Executive Coach (PCC) + Board Director (IBDC.D) | Award-Winning International Author at Capistran Leadership
Answered 2 months ago
My go-to question is simple: "What's the decision that's taking more of your thinking time than it should right now?" It works because it immediately signals that we're not there for a transactional exchange. Senior leaders spend most of their day being asked for answers. Very few are given a place to think out loud about the one issue that carries real weight — the choice with consequence, timing, and visibility attached to it. The moment that question lands, the energy in the conversation changes. You move from biography to reality. From titles and summaries to what's actually shaping their week, their team, their sleep. It also does something else — it shows respect for how they operate. You're not asking for a story they've told a hundred times. You're inviting them into a strategic dialogue. And for people who live in constant output mode, that's rare. Why is it effective? Because it meets them at the altitude they live at. Surface-level questions keep leaders in performance mode. This one gives them permission to drop into what's true: the succession decision they haven't named publicly, the misalignment at the top of the organization, the growth opportunity that's exciting and destabilizing at the same time. And when someone answers it, you learn in minutes what would otherwise take months to understand — how they think, what they value, where they feel pressure, and whether they're carrying it alone. The best conversations don't start with cleverness. They start with relevance. Ask a question that helps someone think about what actually matters, and you're no longer networking. You're building a relationship grounded in trust and real work.
My go-to question is: "What's one piece of feedback you've had recently, and what did it change for you?" I use it because it invites someone to share a real example, not just a headline version of how things are going. At Carepatron, we treat feedback as a conversation starter, and this question naturally opens up a two-way street rooted in active listening. It also signals that I am interested in what they have learned and how they operate day to day, which makes the conversation more honest and useful.
I stopped satisfying myself with questions that sound clever. For years, I thought the key to good conversation was asking interesting questions. What I eventually learned is that it's not about being interesting. It's about being genuinely interested in the other person. That shift changed everything. My go-to now is simple: I try to understand what someone actually cares about and why. Not their job title or their weekend plans, but what drives them. I might ask what they're working on that they can't stop thinking about, or what problem they wish they could solve. The specific words matter less than the intent behind them. People can tell when you're asking because you genuinely want to know versus when you're just filling silence. This works because most people spend their days being talked at, not listened to. When someone senses that you're actually curious about their world, their perspective, their challenges, something shifts. The performance drops. The real conversation starts. I've watched people go from guarded small talk to sharing things that actually matter in under five minutes, simply because they felt heard. The best conversations I've ever had weren't about impressive topics. They were about making the other person feel like what they think matters. That's the unlock. Stop trying to be the most interesting person in the room. Start being the most interested.
My go-to is: "What's something you're working on right now that most people around you don't fully understand?" It cuts through the small talk immediately because it asks someone to share something real — a project, a challenge, an obsession — without requiring them to be vulnerable in an uncomfortable way. Most people are quietly working on something they care about but rarely get asked about directly. It's effective because it has a built-in assumption: that you are working on something interesting. That assumption is flattering without being sycophantic, and it gives the other person permission to go deep if they want to. In a networking or professional setting, it's also practical — you often learn something genuinely useful about what they do that a standard "what do you do?" never surfaces. I use this frequently when meeting potential clients or vendor partners. It opens a door to how people actually think about their work, not just their title or company. For me, as someone running an eco-luxury cleaning business in a community where clients care deeply about their values, that question almost always leads somewhere more interesting than a pitch. — Marcos De Andrade, Founder, Green Planet Cleaning Services (greenplanetcleaningservices.com)
My go-to question is, "Can you share a personal story about how this has affected you or someone close to you?" In our work opening the HR system to collect stories from employees with family members who have developmental disabilities, giving people a safe place to share shifted conversations beyond surface-level. That change in tone revealed perspectives facts alone did not capture. Those stories showed our team that personal experiences matter to the culture we are building.
I like to ask one question when we speak with leaders or clients. What is a metric you trust more than most people do. The answer often shows how a person thinks about decisions and whether they rely more on intuition, evidence, or a balance of both. In our work with clients we often see how easy it is to chase vanity signals that look good but do not truly guide progress. This question invites people to name a measure that helps them stay honest in their work. It might be a retention signal, a detail in the sales cycle, or a pattern seen in customer support conversations. Sometimes it is even a personal measure such as hours spent in deep work. When we ask why they trust that metric, the story usually reveals a lesson learned through experience.
When working with clients, our go to question is simple. We ask what they are saying no to right now even if it looks good on paper. This question often opens a more honest conversation about priorities. It helps move the discussion away from surface level ambition and toward real judgement. Generally speaking, many people can talk about what they want to pursue. Far fewer can clearly explain what they choose to decline. Their answer often shows the season they are in and how they think about risk. It also creates space to discuss time, focus, and trade offs in a practical way without drifting into resume talk or office gossip.
My go-to question is, "What goal are you preparing for right now?" It quickly moves the conversation from surface topics to concrete priorities and motivations. I find it effective because people open up when they talk about what matters to them, and it gives a clear thread to follow. This approach mirrors my coaching practice of asking clients to pick a specific goal, such as an interview or presentation, to stay motivated in accent training.
I escaped the "business card trap" of networking events which create surface-level chat that prevents genuine relationship building. To stop wasting time in "What do you do?" loops I replaced small talk with one high-leverage question "What is the most useful lesson you've learned this year?" This single shift cuts past the resume and invites immediate vulnerability. The process requires individuals to disclose their authentic failures and successful projects which demonstrate their true character and mental approach within a minute. I now create a network of valuable partners who remember our discussions instead of collecting 100 worthless cards. I landed three agency partners from a single event using this method. One specific "lesson swap" even unlocked a $200K referral chain. In 2026, depth is the only unfair networking edge left—skipping the small talk is how you find the collaborators who actually move the needle.
My go-to starter is: "I'd love to learn more about your career — where did you start, how many roles have you had, and how did you get to where you are now?" I ask this because people naturally share stories about their journey, and those stories often contain practical lessons and unexpected insights. I have used this question multiple times, including conversations with our company owner, and it frequently uncovers challenges and solutions I had not anticipated. Those takeaways inform how I lead and make decisions at SportingSmiles.
My go-to conversation starter is, "Have you ever taken the Enneagram, and if so, what type are you?" It works for me because it quickly shifts the conversation from tasks and small talk to how someone communicates, what motivates them, and what they need to feel supported. Even if they have not taken it, the question opens an easy discussion about personality and preferences without getting too personal. That understanding helps build trust and respect, which makes future collaboration feel more natural and direct.
I usually go with, "What's been the best part of your week?" or "What's been your biggest headache this week?" It's a solid way to dodge those generic "I'm good" responses and actually get a feel for what's on someone's mind. It works because it gives them an easy opening to either brag a little or vent, both of which tell you way more about a person than small talk about the weather ever will.
Especially if I'm talking to someone with local knowledge, I'll ask about their favorite coffee place. I don't think I've met a networking contact who didn't love coffee, and everyone has their own local shop, favorite drink, or beloved at-home coffee maker. It also creates a natural opening for a follow-up chat over coffee.
My go-to question is, "What am I missing?" I began using it after I realized that the leaders I respected asked great questions rather than pretending to have all the answers. That simple phrase invites other viewpoints, encourages psychological safety, and prompts stronger contributions from the team. It also keeps me curious and signals that learning matters more than being perfectly sure.
Child, Adolescent & Adult Psychiatrist | Founder at ACES Psychiatry, Winter Garden, Florida
Answered a month ago
My go-to conversation starter is to close the loop from the day before by asking about one specific thing I know was on their mind, like, "How did that 10:00 AM meeting with your boss turn out?" It works because it replaces the routine "How was your day?" with a question that shows I was paying attention and I remember what matters to them. That kind of specificity communicates respect and care without forcing a heavy conversation. In my psychiatry practice, I see how relationships drift through small missed moments, and this simple habit turns those moments into real connection. Over time, it builds trust because the other person feels seen, not just checked on.
When we are working with clients, our go to question is simple. We ask what decision they are trying to make right now and what would make that decision easier. This question quickly moves the conversation away from small talk and into something useful. Instead of staying in broad ideas, we start focusing on the real situation in front of us. In many cases people begin sharing the factors behind the decision. They talk about their risk limits, stakeholder expectations, and timelines. Once we understand the decision, we can focus only on what actually matters. This approach also helps us notice early if different leaders see the problem in different ways. When that happens we can address the gap quickly and move toward clear next steps together.
A conversation tends to shift into something more meaningful when the question invites someone to talk about what shaped them rather than what they currently do. One prompt that consistently opens that door is asking someone, "What experience changed how you think about your work?" The wording keeps the focus on a story instead of a resume. People often pause for a moment and then share something personal such as a challenge they faced early in their career, a mentor who influenced them, or a project that completely shifted their perspective. Once that story starts, the discussion naturally becomes more relaxed and authentic because the person is reflecting rather than performing. The reason this works so well is that it creates room for reflection instead of quick answers. A question about job titles or daily responsibilities usually produces a rehearsed response, while a question about turning points invites someone to explain their reasoning and values. Conversations start to feel collaborative instead of transactional. The thinking behind Scale by SEO follows a similar principle in a business context. Real growth often begins with understanding the deeper drivers behind behavior rather than reacting to surface metrics. When a discussion begins with curiosity about experiences and perspective, people tend to open up in a way that leads to stronger relationships and far more memorable conversations.
My go-to conversation starter that consistently moves beyond small talk is asking people what they are currently working on that excites them the most. This question works because it immediately shifts the conversation from obligatory pleasantries to genuine passion. When I ask this at networking events, conferences, or even casual business dinners, the transformation in people's energy is remarkable. Their posture changes, their eyes light up, and suddenly you are hearing about the project that keeps them up at night in the best possible way. As a CEO running a software development company, I have used this question hundreds of times with potential clients, team members, and fellow entrepreneurs. What makes it effective is that it accomplishes three things simultaneously. First, it signals that you are genuinely interested in the other person rather than waiting for your turn to talk. Second, it reveals what someone truly values because people naturally gravitate toward discussing what matters most to them. Third, it creates an emotional connection because excitement is contagious and sharing something you care about builds trust faster than exchanging business cards. The question also works beautifully because it has no wrong answer. Whether someone talks about a side project, a career milestone, a personal goal, or even a hobby they recently picked up, every response opens doors to deeper conversation. I have built some of my strongest business relationships from answers to this single question because it bypasses the transactional nature of most professional interactions and gets straight to what makes someone tick.
My favorite question is: "What are you working on right now that you are most excited about?" It sounds simple but it works for a specific reason: it asks about something the person is actively doing, not something they did in the past or might do in the future. The present tense creates immediacy. The word "excited" filters toward things they actually care about rather than things they feel obligated to mention. Most conversation openers invite people to perform their identity. "What do you do?" produces job titles. "Where are you from?" produces geography. Both answers are technically accurate but rarely tell you anything real. "What are you most excited about right now" skips the performance and goes straight to what is actually alive for someone. The responses are almost always surprising. I have had a corporate lawyer describe a woodworking project. A nurse mention she had just started learning to compose music. An engineer at a large company tell me about a side project that eventually became his full time work. What makes it effective conversationally is that it creates immediate asymmetry in a good way. Most people do not get asked what they are excited about. When you ask that question and actually listen to the answer, people feel genuinely seen rather than processed. They tend to ask you the same thing back, and you are both suddenly in a real conversation. The follow on question that makes it even better: "What got you interested in that?"
I work at DeWitt Pharma, which is an organization that assists physicians and clinics in achieving safe, smart, and successful practice. I particularly love to choose good people to work with and establish a good relationship. People are exposed to me with the help of one question. I will question, What is your project or goal that you are interested in at the moment? rather than talking about the weather and the news. These are very easy questions, yet they always make the best answers. When human beings discuss the things they like, they are opening up. I know what is important to them, what their problems are, and what they wish to do. I can relate well with them and gain their confidence. This question is also a commencement of conversations that may result in helping one aid the other. Other networking conversations are superficial. This question makes the negotiations more substantial. This one question can indeed alter the situation over the years I learned. It assists me in establishing authentic connections in the field of healthcare and the development of business.