From dealmaker
Use when building trust with people who don't yet know or trust you — new teams, new roles, hostile audiences, or strained relationships where the goal is connection before any ask. Applies Tactical Empathy through mirroring, labeling, and belonging cues. Not for confrontation (use difficult-conversations) or giving feedback (use feedback-coach).
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/dealmaker:rapport-builderThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Rapport is not about being "liked"; it is the tactical establishment of psychological safety and mutual understanding. This skill provides the mechanics for "Tactical Empathy"—using active listening and belonging cues to synchronize with a counterpart’s emotional state and create a "Pool of Shared Meaning."
Rapport is not about being "liked"; it is the tactical establishment of psychological safety and mutual understanding. This skill provides the mechanics for "Tactical Empathy"—using active listening and belonging cues to synchronize with a counterpart’s emotional state and create a "Pool of Shared Meaning."
Empathy is not sympathy. It is the act of recognizing a counterpart’s perspective and vocalizing it back to them to gain trust. It is an active "martial art" of listening used to gain access to the mind of another person.
Connection happens when the amygdala receives a steady pulse of "belonging cues." These signals tell the brain to shift from "danger mode" into "connection mode," allowing for collaboration and problem-solving.
Dialogue cannot exist without safety. Safety is built on two conditions: Mutual Respect (the belief that you care about their well-being) and Mutual Purpose (the belief that you are working toward a common goal).
Sharing personal vulnerabilities or stories signals that the environment is safe for others to do the same. Brief, authentic self-disclosure lowers the defensive posture of the counterpart and accelerates connection.
Focus on the underlying interests—the why behind a position—rather than attacking the individual's stance. This preserves the relationship even when the deal is difficult.
Belonging is reinforced by signals that the relationship will continue. Phrases that imply a shared future help reduce the anxiety of the current high-stakes interaction.
Adopt the Late-Night FM DJ Voice: deep, soft, slow, and downward-inflecting. This tone signals that you are in control and that the environment is safe (Source: Voss, Never Split the Difference).
Monitor the counterpart for signs of Silence (masking, avoiding, withdrawing) or Violence (controlling, labeling, attacking). If safety is lost, step out of the content and restore it (Source: Grenny, Crucial Conversations).
If you know they have negative feelings toward you or the situation, vocalize them first. "You’re probably thinking that I’m only here to squeeze you for a lower price." This defuses the negative energy (Source: Voss, Never Split the Difference).
If the counterpart misinterprets your intent, use Contrasting.
Continue the process of mirroring, labeling, and summarizing until the counterpart says, "That's right." This is the signal that they feel understood and that the rapport is sufficient to move to the "ask" (Source: Voss, Never Split the Difference).
To build a "familial" group bond, ensure every interaction contains these three elements:
When you must share a controversial view while maintaining rapport:
npx claudepluginhub joellewis/skill-library --plugin dealmakerRoutes interpersonal and organizational situations to the right emotional intelligence tool: motivation mapping, resistance diagnosis, stakes mapping, or trust audit.
Plans and facilitates high-stakes conversations involving conflict, feedback, performance issues, or sensitive interpersonal topics using Harvard Negotiation and radical candor frameworks.
Coaching for multi-party negotiations: salary, sales, collective bargaining, hard 1:1s, recruitment closes, cross-cultural deals. Prepares, coaches live, and debriefs lost outcomes.