Conversation Styles at Work | Lent Prep | Easter Prep

In a professional setting, communication is about managing relationship dynamics, deadlines, team morale and corporate culture. Recognizing the style of your colleagues can help strengthen your team.

Four Team Communication Styles:

The Directive Style

These individuals value brevity and efficiency. Direct, fast-paced, and sometimes perceived as blunt or impatient. Skip the small talk with these colleagues. Use bullet points to stay focused. Be careful, they may steamroll others in a rush to reach a decision.

The Analytical Style

Precision is a priority. This colleague needs facts, figures, and logical sequences before they feel comfortable in the conversation. They are systematic, cautious, and detail-oriented and like data in advance. Avoid sharing your gut feelings or vague estimates. Use logic to support your claims. This colleague may fall into “analysis paralysis” and struggle with quick pivots.

The Collaborative Style

This colleague is focused on the process of how a team works together. It is just as important to them as the outcome. This colleague prioritizes harmony at work. This colleague is warm, supportive, and focused on consensus. The conversations with these colleagues start with a brief personal check-in. Ask for their input. This colleague may avoid interacting with you while there is a conflict hoping it will be resolved by someone else.

The Expressive Style

These are the visionaries who think in big pictures. They communicate with enthusiasm and are often the “cheerleaders” of a project. This colleague is energetic, outgoing, and sometimes disorganized in their work process. They like to Focus on the “big picture” impact. Acknowledge their creativity and the value of their input on the project. They will not add logistics or practical details into their conversations so that information is best left to emails and memorandums at work or shared timelines for them to follow.


Quick Comparison Table

StylePrimary GoalMajor Pet PeeveBest Format
DirectiveResultsWasted timeBrief Executive Summary
AnalyticalAccuracyInaccurate dataDetailed Report/Spreadsheet
CollaborativeConnectionDismissive attitudesFace-to-face/Team Meeting
ExpressiveInnovationRigid Routine with others focused on different areasInformal meetings for update