Stop making excuses.
Stop justifying.
Stop proving you’re right.
Stop proving they’re wrong.
Ask for what you want.
Avoid Adversarial Energy
Many requests come from dissatisfaction. Stop complaining before asking for something. You can’t antagonize and influence at the same time.
A complaint is not a request. Don’t create an adversarial relationship with the person you hope will say yes.
A clear ask beats a long explanation.
- State your purpose.
- Show respect.
- Make a specific ask.
- Avoid ambiguity. (Don’t ask for “support.” Define it.)
Use Frustration
Angry people know what they don’t want—but often can’t say what they do want. Frustration motivates action. Positive intent channels it.
If you’re frustrated, pause. Clarify the positive outcome you’re after.
How to Ask for What You Want
- Describe the goal: What outcome are you seeking?
- Reinforce alignment: “I’m committed to our team and organization.”
- Lower the heat: “I’ll support your decision, even if I wish it were different.”
- Keep it simple: Ask with one short question.
An Ask is a Question
“I would like you to…” is a statement.
“Would you consider…” is a request.
“I’d like your approval to…” is a request.
“I need you to…” is a statement.
Avoid “shoulding” on people.
“The boss should…” is fantasy.
“Would you…” is asking for what you want.
What do you wish people wouldn’t do when they ask for what they want?
How do you ask for what you want?
How Identity is Influence – Leadership Freak
https://www.indeed.com/career-advice/career-development/how-to-ask-your-boss-for-something
