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From grimoire
Alternates between opening moves that draw out the other party and closing moves that absorb without telegraphing, for controlling information flow in live conversations.
npx claudepluginhub jeffreytse/grimoire --plugin grimoireHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/grimoire:apply-open-close-dialogueThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Alternate deliberately between opening moves that draw out the other party and closing moves that absorb without telegraphing — to control information flow during live conversation.
Proactively discovers another party's true position by asserting the opposite or asking about reasons not to act, prompting them to correct you and reveal genuine intent.
Coaching for multi-party negotiations: salary, sales, collective bargaining, hard 1:1s, recruitment closes, cross-cultural deals. Prepares, coaches live, and debriefs lost outcomes.
Coaches active listening skills: receptive mindset, reflective paraphrasing, clarifying questions, and synthesis. Use for improving communication, preparing for difficult conversations, or when you talk more than you listen.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Alternate deliberately between opening moves that draw out the other party and closing moves that absorb without telegraphing — to control information flow during live conversation.
Guiguzi (~4th century BC) identified that continuous speech prevents hearing and continuous concealment produces no information — effective dialogue requires cycling between the two modes. This principle recurs independently across modern evidence-based practice: FBI hostage negotiators (Voss, 2016) use tactical silence after emotional labeling to let counterparts fill the void and reveal underlying concerns. Carl Rogers' active listening research (1951) demonstrated that suspending speech to genuinely absorb a speaker's position produces significantly more disclosure than question-asking alone. Harvard PON's active listening protocol formalizes the same rhythm. The core insight — that information asymmetry in dialogue is governed by who speaks and who withholds — is consistent across traditions.
Distinct from apply-probe-strategy: apply-probe-strategy designs pre-dialogue investigative sequences before entering a conversation. apply-open-close-dialogue governs the real-time rhythm of speaking and silence during a live exchange.
Adopted by: FBI hostage negotiators (Voss's tactical silence and emotional labeling methodology); Harvard PON active listening protocol (formalized in negotiation training programs globally); Carl Rogers' person-centered therapy practitioners and motivational interviewing practitioners.
Impact: Carl Rogers' active listening research (1951) demonstrated that suspending speech to genuinely absorb a speaker's position produces significantly more disclosure than question-asking alone; Voss documented that deliberate post-label silence consistently caused counterparts to volunteer underlying concerns and constraints they had not disclosed under direct questioning.
Classify each dialogue move before you make it. Every contribution is either opening (you speak, disclose, ask, react) or closing (you go silent, withhold reaction, defer response). Choose which mode you're entering before acting.
Open to draw out. Make one revealing move — disclose a term, ask a genuine question, share a concern — then stop completely. Do not elaborate, justify, or fill silence. The opening move creates a void the other party feels compelled to fill.
Close to absorb. After the other party responds, close before responding yourself. Receive the full response. Note what they volunteer beyond the direct answer — emotional register, qualifiers, what they avoid. Do not react visibly.
Hold the close through discomfort. Silence past the point of social comfort produces the most disclosure. Most people cannot tolerate extended silence and will continue speaking, often revealing more than they intended. Maintain closing mode until the other party has fully stopped.
Respond from what you absorbed, not from what you planned. Your next opening move should incorporate what the close revealed. If they revealed a concern you didn't know about, address it. If they revealed a constraint, adjust your position accordingly.
Track the rhythm across the full dialogue. A dialogue where you have been exclusively opening (speaking, disclosing, reacting) for more than three consecutive exchanges has handed information control to the other party. Deliberately shift to closing mode to rebalance.
Close after your own key disclosure. When you make a significant disclosure or offer, close immediately afterward. Do not explain, qualify, or soften it. Let the disclosure land and observe the unfiltered reaction.
Negotiation: State a price, then go completely silent. The counterpart will respond, justify, counter, or reveal their constraints — often volunteering their actual ceiling or deadline before you say another word.
Sales: Ask "What's driving the timeline on this decision?" then say nothing — not even filler affirmations. The answer will reveal the real urgency (or lack of it).
Executive conversation: Share a strategic concern and stop talking. Observe whether the other party validates, deflects, or expands. Expansion reveals aligned interest; deflection reveals a gap; validation reveals they already know the problem.
Competitive intelligence: Share a genuine piece of information about your own situation, then close. The norm of reciprocity causes most people to share something equivalent — what they share reveals their actual priorities.