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Listening is the underrated skill that makes you a better leader instantly
We often think of great leaders as great talkers. We imagine them giving rousing speeches, setting a clear vision, and having an answer for everything. But a massive review of scientific research suggests we have it backward. The most effective way to improve your leadership isn’t to speak more; it is to listen better.
New data shows that listening is not just a “soft skill” for making friends – it is a hard driver of job performance and professional success.
144 studies confirm listening drives performance
A recent meta-analysis published in the Journal of Business and Psychology examined the link between listening and work outcomes. The researchers looked at data from 144 studies involving more than 155,000 people.
Their conclusion was clear: listening has a strong, positive effect on employee job performance.
Leaders who are perceived as good listeners do more than just make their employees feel warm and fuzzy. They actually get better results. The study found that listening improves the quality of relationships at work, which in turn boosts performance. When employees feel heard, they perform better. This dynamic helps leaders unlearn bias and lower conflict within teams.
As the researchers noted, the link between listening and positive job outcomes is “robust.” They suggest that listening is an underrated predictor of job performance – a simple cause of superior results that many organizations overlook.
Why we love to talk about ourselves
If listening is so effective, why is it so hard? Why do so many of us default to talking instead?
The answer lies in our biology. A study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) found that talking about ourselves is inherently rewarding. In fact, humans devote about 30–40 percent of everyday speech to informing others about their own subjective experiences – their thoughts, feelings, and opinions.
Using brain scans, researchers found that self-disclosure activates the mesolimbic dopamine system – the same brain regions associated with the pleasure we get from food, money, and sex. It feels good to talk about yourself.
The drive is so strong that people in the study were willing to give up money just to keep talking about themselves. When given a choice between answering questions about others for a higher payment or answering questions about themselves for a lower payment, participants voluntarily gave up between 17 and 25 percent of their potential earnings to talk about their own views.
We are wired to broadcast. To lead effectively, you have to fight that wiring.
The power of follow-up questions
You can become a better listener instantly by changing how you ask questions. It is not enough to just stay silent; you need to show you are engaged.
Research published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology found that the specific type of question you ask matters. The study showed that asking follow-up questions – questions that ask for more detail on what the other person just said – dramatically increases how likable you appear.
When you ask a follow-up question, you prove you were listening. You signal validation, care, and understanding. This simple habit makes you more persuasive and influential because, as other research in Frontiers in Psychology shows, likable people are better at influencing those around them.
Asking follow-up questions and recalling small details are among seven habits that mark an exceptional listener, and this research confirms it is a key tool for leaders.
Feeling known leads to feeling supported
Listening does more than build rapport; it meets a fundamental human need.
A study in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology found that employees feel less objectified when their boss knows them as people, rather than just as workers or numbers. Furthermore, research linked to the Journal of Experimental Psychology suggests that “feeling known” is a necessary precursor to “feeling supported.”
You cannot support an employee you do not know. You cannot help them reach their career goals if you never asked what those goals were. You cannot solve their roadblocks if you never listened to what those roadblocks are.
What you can do about it
To become a better leader today, flip the ratio of your conversations.
- Talk less. Recognize that your brain wants the dopamine hit of talking about yourself. Resist it.
- Ask for their story, not yours. Instead of telling your team about your weekend or your problems, ask about theirs.
- Use the follow-up rule. When an employee answers, do not just nod and move on. Restate what they said or ask one follow-up question based on what they just said.
- Listen to learn. You already know what you know. The only way to learn something new is to listen to what others know.
Mastering conversation: how active listening keeps dialogue engaging is a skill you can practice in every interaction, whether with a colleague, a client, or a friend.
Sources & related information
Journal of Business and Psychology – The Power of Listening at Work – 2023
A meta-analysis of 144 studies involving 155,000 observations found that perceived listening is strongly correlated with improved job performance and relationship quality.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences – Disclosing information about the self is intrinsically rewarding – 2012
Neuroimaging research shows that self-disclosure activates the brain’s reward systems, motivating people to talk about themselves even at a financial cost.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology – It Doesn’t Hurt to Ask – 2017
A series of studies demonstrates that asking follow-up questions increases interpersonal liking by signaling responsiveness and listening.
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