and how to interrupt them by just 1%The difference between intent and impact, and why getting that wrong costs you relationships before they even startHow micro moments in everyday conversations can shift your outcomes more than any pitch ever willWhy the goal of the meeting is never the deal -- and what it actually should beHow to build confidence through non-verbal cues and purposeful preparation before you walk in the roomThe BREW methodology: Be the Moment, Raise Confidence, Engage, and What About -- a framework for any interactionWhy "you," "because," and "thank you" are three of the most powerful words in your vocabulary, and why "sorry" and "just" are quietly killing your credibility Chapters (00:00) Introduction to Amy Reczek and Connect to Close(04:12) Why Communication Patterns Go Stale and How to Interrupt Them(10:30) Intent vs. Impact: The Hidden Driver Behind Every Conversation(14:53) Why Buying Relationships Doesn't Build Them(22:43) Micro Moments and the Listening Skills That Unlock Them(28:35) Building Confidence Through Non-Verbal Cues and Practice(34:48) The BREW Methodology: A Framework for Every Interaction(42:41) Guiding Decisions Without Scripts or Pressure(51:53) The Most Impactful Words and Phrases in Any Conversation Links and Resources Connect to Close by Amy Reczek: https://a.co/d/01F83b8ESales and Presence: https://www.salesandpresence.comAmy Reczek | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/amy-reczek Sponsor Links: InQuasive: http://www.inquasive.com/Humintell: Body Language - Reading People - HumintellEnter Code INQUASIVE25 for 25% discount on your online training purchase.International Association of Interviewers: Home (certifiedinterviewer.com) Podcast Production Services by EveryWord Media

    1 h 3 min
  3. 10 jun

    How to Successfully Navigate Difficult Elder Care Conversations | Cory Fosco | Ep. 171

    What if the most loving thing you could do for someone is start a conversation you've been avoiding? In this episode, Michael Reddington sits down with Cory Fosco, a 34-year veteran of the eldercare and healthcare technology industries, author of The Question of When, creative writing teacher, and VP of Enterprise Sales. Cory brings a rare combination of frontline caregiving experience, social work roots, and sales leadership perspective to one of the most universally avoided topics in family life: planning for the care of aging loved ones before a crisis forces your hand. This conversation goes far beyond eldercare. Cory unpacks why denial and guilt keep families frozen, how the fear of messing up drives worse decisions than the fear of missing out, and why having a conversation is fundamentally different from making a decision. The parallels to sales, leadership, and any high-stakes relationship are impossible to miss. What You'll Learn in This Episode Why waiting for the "right time" to have a care conversation is itself the mistakeHow families that do the homework in advance make better decisions under crisis pressureThe difference between "fear of missing out" and "fear of messing up" and how it shows up in caregiving and salesWhy expressing love through preparation changes how families approach difficult conversationsHow having a conversation and making a decision are not the same thing -- and why that distinction mattersWhat the "When Readiness Checklist" is and how to use it to assess where your family standsWhy "it's better to do right than to be right" applies equally to caregiving, leadership, and salesHow to give people around you permission to make mistakes by modeling it yourself Chapters (00:00) Introduction to Cory Fosco and A Question of When(05:05) Why Families Wait Too Long to Have the Conversation(07:28) How We Compensate and Make Excuses for Loved Ones(10:57) How to Optimize Preparation Time and Remove Stress From Big Decisions(14:18) The Fear of Messing Up and How to Take the Risk Off the Table(24:00) Listening as the Foundation of Caregiving, Sales, and Leadership(27:39) Why It's Better to Do Right Than to Be Right(33:13) How the Book Is Structured to Meet Families Where They Are(50:21) Core Principles for Navigating Difficult Family Conversations(52:31) How to Find Cory and Access His Resources About the Guest Cory Fosco has spent over 34 years working at the intersection of long-term care, healthcare technology, and family decision-making. He began his career as a social worker, moved into admissions and senior care leadership, and now serves as VP of Enterprise Sales for one of the largest EMR platforms serving skilled nursing facilities. He is the author of A Question of When, a guide for families navigating eldercare decisions, and teaches creative writing to a wide range of students including the blind and visually impaired community through Second Sense in Chicago. Links and Resources A Question of When by Cory Fosco - https://a.co/d/0ciiLRpchttps://www.coryfosco.comFrom Values to Action by Harry Kramer - https://a.co/d/06m0h7lH Sponsor Links: InQuasive: http://www.inquasive.com/Humintell: Body Language - Reading People - HumintellEnter Code INQUASIVE25 for 25% discount on your online training purchase.International Association of Interviewers: Home (certifiedinterviewer.com) Podcast Production Services by EveryWord Media

    58 min
  4. 3 jun

    Apply a Framework Designed to Improve Influence and Communication | Joel Silverstone | Ep. 170

    What separates a leader who communicates with confidence from one who communicates with true influence? In this episode, Michael Reddington sits down with Joel Silverstone, founder of This Feels Right and a former professional actor who now coaches leaders on elevating their interpersonal communication and influence. Joel blends emotional and social intelligence with his acting background to help leaders move from confident to compelling, and the framework he shares in this conversation is immediately actionable. Joel breaks down his MOVE model, the difference between acting, reacting, and responding in real conversations, and why most people are listening to solve the problem rather than listening to understand. He also challenges the idea that validation means agreement, and explains why skipping that step is one of the most common ways leaders quietly damage trust. What You'll Learn in This Episode Why an actor's job has nothing to do with acting, and what that teaches us about presence in conversationHow the MOVE model (Mindset, Observe, Validate, Engage) creates momentum in even the most difficult conversationsThe difference between reacting and responding, and why one builds trust while the other breaks itWhy validation is not agreement, and how skipping it quietly damages relationshipsHow to listen without solving the problem, and why that skill matters more than most leaders realizeWhat the "clue bird" reveals about the moments leaders most commonly missHow to change the script when a conversation goes sideways, and why breathing is the first moveThe difference between motivating and manipulating, and how to tell which one you are actually doing Chapters: (00:00) Introduction to Joel Silverstone and the MOVE Model(04:22) Why an Actor's Job Is to Move the Other Person(06:13) Breaking Down the MOVE Model: Mindset, Observe, Validate, Engage(09:03) How to Stop Making the Other Person the Problem(13:02) Observation Skills and the Closed Circuit Camera Technique(17:14) Why Validation Is Not Agreement and How to Practice It(21:29) The "Yes, And" Framework and Listening Without Solving(26:15) Driving Engagement When Someone Won't Play Ball(31:00) How to Change the Script When Conversations Get Challenging(35:12) The Difference Between Motivating and Manipulating Links and Resources: This Feels Right - https://www.thisfeelsright.caJoel Silverstone | LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/joel-silverstone Sponsor Links: InQuasive: http://www.inquasive.com/Humintell: Body Language - Reading People - HumintellEnter Code INQUASIVE25 for 25% discount on your online training purchase.International Association of Interviewers: Home (certifiedinterviewer.com) Podcast Production Services by EveryWord Media

    46 min
  5. 27 may

    Learn How to Design Decision Making Teams | Kylee Ingram | Ep. 169

    In this episode, Michael Reddington sits down with Kylee Ingram, CEO of Wizer, a decision intelligence platform built to help organizations make better decisions by designing the right room. Kylee draws on the behavioral research of Dr. Juliette Burke and the science of wise crowds to help leaders understand not just who's sitting at the table, but how they think -- and who's missing. Kylee breaks down the seven decision-making archetypes, explains why 75% of Western CEOs share just two of them, and shows how that cognitive drift quietly drains innovation and increases decision error over time. She also introduces a practical framework for adapting communication to fit how different people actually make decisions -- not just how they prefer to be addressed. What You'll Learn in This Episode What decision intelligence actually means and why it goes far beyond AI-driven analyticsThe three factors that determine who belongs in any high-stakes decision roomThe seven decision-making archetypes and why you can only truly operate from a primary and secondaryWhy achievers and explorers dominate the C-suite and what that costs organizations over timeHow social bias, information bias, and capacity bias create the blind spots that lead to catastrophic decisionsHow to identify who is missing from your decision room before the damage is doneWhy tailoring communication to someone's decision archetype produces measurably better response ratesHow the same framework used for decision-making can be applied to influence, negotiation, and difficult people Chapters (00:00) Introduction to Kylee Ingram and Wizer(03:32) Defining Decision Intelligence and Why the Room Matters(05:47) The Three Factors for Building a Better Decision Room(07:26) The Seven Decision-Making Archetypes Explained(10:15) Cognitive Drift and Why Companies Lose Diversity at the Top(14:42) The Three Biases That Create Decision Blind Spots(19:45) What Happens When Everyone in the Room Thinks the Same Way(27:34) How to Identify Who Is Missing Before a Major Decision(29:56) Applying Decision Archetypes to Communication and Influence(36:14) Working With Difficult People Through Their Decision Style Links and Resources Wizer -- https://wizer.businessWizer Snaps (free communication tool) -- https://wizer.businessKylee Ingram | LinkedIn -- https://www.linkedin.com/in/kylee-ingramThe Disciplined Listening Method by Michael Reddington -- https://a.co/d/0aKT2oxR Sponsor Links: InQuasive: http://www.inquasive.com/Humintell: Body Language - Reading People - HumintellEnter Code INQUASIVE25 for 25% discount on your online training purchase.International Association of Interviewers: Home (certifiedinterviewer.com) Podcast Production Services by EveryWord Media

    51 min
  6. 20 may

    How to Grow Your Business and Earn Referrals Without Asking | Stacey Brown Randall | Ep. 168

    What if the most powerful thing you could do to grow your business was to stop asking for referrals entirely? In this episode, Michael Reddington sits down with Stacey Brown Randall, author, speaker, and host of the Roadmap to Referrals podcast. Stacey has spent over a decade helping business owners and sales professionals generate referrals without asking for them by applying brain science, psychology, and behavioral economics to how relationships are built and maintained. Stacey breaks down why asking for referrals actually works against you, what is really happening in the brain of the person who refers you, and how the right language planted at the right time can move referrals from a conscious ask into someone's subconscious. She also introduces her three-bucket framework for building a referral strategy that compounds year over year, and shares two concrete referral seeds you can start using immediately. What You'll Learn in This Episode Why asking for referrals triggers a brain response you cannot manufacture or replicateHow referrals are actually about your referral source, not about youThe three scientific principles that drive referrals beyond the psychology of trustThe difference between keeping in touch and actually moving a relationship forwardHow to segment your referral strategy across three distinct buckets of potential referral sourcesWhy using someone's name in a thank you note changes how the brain encodes the memoryHow to plant referral seeds during your client experience without it feeling forcedWhat to do when a referred prospect ghosts you before the conversation ever starts Chapters (00:00) Introduction to Stacey Brown Randall and the Referral Without Asking Framework(03:24) Why Referrals Change the Entire Dynamic of a Sales Conversation(07:03) Why You Are Never Allowed to Ask for Referrals(10:42) The Three Scientific Principles Behind How Referrals Actually Happen(15:50) The Difference Between Keeping in Touch and Moving Relationships Forward(17:37) The Three Buckets of Referral Sources and How to Approach Each One(24:43) Planting Referral Seeds vs. Asking: What the Difference Actually Looks Like(28:57) The Right and Wrong Way to Write a Referral Thank You Note(34:21) How to Build a Referable Client Experience from the Inside Out(36:40) Recovery Strategies When a Referred Prospect Ghosts You(41:44) How to Onboard a Referred Prospect Without Rushing or Ignoring Them(45:29) How to Learn More and Work with Stacey Links and Resources Stacey Brown Randall | LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/staceybrandall/Home - Stacey Brown Randall - https://staceybrownrandall.com/The Disciplined Listening Method: How A Certified Forensic Interviewer Unlocks Hidden Value in Every Conversation - https://a.co/d/02ZfcnZm Sponsor Links: InQuasive: http://www.inquasive.com/Humintell: Body Language - Reading People - HumintellEnter Code INQUASIVE25 for 25% discount on your online training purchase.International Association of Interviewers: Home (certifiedinterviewer.com) Podcast Production Services by EveryWord Media

    50 min
  7. 18 may

    Leverage Excuses, Avoid Confrontation, and Quickly Obtain the Truth | Michael Reddington | Ep. 167

    What if the excuse someone just gave you is actually the best thing that could have happened? In this solo episode, Michael Reddington breaks down one of the most misunderstood moments in any high-stakes conversation: the excuse. Most leaders instinctively attack excuses, feeling disrespected, frustrated, or deceived. But that reaction, however understandable, almost always makes things worse. Michael reframes excuses not as acts of dishonesty, but as face-saving statements that gift-wrap an admission and open the door to the truth. Drawing on his background in forensic interviewing, Michael walks through the neuroscience of why attacking excuses backfires, why accepting them creates a different set of problems, and how a precise four-step response can transform the most frustrating moment in a conversation into the expressway to accountability, root-cause clarity, and lasting behavior change. What You'll Learn in This Episode Why the part of the excuse that infuriates you is the part you should ignoreHow an excuse is actually a face-saving statement that opens the door to the truthWhy attacking an excuse puts the other person on the defensive and shuts down your learningThe four-step framework for responding to excuses without accepting or attacking themWhy "walk me through" is more effective than "help me understand"How to obtain the untainted narrative and listen for intelligence, not just informationWhy accountability holds better at the end of a conversation than at the beginningHow this approach helps you identify the real root cause, not just the surface behavior Chapters: (00:00) Introduction: The Topic That Drives Leaders Crazy(00:38) Why We Hate Excuses and What That Reaction Costs Us(03:55) The Admission Before the Because(04:54) What Excuses Actually Are: Face-Saving Statements(06:08) Why Excuses Are the Expressway to the Truth(07:04) The Problem With Attacking or Accepting(09:08) The Four-Step Framework: Thank, Name, Affirm, Ask(12:35) How to Listen for Intelligence, Not Just Information(15:18) Why This Process Works and What It Solves Long-Term Links and Resources: The Disciplined Listening Method by Michael Reddington -- https://a.co/d/0aKT2oxR Sponsor Links: InQuasive: http://www.inquasive.com/Humintell: Body Language - Reading People - HumintellEnter Code INQUASIVE25 for 25% discount on your online training purchase.International Association of Interviewers: Home (certifiedinterviewer.com) Podcast Production Services by EveryWord Media

    19 min
  8. 13 may

    How to Translate Your Expertise, Become Relatable, and Earn Trust | Dr. Laura Sicola | Ep. 166

    What does it actually mean to close the gap between what you think you said and what your audience actually heard? In this episode, Michael Reddington sits down with Dr. Laura Sicola, a cognitive linguist and executive communication coach who helps leaders master communication and executive presence. Dr. Sicola works with senior leaders, business owners, and professionals across Fortune 500 companies to help them translate their expertise so it lands with clarity, credibility, and impact. This conversation is packed with practical tools for anyone who has ever walked away from a conversation wondering why their message didn't land. Dr. Sicola breaks down the expert's curse, the hidden cost of trying to sound smart, and how the alignment between your words, voice, and body language either builds or destroys credibility in real time. What You'll Learn in This Episode What the expert's curse is and why deep knowledge is often the biggest obstacle to clear communicationWhy trying to sound smart usually backfires and what to do insteadHow analogies and metaphors bypass conscious processing and create instant comprehensionThe simple one-minute video exercise that reveals the gap between your intent and your actual deliveryWhy credibility depends on aligning your verbal, vocal, and visual channelsHow to stop telegraphing your nerves without faking confidenceWhy adjusting your communication style for different audiences is not inauthenticity, it is self-awarenessHow Dr. Sicola's Listening to Understand protocol creates the conditions for genuine resolution in any conflict About the Guest Dr. Laura Sicola is a cognitive linguist, executive communication coach, and the author of Speaking to Influence. She helps leaders close the gap between what they think they said and what their audience actually heard, translating technical expertise into messages that move people to action. She is the founder of Vocal Impact Productions and speaks and coaches across industries worldwide. Chapters (00:00) Introduction to Dr. Laura Sicola and the Expert's Curse(04:32) Why Trying to Sound Smart Makes You Less Persuasive(06:07) The Most Counterintuitive Advice on Executive Communication(07:17) How to Simplify Without Dumbing It Down(17:30) Using Analogies and Metaphors to Speak to the Unconscious Mind(23:34) The One-Minute Video Exercise That Changes Everything(31:14) Verbal, Vocal, and Visual: The Three Channels of Credibility(39:42) Authenticity Is Not a Fixed Point: The Prismatic Voice Framework(45:23) The Listening to Understand Protocol Links and Resources Dr. Laura Sicola's Website: https://www.laurasicola.comSpeaking to Influence by Dr. Laura Sicola: https://laurasicola.com/shop/ Sponsor Links: InQuasive: http://www.inquasive.com/Humintell: Body Language - Reading People - HumintellEnter Code INQUASIVE25 for 25% discount on your online training purchase.International Association of Interviewers: Home (certifiedinterviewer.com) Podcast Production Services by EveryWord Media

    53 min
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Truly becoming a great listener and influential communicator requires people to embrace the universality of the human experience. Join Certified Forensic Interviewer Michael Reddington as he speaks with experts from across the spectrum of human communication to explore how they’ve learned to listen and influence others within the context of their lives and careers. Business leaders, investigators, military leaders, scientists, social workers, athletic coaches and beyond all join Michael to share their experiences, perspectives and ideas. Every episode provides listeners with new skills, perspectives and techniques for unlocking hidden value in all of their high impact conversations and relationships.

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