by
Questions aren’t just one-off icebreakers for team building. Instead, they’re an operating system for clarity and connection.
Eight years of building a values-driven question game taught an unexpected leadership lesson: Asking better questions can transform how you lead. Intentional prompts can build five critical skills that many leaders chase: self-awareness, deep listening, values alignment, perspective taking, and reframing limiting beliefs.
Building a values-driven question game began while I was battling burnout and social anxiety. As an introvert, even facilitating group play was hard. Working through the questions privately, and then with small teams, rewired how feedback landed, how conflict de-escalated, and how decisions moved faster. The good news is you can apply the same practices without any special tools.
1. Strengthen self-awareness and awareness of others.
Questions surface the stories and motivations that drive decisions. Prompts like “What were the holidays like for you growing up?” or “When do you feel most free?” reveal patterns you may be carrying into today’s work. They also help you notice how emotions show up in groups.
Try this:
- Pick three prompts that spark genuine curiosity.
- Journal your answers. Then, jot down what they reveal about motivations and triggers.
- Bring one question to a weekly team huddle and reflect on what you learn about teammates’ styles and needs.
2. Practice deep listening, not just waiting to talk.
The only hard rule of our game, Actually Curious, is “listen to understand, not to react.” That’s simple to say and hard to do, especially in conflict or negotiation. Practicing with structured prompts gives you reps turning off the fight switch and finding win-win outcomes.
Try this:
With a trusted colleague, choose two value-centered question prompts. The speaker will answer while the listener only takes notes. The listener reflects on one thing they didn’t agree with at first but now understand based on the response.
3. Align on values so decisions get easier.
When it comes to value-driven questions, “tell me what you believe” is too broad. People default to safe answers. Targeted prompts uncover shared principles faster. Questions like “What are you willing to fight for?” or “What is guaranteed to bring you happiness?” surface nonnegotiable that guide trade-offs.
Try this:
When someone answers, jot two to three values you hear. For example, fairness, autonomy, and reliability. Confirm with them, “I heard autonomy and reliability. Does that resonate?” Invite them to do the same when you answer. Capture a visible team values list to reference in mitigating debates.
4. Build your perspective-taking muscle.
Perspective taking is a relationship superpower, and it improves with practice. Even light prompts such as “Name five musicians for your ultimate supergroup,” or “Pick one: introvert or extrovert” train your brain to imagine another person’s view before hearing them or even reacting.
Try this:
This practice is called the mind-reader game. Choose a few fun prompts and one thoughtful prompt. Everyone privately writes their answers. The group guesses each person’s responses before the reveal. Notice when you’ve read each other well and where you miss. That’s coaching material.
5. Reframe limiting beliefs into actionable “yes, ands.”
Great leaders hold two truths at once: decisiveness and possibility. Prompts like “What does ‘perfect’ mean to you?” or “When did you last cry and why?” surface subconscious beliefs that narrow options. Once visible, you can reframe those beliefs into fuel for innovation.
Try this:
- Run a solo or team journaling session with three to five challenging prompts.
List the beliefs that show up. For example, “Perfect means never making mistakes.”
- Reframe each into an abundance statement. This should be something affirmative and within one’s control. For example, “Perfect is consistent progress and shared learning.”
- Convert one reframe into a concrete habit for the week. For example, “Ship v1 on Thursday. Review learnings Friday. A perfect evolution of the project.”
Make questions part of your operating rhythm.
Questions aren’t just one-off icebreakers for team building. Instead, they’re an operating system for clarity and connection. Layer one practice into your calendar: weekly prompt, monthly values check, or a quarterly perspective-taking game, a scarcity to abundance reframing exercise. Measure the shift in trust, speed in decision-making, and quality of ideas. With steady reps, you build empathetic leaders at every gamified engagement.
This post originally appeared at inc.com.