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how to find common ground even when you're over it

How to Find Common Ground (With Video)

by | Jan 26, 2026 | By Karin Hurt and David Dye

Leadership Tools In Your Inbox Weekly

Simple Practices to Make Finding Common Ground Your Go-To Move

You’re in the middle of a conversation that’s supposed to move things forward. Instead, it’s circling. You both care. You both have opinions. And somewhere betweenthat’s not quite how I see itandwell, I disagree,something more important gets lost.

Not the project. Not the decision.

The connection.

That’s the real danger in conflict—it’s not the disagreement itself. It’s the slow slide into disconnection. When people forget what they’re working toward together, they start defending positions instead of solving problems.

This is where finding common ground makes all the difference.

Why Finding Common Ground Is So Important (Click on Image for Video)

Look for common ground

In a world where remote teams, pressure-cooker deadlines, and opposing viewpoints collide daily, the ability to find common ground is what keeps collaboration from falling apart.

When you focus on what unites you:

  • People start listening (not just waiting to speak).
  • Defensiveness drops. Engagement rises.
  • The conversation becomes about solutions—not sides.

This isn’t about beingniceor smoothing things over. Finding common ground doesn’t mean compromising your values or letting things slide.

It means saying, Here’s what matters most—and I believe we can get there together.”

It’s one of the simplest and most effective ways to lower the temperature and raise the trust.

How to Find Common Ground Without Sounding Scripted

Here’s how to bring this habit into your everyday conversations—especially the tricky ones.

Clarity habit: Find common ground

Click here to learn more about our habit based team building system.

1. Say What You Genuinely Care About

“I care about our client relationship.”

I care about how this affects the team.”

Be specific. Be real. People can spot fake alignment a mile away.

2. Acknowledge the Tension

We’re looking at this from different angles, but I think there’s a path that works for both of us.”

You’re not dodging conflict—you’re grounding it in connection.

3. Re-center on Shared Intent

“What are we both trying to accomplish here?”

When you find the shared goal, you find common ground.

4. Don’t Pretend It’s All Okay

“What would it take for us to get on the same page?”

Respect doesn’t require agreement. But it does require honesty.

5. Be Firm on Care, Flexible on Form

If you both care about the outcome, you can flex on the how.

More Powerful Phrases to Help You Find Common Ground

Use these when a conversation feels stuck or strained:

  • “We both want this to succeed—what would that look like from your view?”
  • Here’s what I want to protect as we figure this out. What about you?”
  • “Can we pause and name what we agree on before we go further?”
  • “What are we each solving for here?”
  • “What matters most to you in this decision?”

Mini-Experiments to Build the Common Ground Habit

habit experimentYou don’t build a new habit by reading about it. You build it by doing—over time, in real moments, when it collaboration matters. These small, simple experiments are designed to help you find and name common ground more easily when the stakes are high and the pressure is on.

Try one at a time, or rotate through. Each can be done solo—or shared with your team.

1. The Care Clarity Log

Every time a conflict pops up—big or small—pause and ask yourself:

“What do I actually care about right now?”

Then jot it down. One sentence. No overthinking.

At the end of the week, review your list. Patterns will pop up: what really matters to you, what’s worth protecting, and what you keep coming back to. That’s your compass.

 2. Pre-Meeting Anchor Phrase

Before a meeting where tensions might flare, write down one sentence that ties what you care about to what you want to see happen.

Examples:

  • “I care about the team’s energy—I want this to feel collaborative, not combative.”

  • “I care about the timeline—I want to walk out with a decision.”

Start your part of the meeting by saying that sentence aloud—or paraphrasing it in your own voice. It quietly sets the tone and nudges everyone toward common ground before things go sideways.

3. Shared Goals Check-In (Team Edition – Try it for a month)

Start your weekly team meeting with this one-liner:

“Let’s name one thing we’re all trying to get right this week.”

Go around. One sentence per person. No deep speeches.

It sounds simple, but it surfaces shared goals early, creates alignment fast, and reduces drama later. (And if someone can’t name a shared goal… that’s a conversation worth having.)

 4. The Weekly Reframe (4 Fridays in a row)

Once a week, think back on a tough moment where tension showed up. Ask yourself:

“What was one piece of common ground we could have named that might have helped?”

You don’t have to go back and redo the conversation. But noticing what was there—and missed—trains your brain to look for it next time.

Write it down. Keep a list. Over time, that shift becomes muscle memory.

Remember: Common Ground Isn’t a Shortcut. It’s a Strategy.

You don’t need to wait for the perfect moment. You just need to start from what you care about. Say it clearly. Say it confidently. And say it like you mean it:

“I care about (you, this team, this project), and I’m confident we can find a solution we can work with here.”

That’s how common ground becomes common practice.

See Also; Why Agree to Disagree Stinks: And What to Do Instead

Powerful Phrases for Dealing with Workplace Conflict

 

Want more human-centered leaders in the workplace? Share this today!

Want more human-centered leaders in the workplace? Share this today!

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Karin Hurt and David Dye

Karin Hurt and David Dye help human-centered leaders find clarity in uncertainty, drive innovation, and achieve breakthrough results. As CEO and President of Let’s Grow Leaders, they are known for practical tools and leadership development programs that stick. Karin and David are the award-winning authors of five books including, Courageous Cultures: How to Build Teams of Micro-Innovators, Problem Solvers, and Customer Advocates and Powerful Phrases for Dealing with Workplace Conflict. A former Verizon Wireless executive, Karin was named to Inc. Magazine’s list of great leadership speakers. David Dye is a former executive and elected official. Karin and David are committed to their philanthropic initiative, Winning Wells – building clean water wells for the people of Cambodia.

Be More Daring

BUILD CONFIDENCE, TRUST AND CONNECTION  WITH CONSISTENT ACTS OF MANAGERIAL COURAGE

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7 Practical Ways to be a Bit More Daring

Be More Daring

BUILD CONFIDENCE, TRUST AND CONNECTION WITH CONSISTENT ACTS OF MANAGERIAL COURAGE

Get the FREE Courageous Cultures E-Book to learn how

7 Practical Ways to be a Bit More Daring

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