Economic Insider

Christine Miles Solves Communication Breakdowns at Work

Christine Miles Solves Communication Breakdowns at Work
Photo Courtesy: Sarah Miller Photography

By: Sarah Watson

In the post-pandemic reshuffle, formats keep changing, from fully remote, to hybrid, and now return-to-office mandates. But one problem hasn’t changed: teams are talking more and understanding less. Slack threads pile up, meetings multiply, and yet key details still slip through the cracks. The result? Lost time, missed opportunities, and rising frustration.

Christine Miles, M.S. Ed., founder and CEO of EQuipt and creator of The Listening Path®, explains, “We’re taught to read, write, and speak, but not to listen in a way that truly connects us. When people feel understood, speed and story snap into place.”

Hybrid, RTO, and the Cost of Missed Meaning

As organizations tighten in-office expectations and managers juggle split schedules, communication splinters across rooms and screens. Add commutes to already packed calendars, and pressure builds at every level. The result is familiar to leaders everywhere: misunderstandings, disengagement, and collaboration that stalls at the handoff.

Miles’ diagnosis is consistent across industries and levels. She explains, “Despite spending 80% of our day communicating, almost no one receives formal listening training. That gap is why listening becomes a true career advantage.” For companies, it’s also a competitive advantage because clarity shortens cycles, reduces rework, and lifts morale.

Why Listening Training Works

The Listening Path® treats listening as a repeatable system, not a “soft skill.” At its center is story-gathering—bringing the other person’s perspective into focus before adding your own. In practice, it relies on three disciplined moves:

  • Go Back (for the story): “Before we decide, take me back to what’s most important this week?”
  • Communicate (understanding): “So, speed is the priority, legal optics matter, and success means a clean handoff by Friday.”
  • Confirm (invite correction): “Do I get you?”

That last question replaces the reflexive “I understand.” Instead of declaring comprehension, it invites it, lowering defensiveness, catching misalignment early, and turning meetings from longer to lighter and clearer.

Managers Need a Shared Language, Not More Meetings

Hybrid and RTO aren’t just logistics challenges; they’re meaning problems. Teams don’t need more calendar time, they need the same language for outcomes, constraints, and success. When managers open with “what matters most this week,” they summarize back the understanding of the story they just heard and close with a short written recap. Then cross-location work starts to feel coordinated again. Small rituals reduce big churn.

Miles reminds leaders, “Listening is not about agreeing. It’s about showing others you understand them. When people feel truly seen and heard, everything changes. Teams perform better, relationships deepen, and innovation thrives.” 

Her bestselling book, What Is It Costing You Not to Listen?, which earned the Axiom Business Book Awards’ Silver Medal, makes the case that listening—not speaking—is the true engine of leadership development.

From Boardrooms To Classrooms

Miles blends clinical rigor with enterprise practicality. She began her career as a home-based family therapist in a pilot program at the Philadelphia Child Guidance Center, where she trained as a Structural Family Therapist in the lineage of Salvador Minuchin, a pioneer of family systems therapy. That elite credential shaped her systemic understanding of communication. Later, she translated that lens to business, founding EQuipt to help organizations, and now schools, operationalize listening as a repeatable skill.

Her programs are trusted across industries. Companies like SAP, McCain Foods, Keck Medical, and Harmony Biosciences have integrated The Listening Path® to improve culture, collaboration, and leadership. Her work has been featured in USA Today, ABC, NBC, NPR, and Sirius XM, and her speaking engagements now span audiences from 100 to 10,000 worldwide.

Her mission also extends to education. The Listening Path® is currently used in more than 20 schools across the U.S., Canada, and Ireland, helping students develop listening as a core life and career skill.

Listening Is the Real Productivity Multiplier

In an era of tool overload, the real advantage isn’t another app—it’s adopting a shared language of listening. In EQuipt engagements, once teams adopt a shared language of listening—what Miles often calls co-listening—leaders report shorter meetings, fewer escalations, and faster cross-functional work. For managers, that means clearer ownership and fewer do-overs; for employees, more autonomy and momentum.

In sales, listening sharpens discovery and reduces objections. In operations and product development, it prevents “solve-the-wrong-problem” loops that drain time and trust. And because co-listening lowers friction, it supports day-to-day mental health and stamina vital when commutes and routines keep shifting. 

Three Moves You Can Use Today

While The Listening Path® powers company-wide change, the philosophy works one conversation at a time. Managers, teammates, or partners can reset difficult exchanges and strengthen connection immediately by practicing:

  1. Shine a Light on Their Story
    Shift the focus from your reply to their reality. Help their story come into view so they feel seen, heard, and understood. When people experience understanding, resistance drops and progress starts.
  2. Aim for Understanding, Not Agreement
    You don’t have to endorse every point to be an effective listener. Highlight what matters—needs, feelings, constraints—so trust can form and decisions can stick.
  3. Replace “I Understand” With “Do I Get You?”
    Saying “I understand” doesn’t ensure clarity—or that they feel understood. Ask “Do I get you?” to invite correction and deepen alignment.

These small shifts compound: less defensiveness, cleaner decisions, and stronger relationships one interaction at a time.

Why It Matters Now

Formats will keep shifting—remote today, more office tomorrow. What shouldn’t shift is the skill that makes any format work: listening to understand. Miles adds, “Speed doesn’t equal clarity. Understanding creates clarity and clarity accelerates everything.”

For leaders, that clarity translates directly into stronger culture, faster execution, and higher retention. In a workforce defined by constant change, listening is no longer a soft skill—it’s a strategic advantage.

To learn more about Christine Miles and The Listening Path® programs for managers and teams, visit TheListeningPath.com  or ChristineMilesListens.com

This article features branded content from a third party. Opinions in this article do not reflect the opinions and beliefs of Economic Insider.