Are You Asking The Right Questions?

Sometimes when I listen to my daughter I hear my middle sister speaking. She tells me she hates reading because she doesn’t like being told that she needs to do it and says history is a waste of time.

When I explain to her why I disagree and encourage her not to argue with me about things she won’t change my mind on she’ll ask me why I am acting like this and I’ll tell her she is asking the wrong question.

How did they do this?

That often leads us to a wide ranging discussion about the why an education is important, how she is more like her father than she realizes and how her aunt learned to love to read which reminds me, I need to ask her if she has learned to love history yet.

Aw, the hell with that I am going to say she did and mark that off as more proof she should never argue with her big brother because he knows more than she does.

Anyhoo, my comment about asking the right questions is more on point for personal and professional reasons than my daughter realizes but since she is 10.5 going on 30 I’ll give her a break.

Are You Asking The Right Questions?

The first time I definitively remember someone saying anything about it was during a job interview.

I was a 27 year-old newlywed interviewing for a position working at a mortuary. Had I gotten the job you might have been regaled with tales of how I used to work with stiffs.

Somewhere during the middle of the interview the hiring manager asked me if I had any questions and replied by telling me I wasn’t asking the right questions.

She was so aggressive in her response I sat back in the chair and wondered if I was in the right place but I am grateful for it because it made me think more carefully and analytically about what I was asking.

Part of it made me laugh because more than a few people have told me I ask too many questions. Blame that on a journalist/writer/storyteller and a guy who wants to know what happens if I press that button I am not supposed to press.

But it made sense to a guy who is curious about everything to refine and hone the questions to maximize time and return.

Made sense to think about my goals and objectives so that I could start figuring out what questions I needed to ask so I could build a road map that would enable me to hit those goals.

How Do You Tell Their Story?

I have sat in job interviews and had conversations with people who wanted to pick my brain about how I would market a product/company/service or what approach I would take to tell a story and told them I didn’t know what questions to ask.

That wasn’t me putting them off, it was me building the foundation for saying I didn’t always know enough about the product/company/service to give a substantive answer.

Without a bit more knowledge I wondered if I was going to miss including critical details like whether Drug XYZ had significant side effects or the warning not to tear the sticker off of the mattress.

Have we talked about how sometimes asking questions helps you figure out new and innovative ways to use common kitchen appliances?

Actually I don’t know how the author of the video below figured the things he talks about in the video. They may have just known they could do it or figured it out by accident.

Or maybe they thought their might be additional uses and asked the right questions of the manufacturer.

(Visited 133 times, 1 visits today)

By Joshua Wilner

Hi, I am Josh Wilner and I am happy that you have decided to visit my corner of cyberspace. I am a writer/marketer/friend and family man. My professional background includes more than twenty years in working with businesses to help them do a better job of connecting with their existing and prospective customers. More specifically I have worked with companies of all sizes from the Fortune 500 to the new start up to help them build, develop and grow their social media and marketing plans. I love spending time with my family and friends. I enjoy music, reading, writing, playing sports and laughing.

5 comments

  1. I also like to ask questions and been told that I do it to much at times. I am intensely curious. I also love to learn. I think the questioning comes from there.

    1. TheJackB – Someone complained that this page doesn’t tell you what to expect to find here in this blog so I aim to rectify this with the next line. I am a father who writes about life, parenting, business, politics and fiction. I don’t use an editorial calendar because I don’t map out what I am going to write that far in advance. The primary focus will be on things that relate to children and parenting. But the nifty thing about that is that encompasses a wide range of things. Sometimes I work with companies on their PR/Marketing efforts. If they provide products or services I will disclose it. Here is an incomplete list of companies that I am currently or have recently worked with: Nintendo, Philips Norelco, Subway, Frigidaire and Mattel. Want to know more about me, keep reading. If I wanted to provide a professional description it would looks similar to this: Jack has a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism from California State University Northridge. He has been writing for print and web publications for more than twenty years, covering a wide range of topics including: business, technology, parenting, politics, education, sports and religion. That is far too serious so I prefer to use something like: The Jack B. is a writer and author of 39 unpublished books and three screenplays. A former athlete and would be superhero he still fights for truth, justice and the American Way. Though he may look like a grown man, don’t fool yourself he is still a boy at heart. When he is not engaged in Walter Mitty like fantasies he is a husband, father and friend and blogs at TheJackB. Hmm…obviously I have since moved from Random Thoughts over to this place, but that is ok. This page is a work in progress which is a good description for me. I’ll probably tweak this on a regular basis so feel free to keep checking back in because you never know what might show up. I am a prolific writer and update frequently so don’t forget to scroll down the page to see what nugget of wisdom you just might have missed. Here is a short selection of posts to get you started. A Father Describes Parenting A Father’s Burden How Sister’s Helped to Train A Father of “Daddy’s Girl” Inside the Blogger’s Studio- A Dream, Er Nightmare The GermoPhobe What I Dream About I am In Love Becoming a Dad Dad’s Most Important Job A Decade of Dad Grandpa Donuts Why Your Post Sucks and Everyone Hates Your Blog A Letter To My Children- Things That Matter A Letter To My Children-2011 Dad Balances Fear Versus Reality Q&A With Daddy Blogger JackB Save The Last Dance For Me- 75 Years of Marriage An Uncertain Certainty Four Generations & A Wedding The Best Thing My Father Ever Said To Me 1 Foolproof Way To Become a Better Writer The Story Of A House- The Final Days He Died A Hero Twenty-Five Links That Will Make You A Better Writer/Blogger Thanks for coming by, I hope you like it. If you want to reach me use the contact form or try talk-to-jacknow-at-gmail-dotcom You can also find more information by clicking About Me and reading my profile there. Also, I encourage you to sign up for my newsletter using the form on the top right hand side of the page.
      Josh says:

      That is a great quality to have. Curiosity and a desire to obtain answers will take you all sorts of interesting places.

  2. “Thinking is nothing but the process of asking and answering questions.”

    That is something I learned from Tony Robbins when he did his Power Talk session on the topic of the right questions being the answer.

    He spent about an hour, maybe longer talking about how incredibly important it is to make sure that you are consciously challenging yourself to ask the questions that will put you in a resourceful state of mind.

    It is a talk I imagine you would love Josh and I highly, highly encourage you to get your hands on it. Even if you had to buy the entire Power Talk series. Why?

    Because I don’t think that there anyone better at interviewing thought leaders than Tony and that’s what that series is – him interviewing thought leaders that made a meaningful impact on him for one tape and then him discussing a topic in length that compliments the interview for another hour on another tape. Really, really, good stuff.

    Check it if you get a chance. 🙂

    1. TheJackB – Someone complained that this page doesn’t tell you what to expect to find here in this blog so I aim to rectify this with the next line. I am a father who writes about life, parenting, business, politics and fiction. I don’t use an editorial calendar because I don’t map out what I am going to write that far in advance. The primary focus will be on things that relate to children and parenting. But the nifty thing about that is that encompasses a wide range of things. Sometimes I work with companies on their PR/Marketing efforts. If they provide products or services I will disclose it. Here is an incomplete list of companies that I am currently or have recently worked with: Nintendo, Philips Norelco, Subway, Frigidaire and Mattel. Want to know more about me, keep reading. If I wanted to provide a professional description it would looks similar to this: Jack has a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism from California State University Northridge. He has been writing for print and web publications for more than twenty years, covering a wide range of topics including: business, technology, parenting, politics, education, sports and religion. That is far too serious so I prefer to use something like: The Jack B. is a writer and author of 39 unpublished books and three screenplays. A former athlete and would be superhero he still fights for truth, justice and the American Way. Though he may look like a grown man, don’t fool yourself he is still a boy at heart. When he is not engaged in Walter Mitty like fantasies he is a husband, father and friend and blogs at TheJackB. Hmm…obviously I have since moved from Random Thoughts over to this place, but that is ok. This page is a work in progress which is a good description for me. I’ll probably tweak this on a regular basis so feel free to keep checking back in because you never know what might show up. I am a prolific writer and update frequently so don’t forget to scroll down the page to see what nugget of wisdom you just might have missed. Here is a short selection of posts to get you started. A Father Describes Parenting A Father’s Burden How Sister’s Helped to Train A Father of “Daddy’s Girl” Inside the Blogger’s Studio- A Dream, Er Nightmare The GermoPhobe What I Dream About I am In Love Becoming a Dad Dad’s Most Important Job A Decade of Dad Grandpa Donuts Why Your Post Sucks and Everyone Hates Your Blog A Letter To My Children- Things That Matter A Letter To My Children-2011 Dad Balances Fear Versus Reality Q&A With Daddy Blogger JackB Save The Last Dance For Me- 75 Years of Marriage An Uncertain Certainty Four Generations & A Wedding The Best Thing My Father Ever Said To Me 1 Foolproof Way To Become a Better Writer The Story Of A House- The Final Days He Died A Hero Twenty-Five Links That Will Make You A Better Writer/Blogger Thanks for coming by, I hope you like it. If you want to reach me use the contact form or try talk-to-jacknow-at-gmail-dotcom You can also find more information by clicking About Me and reading my profile there. Also, I encourage you to sign up for my newsletter using the form on the top right hand side of the page.
      Josh says:

      @MyNoteTakingNerd:disqus I’ll have to look up the Tony Robbins stuff. I have never seen any of his work at any length other than the promotional stuff.

      It sounds quite interesting.

      1. I’ve been a fan of Tony’s since the time I was a kid riding the bus to go work heavy duty manual labor on commercial construction sites.

        I’d listen to him on the ride on my walkman and if the opportunity allowed (not too many moving pieces in the environment to be concerned about), I’d listen to him on the job site. I still listen to him to this day while working but more so for the purpose of sharing excerpts of lessons of his I’ve cherished for years.

        Nowadays I look at the long list of thinkers I respect and the major celebrities like Oprah who revere and endorse him and I think, “Of course. Why wouldn’t they. This guy is f’n money.”

        But for me, I wasn’t sold on him by any of “the leader called upon by leaders” promotional stuff. I had a friend I respected who gifted me a copy of Tony’s “Notes From a Friend” book and I actually read it. And the book must have been good as it convinced a kid who only listened to gangster rap on his walkman and hung out with gang members, to start giving a lot of attention to this white guy named Tony Robbins when that was not the cool thing to do in my peer group or my family.

        Tony spoke to the common sense part of my mind. He simplified the complicated and was pivotal in helping me start asking better questions. Not long after, and to this day, I take the title of his book seriously and see him as a Friend. He, through his messages, has been more of friend to me than many people who have called themselves my friend.

        I can imagine that out of the 400+ posts I’ve assembled on my site, at least 10 of them are dedicated to a lesson I’m sharing from one of his courses.

        I mentioned Power Talk in my comment and I just wanted to share with you a post in which I excerpted an awesome story he told on another one of those tapes. I mentioned that I believed Tony Robbins was one of the finest interviewers I’d ever come across. Well, now I’ll go on record as saying that I believe Tony is one of the finest story tellers I’ve ever encountered. He’s an absolute master.

        This post I’m sharing with you here will give you a glimpse of stories he tells that emphasize the need to evaluate the questions you ask yourself. I guarantee that if you like what you read here, you’ll absolutely love actually hearing him tell the story on the audio… http://www.mynotetakingnerd.com/blog/a-brilliant-story-told-by-anthony-robbins-about-creating-the-rules-you-live-your-life-by/

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