Lousy bosses use pressure tactics and call it leadership. They disguise manipulation as motivation.
Pressure tactics are self-serving strategies used to get what you want.
Pressure Tactics Sound Like
- “I’m pushing you because I believe in you.”
- “This is a chance to prove yourself. Get it to me by Friday.”
- “You’re the only one I trust with this.”
- “You’re too valuable to promote.”
- “Let me help you think this through.” (Translation: Do it my way.)
- “This will open doors for you.”
- “We all make sacrifices.”
13 Pressure Tactics to Watch For
- Flattery – Praise with strings attached.
- Social Proof – “Everyone else is on board.”
- Loyalty Leverage – “I’ve done a lot for you.”
- Fake Input – “What do you think?” (While guiding the answer.)
- Urgency – “This offer expires tomorrow.”
- Pulling Rank – “Here’s what I think… what about you?”
- Guilt Trips – “Don’t let me down.”
- Gaslighting – “You’re the only one who has an issue.”
- Veiled Threats – “I’d hate for this to affect your future.”
- Favoritism – “You’re our most important person.”
- Toxic Positivity – “Everything’s great. No complaints.”
- Policy Shields – “It’s company policy.”
- Repetition – Say it often enough and it feels true.
7 Ways to Respond to Pressure Tactics
#1. Recognize: Notice when you feel pressure. Naming is one step toward overcoming.
#2. Slow Down: Artificial urgency is the mother of bad decisions.
#3. Explore: “What are the other options?”
#4. Restate: “I just want to be clear. So you’re saying I could get fired if I don’t do this. Is that right?”
#5. Seek Mentorship: Secrecy gives pressure tactics power.
#6. Be Honest. “I need some time to think about this.” (Use “I” statements.)
#7. Prioritize. “Let’s talk about what’s most important.”
Make a Shift:
Inspiration touches hearts. Pressure tactics require authority. Fear is a short-term solution.
Energize people by helping them get where they want to go.
What pressure tactics have you seen leaders use?
7 Ways Manipulators Get What They Want
24 Ways to Challenge People Without being a Jerk-Hole
Manipulative vs. Persuasive Leadership
