FerrariFan wrote:
My best suggestions:
1. Let your clients talk about themselves. People, generally, like talking about themselves and their families. Let them do that while you sit back and LISTEN. They will tell you what they want.
2. Learn to LISTEN. Look at whoever is talking to you and repeat back to them what they said in different terms.
For example:
Client says, "I bought a new car."
You reply, "What car did you buy?"
3. Ask open ended questions and avoid Yes or No type questions whenever possible. This encourages the other person in the conversation to elaborate and talk more about whatever the topic is. Again, just listen and reply as you need to. Sometimes that is difficult for us, given our ASD, but it CAN be learned.
Good luck!! !
FF
This. I do almost no in-person interactions, but spend a fair amount of time on the telephone with clients. This is great, because when I don't have to try to interpret facial expressions/body language I'm much more capable of "engaging" in conversation, and rules like this were the foundation that let me develop this set of skills.
People like to talk about themselves, and they'll tell you what they want to hear.
I totally can't do this in person, though. Far too much mental processing involved there, and by the time I figure out what they're talking about the conversation's been over for hours.
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~MissChess