Questions Aren't Curiosity

Dec 21, 2025 2 Min Read
pink question mark
Source:

Freepik

The most productive questions aren't on your checklist.

There’s no curiosity when you know the answer.

Questions that end with verbs aren’t curious. They’re controlling.

“We agree this was the best option, don’t we?”

“That’s what we decided, correct?”

Leaders ask questions but haven’t learned to inquire.

Contrast

Questions collect information. Curiosity seeks understanding.

Work questions aim for speed, clarity, compliance, and closure.

  • “What happened?”
  • “Why did you do that?”
  • “Did you follow the process?”
  • “When will this be finished?”

You can ask questions without caring about people.

Work questions move work forward. Curious questions move people forward.

Examples

Curiosity shows up as inquiry:

  • “Help me understand how you saw this.”
  • “What felt most important to you?”
  • “What surprised you?”
  • “What am I missing?”
  • “What are you learning?”
  • “What’s working?”
  • “What will you do differently next time?”

Curious leaders invite thinking. Work questions often invite defensiveness.

Related: Stuck in a Rut? 7 Questions to Inspire New Thinking on Your Team

Use Both

Ask questions when you need answers. Practice inquiry when you want growth.

Questions solve problems.
Curious questions develop people.

Shift Conversations

Being curious slows conversations.
Control speeds it up.

Work questions narrow options.
Inquiry opens them.

Action

Before your next conversation:

  • Check your motive. Is this about work or development? Or both?
  • Do you need to know or understand?
  • Prepare one curious question.
  • Commit to talk less and listen more.

Curiosity isn’t simply asking better questions. It’s caring about people.

This article was originally published on Leadership Freak.


Upcoming Workshop for Middle & Senior Managers:

Paradoxical Leadership in the Age of AI with Roshan Thiran

events.leaderonomics.com

Share This

Alt
Dan Rockwell is a coach and speaker and is freakishly interested in leadership. He is an author of a world-renowned leadership blog, Leadership Freak.
Alt

You May Also Like

white flowers

Spring-Cleaning Your Motivation: Eight Evidence-Based Strategies

By MICHELLE GIBBINGS. With spring on our doorstep, it’s the perfect time to spring-clean your motivation, so you and your team can finish the year with clarity, energy, and impact.

Sep 10, 2025 8 Min Read

Alt

Why You Need A Powerful Dream To Inspire You

How important is it to have a powerful dream and to live it? In this week's episode of Leadership Nuggets, Prof. George Kohlrieser of IMD Switzerland and veteran hostage negotiator shares the story of a man who had a dream and then lost it

Aug 03, 2014 2 Min Video

Be a Leader's Digest Reader