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Skill Drill: Difficult Conversations for Steel and Metals

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Skill Drill: Difficult Conversations for Steel and Metals

Direct Answer

This drill builds the skill of running a high-stakes, direct conversation — a missed heat lot, a safety violation, a chronic late delivery, a price-increase pushback — without the conversation collapsing into defensiveness or going unsaid for another quarter. A plant manager, mill supervisor, or commercial lead runs it with a team of 4–12 in 45 minutes (compressible to 5, extendable to 60).

The team walks away able to open a hard conversation in two sentences, stay in it when the other person pushes back, and land a commitment — using the Crucial Conversations STATE pattern and Radical Candor as the coaching backbone.

Why This Drill Matters in Steel and Metals

Steel and metals is a relationship-and-tolerance business run by people who would rather fix a furnace than have a feelings conversation. A service center buyer calls about an out-of-spec hot-rolled coil — wrong yield strength on the mill cert, ASTM A1011 grade 50 ordered, grade 36 shipped — and the inside salesperson goes quiet, hopes the customer eats it, and loses the account three months later when it happens again.

A melt-shop supervisor watches an operator skip a lockout/tagout step on the EAF and says nothing because the guy has 22 years in and "you don't tell him anything." A purchasing manager at a stamping plant needs to push back on a 9% surcharge tied to the CRU Midwest index but doesn't want to torch a 15-year supplier relationship.

These are not soft-skill luxuries. The cost of the avoided conversation is scrapped coils, a recordable injury, a margin leak, or a lost tonnage commitment. The bottleneck is almost never that people don't know the technical facts — they know the cert is wrong and the LOTO step got skipped.

The bottleneck is that nobody on the floor was ever taught a repeatable way to open the conversation and survive the first wave of pushback.

Two named methodologies anchor this drill. Crucial Conversations (Kerry Patterson, VitalSmarts/Crucial Learning) gives the STATE skills — Share your facts, Tell your story, Ask for the other's path, Talk tentatively, Encourage testing — and the idea of making it safe so the other person stays in dialogue instead of going to silence or violence.

Radical Candor (Kim Scott) gives the simple compass: Care Personally + Challenge Directly, and names the three failure modes — Ruinous Empathy (you care but won't challenge, the default in a tight-knit mill crew), Obnoxious Aggression (you challenge but don't care, the stereotype of the old-school plant boss), and Manipulative Insincerity (neither).

We'll also borrow the SBI model (Situation-Behavior-Impact) from the Center for Creative Leadership for clean, blame-free feedback framing.

What You'll Need (5 min prep)

flowchart TD A[Prep 5 min: cards, STATE card, fishbowl chairs] --> B[Round 1 Set the Scene 5 min] B --> C[Round 2 Fishbowl Demo 8 min] C --> D[Round 3 Run the Reps 15 min] D --> E[Round 4 Pressure Test 10 min] E --> F[Round 5 Debrief and Lock It In 7 min] F --> G[Team can open and hold a hard conversation]

Round 1 — Set the Scene (5 min)

Open by naming the cost, not the skill. Read this aloud:

"Everybody in this room has a conversation they've been avoiding — a cert that came back wrong, an operator cutting a corner, a supplier squeezing us on price, a customer who keeps shorting us. We avoid it because we don't want to blow up a relationship we need next week. Today we're going to learn a way to have that conversation so it's direct AND keeps the relationship.

Two tools: STATE from Crucial Conversations, and the Radical Candor compass — Care Personally, Challenge Directly."

Put the Radical Candor 2x2 on the board. Ask: "Where do most of us default in this plant?" Let them say it — almost every metals crew lands on Ruinous Empathy (we care, we won't challenge). Name that as the thing we're fixing today.

What good looks like: the room admits avoidance is normal and costs money. Nobody is being graded on being naturally good at this.

Round 2 — Fishbowl Demo (8 min)

You demo first so the reps aren't cold. Put two chairs at the front. You play the mill inside-sales rep; pick a confident volunteer to play the service-center buyer who received an out-of-spec coil.

Walk the STATE open out loud, slowly, so they see the moves:

Share the facts (neutral, no story): "Marcus, the cert on coil lot 4471 shows A1011 grade 36. Your PO called grade 50. I confirmed it against the mill test report this morning."

Tell your story tentatively: "My read is this shipped wrong on our end, and I don't want you finding it on the press line."

Ask for their path: "Before I commit to a fix — what does this do to your build schedule, and what would make this right for you?"

Then deliberately have the buyer push back hard ("This is the second time, I'm pulling the next three releases"). Show STATE's recovery move — make it safe: "You're right to be hot about it. I'm not defending it.

Let me tell you exactly what I'll do and you tell me if it's enough." Don't solve it perfectly; show that staying in dialogue is the win.

What good looks like: facts first, story labeled as a story ("my read is…"), a genuine question, and a recovery line when the buyer escalates.

Round 3 — Run the Reps (15 min)

Pair everyone up. Hand each pair a scenario card. One person is the initiator, one is the difficult counterpart. Run 4 minutes, swap roles, run 4 more, then 7 minutes of pairs swapping cards.

The four steel-and-metals scenario cards:

Coach the SBI frame as they go: Situation ("on Tuesday's release"), Behavior ("the LOTO step on the EAF disconnect got skipped"), Impact ("if that arc strikes, you're the recordable"). No labels, no "you always."

What good looks like: opener lands in two sentences; the initiator asks a real question and shuts up; the counterpart's pushback doesn't make the initiator retreat or attack.

Round 4 — Pressure Test (10 min)

Now raise the heat. Re-run Card B and Card C in the fishbowl with the leader playing the counterpart at maximum difficulty — interrupting, going silent, invoking tenure or relationship history ("I've sent you steel for 15 years and this is the thanks"). The initiator must use STATE's safety moves to keep the person in dialogue.

Give the room two "pause" tokens. Anyone can call "freeze," and the group coaches the initiator on the next line, then restart. This is where the Radical Candor distinction gets real: the initiator must show they Care Personally ("I want you working here in 20 years, that's why I'm saying this") while Challenging Directly ("and we are not skipping LOTO on my shift").

What good looks like: the initiator stays in the conversation through silence and through an emotional appeal, names the relationship, and still holds the line. They land a specific commitment with a date.

flowchart TD A[Same drill, scale by group] --> B{Time available?} B -->|5 min| C[Fishbowl demo only, one scenario] B -->|30 min| D[Demo + reps, skip pressure test] B -->|60 min| E[All rounds + everyone takes the fishbowl] A --> F{Skill level?} F -->|New crew| G[Leader plays counterpart soft, coach STATE openers] F -->|Seasoned| H[Counterpart plays maximum difficulty, add real plant disputes] A --> I{Group size?} I -->|Under 6| J[Everyone role-plays both sides twice] I -->|Over 12| K[Two rooms, sub-leader each, reconvene for debrief]

Round 5 — Debrief & Lock It In (7 min)

Go around the room. Each person names: the conversation they've been avoiding in real life, and the first two sentences they'll use to open it this week. Write the commitments on the flip chart. Assign a check-in date — most floors run this drill, then circle back at the next shift huddle to ask who actually had their conversation.

What good looks like: every person leaves with a real, named conversation and a concrete opener. The team agrees on a follow-up date.

Scaling It: 5-Minute, 30-Minute, and 60-Minute Versions

Common Mistakes & Coaching Cues

FAQ

How is this different from a normal performance review? A review is scheduled and one-directional. This drill trains the unscheduled, two-way conversation you have on the floor the day something goes wrong — and the whole point of STATE is that it's a dialogue, not a verdict.

My crew says they "just tell it straight" and don't need this. What do I do? Run Card B in the fishbowl with a real tenured operator. "Telling it straight" usually means Obnoxious Aggression that ends in silence, or it means they actually avoid the LOTO conversation entirely. The drill exposes which one it is fast.

Won't role-playing feel fake to plant guys? Use real, recent plant scenarios — an actual out-of-spec lot, an actual surcharge letter. Once the scenario is real, the awkwardness drops in about ninety seconds. Lead with the fishbowl so they see you do it first.

What if the difficult conversation involves a union member? The skill is the same; the documentation discipline goes up. Stick to SBI facts (situation, behavior, impact), avoid labels, and keep your steward in the loop per your contract. The drill makes the conversation cleaner, which protects you procedurally.

How often should we re-run this? Quarterly for the full version, plus a 5-minute fishbowl version at any shift huddle right after a real incident — a near-miss or a customer complaint is the best possible live scenario.

Which book do I hand someone who wants more? Crucial Conversations for the STATE skills and how to make it safe; Radical Candor for the Care/Challenge compass and the four quadrants. Both are short and floor-friendly.

Bottom Line

After this drill, the team can open a hard conversation in two sentences, lead with neutral facts instead of accusation, ask a real question and stay quiet, recover when the other person pushes back, and land a dated commitment without burning the relationship. Re-run the full 45-minute version quarterly and drop the 5-minute fishbowl into any huddle that follows a real incident.

Sources

*difficult conversations skill drill — a runnable team training exercise for steel and metals, with verbatim scripts, timing, and coaching cues. Difficult conversations drill review, rating, and review 2027.*

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