Business Literacy
• Why Start a Reading Group
• What is Bussiness Literacy?
• How To Start a Reading Group
• 10 Tips For Success
• Discussion Guides

Berrett-Koehler Discussion Guide for
Getting to Resolution Turning Conflict Into Collaboration
by Stewart Levine

Find out more about this book...

  1. Why is resolution more useful than compromise or settlement?
  2. What is your attitude about conflict? Share how conflict was dealt with in your early environment. Do you deal with conflict in the same way? Have you made a conscious choice about how you want to address conflict in your life?
  3. What are the four main costs of conflict?
  4. Do you think "winning" and "being right" gets in the way of fostering long term relationships?
  5. Do you suffer from scarcity thinking? Do you think that it always must be either you or them, or is it possible for you to both get what you want?
  6. If you have ever been involved in a lawsuit share how the litigation process affected the conflict in terms of time, money intensity, duration, and trust.
  7. When was the last time posturing and withholding helped you quickly resolve a situation? Is there a current conflict in which you might show more vulnerability and greater disclosure?
  8. Do you think it might be useful to think about the process of resolving conflict as an exercise in group learning? Why?
  9. Is there an unresolved situation in your life that you could take more personal responsibility for resolving?
  10. To give yourself insight into the value of listening spend part of a day in silence, just listening and observing what goes on in your workplace. Share what you hear and learn.
  11. Practice the completion process. Focus on one internal situation of conflict, one at work, and one at home. Share what happened for you.
  12. What is an agreement based on covenant? What is the best way to establish one?
  13. Why are the laws of agreement so important?
  14. What are the difference between the process of agreement; the phenomenon of agreement; and the artifact of agreement?
  15. Use the agreement template to craft an agreement about a project that you want to make happen in the world. Do this with your reading group. Notice how the resources you need to support the project start to appear.
  16. Practice the resolution model for 21 days (new thinking and new actions.) This is the time it takes to develop a new habit. After 21 days meet with your reading group to discuss the changes you see.
  17. Look at all of your business relationships through the lens of agreement. Notice the implicit and explicit agreements that guide your actions. Craft new explicit agreements using the models in the book.
  18. What are some of the essential qualities that a resolutionary has?