Tech leaders like Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg often chose to meet while walking, and modern research helps explain why this works. Walking reliably boosts creative thinking, which makes hard conversations and problem solving easier. Nature settings also steady mood and attention, which makes people calmer and more open when they talk. Putting these effects together, a shared walk outdoors often leads to warmer, more productive dialogue.
Peer reviewed studies show that time in nature can nudge people toward empathy and helpfulness. Feeling small awe in a beautiful place shifts focus away from the self and supports prosocial behavior, which can lower tension and increase goodwill during sensitive talks.
When two people walk together, the change of setting and shared movement can also ease conflict. Evidence and expert reviews suggest that walking conversations, especially in calm outdoor spaces, can reduce negative affect and help partners see problems in a new light, a useful starting point for negotiation or design debates.
One experiment with mothers and daughters found that a short walk in an arboretum, compared with a walk in a mall, led to better attention and more positive interactions as judged by independent observers. The takeaway for work and home is simple, next time a relationship or strategy talk feels stuck, try taking it outside on foot.
Children, Youth and Environments – The effects of the natural environment on attention and family cohesion, an experimental study – 2017
In a within subject experiment, mother daughter pairs took one short walk in an arboretum and one in a mall. After the nature walk, attention and observed family cohesion were better than after the mall walk.
Applied Psychology, Health and Well Being – The affective and conversational benefits of a walk in nature among mother daughter dyads – 2021
A follow up experiment found that outdoor walking lowered negative affect and reduced negative exchanges during the conversation, reinforcing the social benefits of walking together outside.
Journal of Experimental Psychology, Learning, Memory and Cognition – Give your ideas some legs, the positive effect of walking on creative thinking – 2014
Across multiple experiments, walking increased creative idea generation during and shortly after the walk, showing a simple way to unlock fresh thinking.
Journal of Environmental Psychology – An occasion for unselfing, beautiful nature leads to prosociality – 2014
Across several studies, exposure to more beautiful nature, or a tendency to see natural beauty, was linked to greater empathy and helping, suggesting a pathway by which outdoor walks can warm social interactions.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology – Awe, the small self, and prosocial behavior – 2015
Inducing awe increased generosity and ethical choices, mediated by a reduced focus on the self, a mechanism relevant to why shared nature walks can improve talks.
Stanford Graduate School of Business Insights – Talking a walk could be a step toward better negotiation – 2023
Summarizes evidence that walking supports cooperation and perspective taking in negotiation, with practical guidance for walking meetings.
Greater Good Science Center – Five ways hiking is good for you – 2020
Reviews research on how hiking supports mood, cognition, and relationships, including evidence for social bonding on shared walks.


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