
330: Deconstructing The Art & Science Of Interviewing With Jay Acunzo
from The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk
by Ryan Hawk
Published: Wed Sep 25 2019
Show Notes
The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk
#330: Deconstructing The Art & Science Of Interviewing With Jay Acunzo
Full show notes can be found at www.LearningLeader.com
This is a special bonus episode focusing on deconstructing the art and science of interviewing. You will hear learning happening in real time. Jay Acunzo and I go a meta-level to better understand how to better improve our conversation ability, how to be better in an interview. "Interviewing is a skill that enhances your life in a pleasant and unexpected way." This is focused on how you can ask better questions, be more interesting and more interested, and become a better conversationalist.
Notes:
- The meta level of deconstructing the process of making the work is rare...
 - "I experience the most flow when it's quiet, nitty-gritty work. Those minute are profoundly rewarding for me."
 - What makes a great interview?
 - An open loop -- Start telling the story, but wait to close the loop until later to build intrigue...
 - The difference between a narrative style show and an interview getting to know someone: 
- A story is three parts - The intent of the story: The "Joseph Campbell Heroes Journey" 1) Status Quo 2) Conflict 3) Resolution
 - Bucket of questions: 
- "Tell me about X..."
 - "How did it make you feel?"
 - The analysis and the reflection
 
 
 - Change your mindset: "You're not an interviewer, you're a dance partner." 
- "The only thing that matters is that you lead. Everything else is little subtle moves to get people to go to where you want to go."
 
 - "It's not a constant march forward. Instead, think of it like a dance. There are some steps back, steps forward, steps to the side — all packaged together in one coherent experience, with lots of zig-zagging and subtle steps inside those boundaries."
 - Open ended questions: "Tell me about X" gets you story details, while "how did it feel when" gets you key moments of reflection and analysis. Both are crucial.
 - Clip #1 -- JJ Redick  
- He says "great question" — what would make someone interviewed as often as a pro athlete say that?
 - How to prep for an interview for someone who is interviewed all the time? 
- Built a basic rapport leading up to the interview -- Discussed sports, restaurants, podcasting, interviewing.  Developed a "friend" level of communication 
- Create an environment where the guest wants it to be a great show
 
 
 - Built a basic rapport leading up to the interview -- Discussed sports, restaurants, podcasting, interviewing.  Developed a "friend" level of communication 
 - Good follow up questions: Ask for an example... Asking, "How did that make you feel?" "What's your process?" --> Then be a deep, thoughtful listener to ask a follow up.
 - Stay on the same level with your dance partner - Don't be a guest "worshiper"
 - When following up, there are a few things you can do: 1) Distill 2) Disagree 3) Ask the next question...
 - During an interview, the best question you can ask: "How did that make you feel?" It enables them to get in an emotional lane (away from canned responses)
 - Testing the levels on the microphone -- Don't waste that opportunity. Engineer the guest, the human -- You need them to feel like we're hanging out and excited about the interview. Make it fun. What to ask instead: "I'm going to check your levels, do you have any pets at home?" "What would be your last meal on earth?" -- It helps people break out of their corporate drone mode. The question is about the person, on a human plane.
 - Create a safe space for them to share their truth. "I'm not a journalist, I'm a conversationalist."
 
 - Clip #2 -- Adam Savage 
- How did he get on the show? Working with a PR firm to book a guest -- A great PR person like Brent Underwood only recommends guests that are a good fit for the show.
 - Ask questions that you are genuinely curious about -- I am curious about someone's process and it's always led me to a useful follow up...
 - The issue is sometimes a "process" oriented question is the guest can answer with a generality... How to wiggle out of that? 
- Look at the acknowledgement section of their book to get ideas for important people/events in their life to ask about...
 
 - Mental Heuristics: Tell me about, 30,000 feet, go to a specific example... The third question is "Putting them in a box:" -- "
 
 - From Jay: Heuristics to tell great AUDIO stories: 
- Tell me about...
 - How did you feel when (or, how did that feel?)
 - Can you give me an example?
 - (Superlatives) Best, worst, funniest, scariest, hardest, least certain, favorite, etc...
 - (Dig for emotional moments)
 
 - Clip #3 -- Brian Koppelman 
- How to handle nerves -- Work to get settled in. Get through the initial conversation point...
 - Give people a genuine compliment for why you like their work -- Tell people why their work helps you
 
 - Hidden Gems: 
- Interplay between your intent for the work and your framework for it: 
- "My goal is to engineer an outcome, but I have an intent I don't want to become The Bachelor in Paradise." 
- Have self and situational awareness. We carry with us good intent to serve the audience. Don't let the framework or engineering supersede the original intent.
 
 
 - "My goal is to engineer an outcome, but I have an intent I don't want to become The Bachelor in Paradise." 
 - The two types of interviews: 1) The person, their story... 2) Their content 
- The best conversations are able to weave both together and smoothly bounce back and forth
 - Learn about the person AND learn about the topic that he has mastered -- Master that dance between both -- I need to give you something that is going to make you better.
 
 
 - Interplay between your intent for the work and your framework for it: 
 - Use the "Get To Know You Document"
 - Why joining The Learning Leader Circle is a good idea