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Beyond Technology: How Christine Miles Teaches the Human Skill AI Can’t Replace

Beyond Technology: How Christine Miles Teaches the Human Skill AI Can’t Replace
Photo Courtesy: Christine Miles / EQuipt

By: Elena Carter

Christine Miles grew up in a household where her mother’s mental illness made her aware of the importance of understanding what is happening below the surface. “While my friends were learning to speak up, I was learning to shine a light on others through listening to understand,” she recalls.

But fine-tuning her ability to listen allowed Miles to understand the deep fears, needs, and hopes beneath the words. And decades later, listening remains the foundation of her life’s work and a sought-after solution to tech overload.

Miles is the founder and CEO of EQuipt, a Wayne, Pennsylvania-based training company, whose services have become a go-to resource for Fortune 100 companies and educational organizations seeking to restore human connection in an increasingly tech-driven world.

As a consultant, she watches executives struggle daily through meetings plagued by miscommunication, where brilliant people talk past each other. Over time, Miles has seen the problem expand to a point where she says, “There’s an invisible problem hiding in plain sight,  misunderstandings are everywhere.”

The $62 Billion Communication Crisis

Miles’ work offers a direct response to the great paradox of our digital age. The more connected we become through technology, the less we truly understand each other.

In the constant presence of digital distractions, our collective inability to listen has become a crisis costing U.S. businesses an estimated $62 billion annually in lost productivity, missed opportunities, and employee turnover.

Miles explains, “It isn’t what people say that creates the issues, it’s what they aren’t hearing or understanding about what’s being said.”

Enter artificial intelligence. While tech advances promise to handle more of our routine communications, they also threaten to erode our human connection skills further. While AI can process language, analyze sentiment, and generate responses, it cannot replicate the profound human experience of feeling truly heard and understood.

“AI brings incredible efficiency,” Miles notes. “But relationships aren’t built on efficiency. They’re built on empathy, presence, and the irreplaceable human ability to make someone feel understood.”

Award-Winning Solution Gains Ground Globally

In response to this communication crisis, Miles wrote a book, What Is It Costing You Not to Listen?, which received the Axiom Business Book Awards’ Silver Medal in 2022.

Her work with Fortune 100 companies, including SAP, McCain Foods, Harmony Biosciences, Brewer Science, and Keck Medical, brought measurable improvements in team collaboration, employee engagement, and customer satisfaction. At Rowan University, where Miles serves on the advisory board for the Rohrer College of Business, listening intelligence has been woven into the leadership education curricula.

She also developed The Listening Path®, a systematic approach to teaching listening skills. Unlike traditional communication training that focuses on speaking techniques, The Listening Path gives people the tools to create what Miles calls “spotlight moments”—interactions where the other person feels genuinely seen, fully heard, and completely understood.

The Listening Path Elementary Program was nominated for the prestigious Mom’s Choice® Award, and is currently being implemented in more than 20 schools across the United States, Canada, and Ireland. And a high-school version is forthcoming.

A Systematic Approach to Human Connection

Miles helps her clients build listening skills through three core actions:

  • Shine a Light on Their Story: Instead of waiting for your turn to speak, focus entirely on bringing the other person’s narrative to the forefront.
  • Seek Understanding, Not Agreement: Effective listening requires communicating that you genuinely comprehend their perspective, needs, and feelings.
  • Replace “I Understand” with “Do I Get You?”: This three-word phrase, framed as a question, opens the door for clarification and demonstrates authentic willingness to learn.

These actions are strategic tools Miles designed to “unlock innovation, prevent costly mistakes, and build the trust that high-performing teams require.”

The Future of Human Skills

As AI continues to reshape the workplace, Miles believes we’re approaching an inflection point where uniquely human capabilities become more valuable.

“Every job that can be automated will be,” she predicts. “But the jobs that remain will require deeper human connection, creative collaboration, and emotional intelligence. The leaders who thrive will be those who can make others feel genuinely heard and understood.”

Her high school program, launching this fall, represents the next step in that vision.

“We’re teaching kids to use tech, which is essential,” she says. “But we’re not teaching them to connect with other human beings truly. As AI handles more of our routine tasks, that connection becomes our distinctive advantage.”

Building a Legacy, One Listener at a Time

Miles earned recognition as Enterprising Women Magazine’s 2023 Enterprising Women of the Year. But her excellent satisfaction comes from witnessing transformation in action.

“I’ve seen engineers become inspiring leaders, teachers transform chaotic classrooms into collaborative communities, and families rebuild relationships they thought were broken,” she reflects. “Everything changes when we shine a light and truly listen.”

Miles views listening as the essential human skill for the future. Her mission extends beyond corporate training to a fundamental reimagining of how we prepare people for an AI-integrated world.

“Technology will handle the data,” she concludes. “But humans will always need to handle each other. The question is, are we going to do it well?”

For organizations navigating technological efficiency and human connection, Miles offers clear guidance: master the one skill that makes everything else possible.

To learn more about Christine Miles and The Listening Path, visit thelisteningpath.com.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of EQuipt, its partners, or affiliated organizations. All content is for informational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional advice or guidance. Individual results may vary, and the experiences described are specific to Christine Miles and her clients. Readers should exercise discretion and consult with relevant professionals before making any decisions regarding communication training or personal development.

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