This framework helps you share your view clearly in conversations that matter — in communities, civic settings, and situations where tension or disagreement may be present.
It is useful any time you want to express something you care about in a way that others can actually hear — without triggering defensiveness or shutting down conversation.
At its core, this is a structured approach to constructive dialogue. It guides you from an opening perspective, to a concrete example, to a clear interpretation of what that example means to you, and finally to an invitation for others to share their view.
To use the framework, start by reading through this page. Click the play buttons to listen to the audio explanations as you go. Review the example statements in each section, then replace the example language with your own words and specifics.
Working through the framework this way helps you internalize both the structure and the logic behind it, so over time it becomes a way of thinking — not just something you reference.
When you're finished, scan the QR code to add a bookmark to your phone's home screen, so this guide is always available when you need it.
Prepare for Dialogue
Define your Audience, the response you want to invite, and their likely concern.
Then use that concern to shape Step 1. The best openings acknowledge what might make this hard to hear — not as a tactic, but as a sign of respect. When people feel that you've thought about their concern before speaking, they're more likely to stay in the conversation.
example
Audience: Neighbors and city council members at a community budget meetingResponse to invite: Share how they see the pool's role in the neighborhood, or whether they know of alternativesLikely concern: They may worry that pushback on the closure will seem like ignoring real budget constraints
Quality Check:
Once you’ve replaced the example with your own concern, ask yourself, "Is this the main reason they might tense up, shut down, or feel unheard?" to strengthen your preparation before moving to the next step.
Before you speak, think carefully about who you are speaking with and what might make this hard for them to hear. This is not about outmaneuvering someone — it's about respecting where they're coming from.
Get specific about your audience. Is this one person or a group? What do they care about? What might they be worried about, protective of, or quietly frustrated by?
The goal here is to speak in a way they can actually stay with. When people feel seen and respected, they're more likely to listen — and more likely to share their own view honestly in return.
Naming a concern is not weakness. It's the thing that keeps dialogue from turning into argument. And once you've named it, use it: let what you know about their concern shape how you open in Step 1. This is what separates a thoughtful opening from one that lands wrong.
STEP1
OPENING — Perspective
Offer your view in a way that lowers defensiveness — and where you can, let it reflect what you know about their concern. An opening that acknowledges what might be hard to hear signals respect before you've asked for anything.
example
"One way I see it is that the budget pressure here is real — and I also think some of what this pool provides isn't easy to replace, which is why I want to make sure we're seeing the full picture before we decide."
Quality Check:
Does this sound like an opening to dialogue, or like I'm declaring the final truth? And does it acknowledge, even implicitly, the concern I identified in the preparation?
Your perspective should sound open, not absolute. Where possible, let it reflect the concern you identified — not to manipulate, but to show you've thought about how this lands.
clearnon-accusatoryopen to dialogue
Start with
"One way I see it is …""From what I've seen …""My concern is …"
Step one is about offering a perspective, not making a proclamation. The goal is to open the conversation, not close it.
Avoid language that sounds like a final verdict. Instead of "The fact is…" — which can sound like you're shutting down other views — try "One way I see it is…" or "From what I've seen…" These phrases signal that you're contributing to a conversation, not declaring a conclusion.
In the example, we say: "One way I see it is that the budget pressure here is real — and I also think some of what this pool provides isn't easy to replace, which is why I want to make sure we're seeing the full picture before we decide." Notice this doesn't push back on the fiscal constraint — it names it first. That's what makes the rest of what follows possible.
There's one more thing the best Step 1s do: they acknowledge, at least implicitly, the concern you identified in the preparation. Look at the example: "the budget pressure here is real." That phrase meets the audience where they are — it says: I'm not ignoring the constraint you're working under. By naming it first, the speaker earns the right to say what comes next. You don't have to be this explicit every time — but if your opening can speak to the concern in some way, the other person is far more likely to stay with you through what follows.
STEP2
SHOW — What you can show
Show something concrete instead of telling people what conclusion they should reach. Specifics lower heat.
example
"For example, last July on a 96-degree Tuesday, I counted more than 80 kids at the Riverside pool between 1 and 4pm — mostly under 12, most of them there without a parent. The lifeguard told me it was a typical summer afternoon."
Quality Check:
Am I showing something people can picture, or just asserting my opinion?
timeplacenumber w/ contextname or characterquote or phrasevisual detail
Start with
"For example, …""At the last meeting …""In my experience …"
Tip: Aim for at least two of these — a name or place, a number with context, a quote, or something people can picture. The more specific the detail, the less room there is for argument about what you mean.
Step two is about showing, not telling. This is one of the most important distinctions in the whole framework.
When you tell people what to think — "people are being dismissive," "this community has a polarization problem" — it triggers pushback. People argue with conclusions. But when you show them something concrete they can picture, they interpret it themselves. That's far less inflammatory.
In the example, we say: "For example, last July on a 96-degree Tuesday, I counted more than 80 kids at the Riverside pool between 1 and 4pm — mostly under 12, most of them there without a parent. The lifeguard told me it was a typical summer afternoon." Count what's in here: a time (last July, Tuesday, 1–4pm), a place (Riverside pool), a number with context (80+ kids, mostly under 12), a character (the lifeguard), and a quote ("typical summer afternoon"). That's five of the six ingredients — and none of it is an opinion. It's just what was there.
The ingredients that make this work: a time, a place, a number with context, a name or character, a quote or phrase, a visual detail. You don't need all of them — but the more of them you use, the harder it is for someone to argue with what you're saying. They can disagree with your interpretation later, in Step 3. But they can't easily dispute something they can picture.
STEP3
MEANING — What it means to you
Explain the takeaway you draw from what you just showed, without pretending it is the only possible interpretation.
example
"What this suggests to me is that closing the pool doesn't just remove a recreational option — it takes away the one reliably safe, free place those kids have on the hottest days of the year."
Quality Check:
Does this sound like my interpretation, or like I'm shutting down other interpretations?
"What this suggests to me is …""The way I interpret this is …""What I take from that is …"
Step three is where you make your meaning plain — but frame it as your interpretation, not the only possible reading.
This is a subtle but important shift. "The bottom line is…" sounds like you're closing the conversation. "What this suggests to me is…" sounds like you're still in it — still open to hearing how someone else sees it.
In the example: "What this suggests to me is that closing the pool doesn't just remove a recreational option — it takes away the one reliably safe, free place those kids have on the hottest days of the year." That's a clear takeaway drawn directly from what was shown in Step 2. It's also framed as an interpretation — not a verdict. Someone else could look at the same 80 kids and draw a different conclusion. That's fine. This is your reading.
Keep it plain. No jargon, no complexity. Just say what you take from what you showed, in plain language. Then leave room for someone else to see it differently.
STEP4
INVITE — Their view
End by inviting perspective rather than forcing agreement. The goal is response, not submission.
example
"How do you see it? Does that match your sense of how this community uses the pool, or is there something I'm not accounting for?"
Quality Check:
Does this invite an honest response, or does it pressure people toward agreement?
"How do you see it?""Does that fit with your experience?""What feels missing or different to you?"
The final step is an invitation, not a close. You're not trying to get a yes — you're trying to open a genuine exchange.
After you've shared your perspective, shown something concrete, and explained what it means to you, the natural next move is to ask how someone else sees it. Not rhetorically. Not as a trap. As a real question.
In the example: "How do you see it? Does that match your sense of how this community uses the pool, or is there something I'm not accounting for?" That question genuinely welcomes a different answer. "Is there something I'm not accounting for?" is especially strong — it signals real openness, not just the form of a question.
If the question you end with only works if the person says yes — it's not an invitation. It's a manipulation. A good Step 4 invites an honest response, even if that response is disagreement.
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