Often it feels like the only thing we can agree on is that we can't agree on anything. World debate champion Julia Dhar offers three techniques to reshape the way we talk to each other so we can take our disagreements somewhere fruitful — over family dinners, during work meetings, and in our national conversations. Plus host Modupe Akinola explains why better arguments might start not with arguments at all, but with better questions. We hope you enjoy this episode from the TED Business archive, and find it helpful in any difficult conversations you have to navigate over the holiday season.
Don't be a jerk to your barista — and other thoughts on frontline work | Adriann Negreros
A playbook on financing climate solutions | Nili Gilbert and David Blood
4 ways to have healthy conversations about race | Afrika Afeni Mills
What if advertising was honest? | Sylvester Chauke
What's your leadership language? | Rosita Najmi
The secret perks of driving electric | Cynthia Williams
How to solve the world's biggest problems | Natalie Cargill
How business can drive solutions to social problems | Carlos Rodríguez-Pastor
You don't actually know what your future self wants | Shankar Vendantam
How to write less but say more | Jim VandeHei
What does "wealth" mean to you? | Aisha Nyandoro
How to fix fashion and protect the planet | Amy Powney
Does more freedom at work mean more fulfillment? | Sarah Aviram
The secret ingredients of great hospitality | Will Guidara
Work has changed. Why haven't resumes? | Nicos Marcou
Your 3-step guide to setting better boundaries at work | Nedra Glover Tawwab
How your company can gain a global talent advantage | Johann Daniel Harnoss
How to help employees with disabilities thrive | Tiffany Yu
5 steps to building a personal brand you feel good about | Marcos Salazar
Why are we making pizza boxes out of endangered trees? | Nicole Rycroft
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