Episode 361: What teamwork question can turn conflict into collaboration?
When conflict arises at work, most people instinctively ask, “Who’s right?” In this episode of Leadership Without Losing Your Soul, David Dye explains why that question keeps teams stuck and introduces a simple but powerful teamwork question that helps leaders uncover what a conversation truly needs. By focusing on connection, clarity, curiosity, and commitment, you’ll learn how to transform disagreements into productive problem-solving.
In this episode, you’ll learn how to:
- Use one teamwork question to quickly shift conflict toward collaboration.
- Recognize whether a conversation needs connection, clarity, curiosity, or commitment.
- Avoid common conflict traps that escalate disagreements.
- Ask questions that build trust, uncover shared goals, and encourage understanding.
- Create clear commitments that prevent the same conflicts from repeating.
Whether you’re leading a team, managing cross-functional projects, or resolving executive disagreements, this practical framework will help you communicate more effectively and build stronger, more collaborative relationships.
Listen to this episode to discover the teamwork question that can change the way you lead difficult conversations. You’ll leave with practical communication strategies that help reduce conflict, strengthen collaboration, and improve problem-solving across your team.
The Teamwork Question That Changes Every Conflict
00:00 – David Dye introduces the teamwork question that helps leaders shift workplace conflict from proving who’s right to understanding what the conversation truly needs.
00:57 – Discover why the common question, “Who’s right?” keeps teams stuck in conflict, and how focusing on winning often makes disagreements harder to resolve.
02:52 – Learn how asking one simple teamwork question—“What does this conversation need right now?”—helps leaders identify whether a conflict requires connection, clarity, curiosity, or commitment.
04:04 – David explains how leaders often overuse one conflict style, such as rushing to decisions or avoiding difficult conversations, and why recognizing your default approach improves collaboration.
05:50 – When connection is missing, simple phrases like “Tell me more” help people feel heard, lower defensiveness, and create an environment where productive conversations can begin.
Building Collaboration Through Better Conversations
06:38 – Many workplace disagreements are really problems of clarity. David shares how the teamwork question can reveal shared goals and help teams define what success looks like before searching for solutions.
09:04 – Curiosity is one of the most powerful tools for conflict resolution. By seeking to understand another person’s perspective, leaders reduce defensiveness and create better opportunities for problem solving.
11:17 – Great conversations don’t end with understanding—they end with commitment. Learn how establishing clear ownership, action items, and follow-up prevents recurring conflict.
12:44 – David reinforces that the goal isn’t to determine who’s right, but to identify what the conversation most needs to move the team toward collaboration and lasting solutions.
12:54 – A real-world executive example demonstrates how conflicting priorities—not conflicting people—were the root cause of the disagreement, highlighting why the right teamwork question leads to stronger teamwork and better organizational outcomes.








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