PURPOSE + OUTCOME
At-a-Glance
Stakeholder Interviews are conversations an individual conducts with his or her key stakeholder: customers, bosses, subordinates or peers both within and outside the organization. The interviews allow you to step into the shoes of your interviewees and see your role through the eyes of these stakeholders.
Purpose
The purpose of a stakeholder dialogue interview is to see your work from the perspective of your stakeholders. It answers the questions: What do my stakeholders want from me? What do they need me for?
Outcomes
People & Place
Stakeholder interviews work best face-to-face. If in-person interviews are not possible, conduct them by phone.
Time
Both figures are estimates and need to be adjusted to the specific context.
Materials
Step 1
Preparation:
Step 2
Step 3
Sample questionnaire:
Step 4
Right after the interview, take time to reflect on key insights, capture your key thoughts in writing.
Step 5
Close the feedback loop:
Right after each interview, send a thank-you note to your interviewee (within 12 hours).
Create transparency and trust about the purpose and the process of the interview; establish a personal connection early on.
Suspend your voice of judgment (VOJ) to see the situation through the eyes of your interviewee. What matters at this point is not whether you agree with what your interviewee is telling you. What matters now is that you to learn to see the situation through the eyes of your stakeholder.
Access your ignorance (access your open mind): As the conversation unfolds, pay attention to and trust the questions that occur to you; don’t be afraid to ask simple questions or questions you think may reveal a lack of some basic knowledge.
Access your appreciative listening (access your open heart): Connect to your interviewee with your mind and heart wide open; thoroughly appreciate and enjoy the story that you hear unfolding; put yourself in your interviewee’s shoes.
Access your listening from the future field (access your open will): Try to focus on the best future possibility for your interviewee that you feel is wanting to emerge. What might that best possible future look like?
Leverage the power of presence and silence: One of the most effective interventions as an interviewer is to be fully present with the interviewee and the current situation—and not to interrupt a brief moment of silence. Moments of silence can serve as important trigger points for deepening the reflective level of a conversation. More often than not, these opportunities go unused because the interviewer feels compelled to jump in and ask the next question. Be courageous. Stay with the opening of the NOW.

C. Otto Scharmer, Theory U: Chapter 21
www.theoryu.com, www.presencing.com








