People rarely want your advice. They want to be heard. Learn to listen so well that other people solve their own problems in front of you.
Most of the time you think you are listening, you are just waiting for your turn to talk. The other person can feel it, and it is why your advice keeps bouncing off.
The instinct to fix runs deep. Someone shares a problem and you reach for a solution, a redirect, a story about the time it happened to you. That reflex shuts the conversation down faster than silence would. People stop opening up because being managed feels nothing like being understood.
This course trains the small set of moves a good coach uses to help without advising. You learn to catch the shift the moment your attention turns from them to you, to reflect what someone said instead of steering them somewhere new, and to ask the one open question that drops the wall and gets the real issue on the table. It closes with a repeatable thinking-partner protocol you can run in any hard conversation, so the other person walks away having reached their own answer.
Managers and team leads: whose people bring problems that do not need to be solved so much as heard.
Partners, parents, and friends: who want the people closest to them to actually open up instead of going quiet.
Coaches, mentors, and helpers: who sense that their fixing instinct gets in the way and want a cleaner method.
7 lessons to get you from zero to confident. Start at your own pace.