Mastering the Art of Connection: A Guide to Rapport Building and People Orientation in Counseling

Rapport, Orientation & Questioning Skills in Counselling | Emocare
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Rapport, Orientation & Questioning Skills

A practical, clinic-ready page for counsellors to reference during sessions and training.

Support-first reminder: If someone is at immediate risk of harm, contact local emergency services or a crisis service right away. Use the questions below with care, compassion, and without judgment.

SECOND DAY TRAINING ON INTERNATIONAL SUICIDE PREVENTION GATEKEEPER & BASICS OF COUNSELLING TRAINING

Types of Rapport

1) Emotional Rapport

Client starts sharing feelings and inner experiences; they feel emotionally held and understood.

2) Intellectual Rapport

Client is impressed by the counsellor’s clarity, reasoning, and collaborative problem-solving.

3) Kinesthetic Rapport

Client is physically at ease (e.g., comfortable with a handshake or brief touch to thank). Respect boundaries and culture.

10 Techniques to Create Rapport with Clients

  • Warm welcome & name use: Greet genuinely, pronounce their name correctly, and show cultural respect.
  • Open body language: Relaxed posture, gentle eye contact, nods, and soft facial expressions.
  • Matching & mirroring (subtle): Align pace, tone, and posture without imitating.
  • Reflective listening: Paraphrase and validate feelings (“It sounds like…”).
  • Collaborative agenda: Ask what they hope to get from today and co-set priorities.
  • Strengths spotting: Notice and name resilience, past coping, and values.
  • Micro-affirmations: Minimal encouragers (“mm-hmm”, “I’m here”), therapeutic silence, and pacing.
  • Clear boundaries & confidentiality: Briefly explain privacy, limits, and session flow.
  • Gentle appropriate humour: Light, non-sarcastic moments can reduce tension—only if welcomed.
  • Follow-through: Do what you say (notes, resources, next steps) to build trust over time.

Three Orientations in People

Action-Oriented

Doers. Prefer concrete steps and quick wins.

  • Language: “Let’s try this today…”, “Next step is…”
  • Tools: Behavioural activation, homework, checklists.
  • Watch for: Impulsivity; balance speed with reflection.

Brain-Oriented

Thinkers. Generate options, analyse patterns.

  • Language: “What are 3 possibilities…?”, “Let’s map the pros/cons.”
  • Tools: Cognitive restructuring, thought records, decision matrices.
  • Watch for: Overthinking; co-create small experiments.

People-Oriented

Connectors. Value relationships, networks, belonging.

  • Language: “Who could support you…?”, “How might we ask for help?”
  • Tools: Role plays, communication skills, support mapping.
  • Watch for: People-pleasing; reinforce boundaries and self-care.

Questioning Skills in Suicide Counselling

Use direct, compassionate language. Normalize the conversation; asking about suicide does not “put the idea” in someone’s head.

Open-Ended Questions (Examples)

  • “What has been going on that’s made life feel especially hard lately?”
  • “When did you first notice thoughts about not wanting to live?”
  • “What tends to make the pain spike, and what helps even a little?”
  • “Who or what has kept you going during your hardest moments?”
  • “If we could change one small thing this week, what would feel most helpful?”
Builds story, meaning, and alliance

Closed-Ended Questions (Examples)

  • “In the past week, have you had thoughts about killing yourself?”
  • “Do you have a specific plan right now?”
  • “Do you have access to the means you’ve considered?”
  • “Have you attempted suicide before?”
  • “Can you agree to a safety plan to keep yourself safe for the next 24 hours?”
Clarifies risk, informs safety planning
How to combine open and closed questions effectively
  • Start open to understand context and emotions.
  • Move to specific closed questions to assess risk (ideation, plan, means, intent, past attempts).
  • Return to open questions to co-create safety and coping plans.
  • Document clearly and consult/supervise for high-risk cases.

Basics in Counselling – Quick Checklist

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