The Blog

If you’ve spent any time in property management, you’ve likely seen a version of this scene.
A resident is talking through a long-standing complaint. Their arms are crossed. Their voice is tight. It’s clear they’ve told this story before—and they don’t feel heard.
The property manager does what many capable, well-intentioned leaders do. They listen… nod… and then begin explaining policies, timelines, and why certain decisions were made.
A few minutes in, the resident interrupts.
“You’re not hearing me.”
The room goes quiet.
The manager pauses, surprised. “I am listening.”
The resident shakes their head.
“No—you’re just waiting to talk.”


What This Story Reveals

This moment captures a distinction that matters deeply in affordable housing:
Are you listening to understand, or listening to respond?
It’s a question worth slowing down for, because how you listen directly affects trust, conflict, and outcomes.

Why This Question Matters in Affordable Housing

If you’re a site manager, property manager, or decision maker, your days are filled with conversations that carry weight:

  • A resident upset about maintenance delays
  • A team member frustrated about workload or communication
  • A partner or vendor pushing back on expectations
  • A difficult conversation about behavior, policy, or performance

In these moments, listening isn’t a “nice-to-have” soft skill.
It’s a leadership behavior that changes the tone, direction, and outcome of the conversation.

When people feel heard, tensions lower.
When they don’t, conflict escalates fast.

The Two Modes of Listening (And How We Slip Into the Wrong One)

Most of us believe we’re good listeners. And technically, we may be. We hear the words. We track the facts.

But listening happens in two very different modes.

Listening to Respond

This is the default setting for many leaders, especially under pressure.

When you’re listening to respond, part of your mind is already working on:

  • Your explanation
  • Your defense
  • The policy you plan to cite
  • The solution you want to offer

You’re hearing the words, but you’re also:

  • Rehearsing your reply
  • Looking for openings to jump in
  • Mentally correcting inaccuracies

It’s efficient.
But in emotionally charged situations, efficient is rarely effective.

Listening to Understand

Listening to understand is slower, more intentional, and at first, a little uncomfortable.
When you’re listening to understand, your goal is simple:

  • To grasp the meaning behind the words
  • To understand the speaker’s perspective, emotions, and concerns
  • To reflect back what you’re hearing, before you try to fix anything

This doesn’t mean you agree.
It means you’re seeking clarity before responding

Why We Rush to Respond (Even When It Backfires)

If listening to understand is so powerful, why do we default to responding?

Common reasons include:

  • Time pressure: “I don’t have 30 minutes for this.”
  • Responsibility pressure: “I’m expected to have answers.”
  • Defensiveness: “This feels like an accusation.”
  • Problem-solver identity: “If I don’t fix it, I’m not doing my job.”

Here’s the paradox:

The faster you try to move toward solutions, the longer the conversation usually lasts, because the other person doesn’t yet feel understood.

A Quick Leadership Moment

I recently coached a manager who kept getting derailed in conversations with a direct report who felt dismissed.

Every time the direct report spoke, the manager jumped to solutions.

When the manager finally slowed down, reflected back on what he heard and the emotions associated with it, and asked one clarifying question… the direct report’s posture changed almost instantly. The tension that had been building for weeks broke in seconds.

Listening didn’t fix everything.
But it created the conditions where solutions could actually land.

What Listening to Understand Sounds Like

Listening to undersant doesn’t require special scripts. It’s practical and learnable.

It sounds like:

  • “Help me understand what’s been most frustrating about this.”
  • “What impact has this had on you?”
  • “Let me see if I’m hearing you correctly…”
  • “Do you need clarity, action, or just to be heard right now?”

Notice what’s missing:

  • Explanations
  • Justifications
  • Policy citations (at least not yet)

There’s time for those, but not first.

Three Things to Try This Week

Here are a few practical experiments, small changes with big impact.

1. Delay Your First Response by 5-10 Seconds

When someone finishes speaking, pause.

Five to ten seconds may feel long, but it signals that you’re thinking, not reacting.
It also gives you space to ask a clarifying question instead of jumping into defense mode.

Often, what comes next is more thoughtful and more effective.

2. Reflect Before You Solve

Before offering a solution, reflect back on what you hear, including the emotions behind what was said.

Try:

“What I’m hearing is… Did I get that right?” “and you seem [name the emotion]”

People often respond with:

  • “Yes, that’s it exactly.”
  • “Almost… what’s really bothering me is…”

Either way, you move forward with clarity, not assumptions.

3. Ask: “Do You Want Me to Listen or Help Solve?”

The single question can transform conversations.

Not every moment requires action.
Some require acknowledgment first.

Asking this helps you match the moment and builds trust through respect.

A Word for Decision Makers

If you’re in a senior or system-level role, this matters even more.

Your position carries power. When people speak to you, they’re often:

  • Choosing their words carefully
  • Holding back emotion
  • Testing whether it’s safe to be honest

When you listen to understand, not just respond, you send a message:

“Your voice matters here.”

That message travels farther than you think.

The Bottom Line

Listening to understand doesn’t make you passive.
It makes you intentional.

It doesn’t slow leadership down.
It prevents problems that arise when people feel dismissed, ignored, or rushed.

And in affordable housing, where relationship, trust, and dignity matter deeply,
how you listen may matter just as much as what you decide.

Call to Action: Choose One Conversation

This week, choose one conversation where you intentionally listen to understand rather than to respond.

Just one.

Then notice:

  • How the other person reacts
  • How the tone shifts
  • How the outcome changes

Reflect afterward:

  • What was harder than expected?
  • What felt different?
  • What did you learn that you might have missed?

Great leaders aren’t defined by how fast they respond,
but by how deeply they understand.

If you’d like more practical, real-world tools like this, I help leaders strengthen communication, navigate conflict, and build trust in the moments that matter most.

Go to garyharrelson.com for more information or email me at gary@garyharrelson.com.

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