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One week before the application you have been working on is to be
delivered, your client asks you to make a small change to a drop down
menu. He knows there isn't time to process the change through change
management so asks you to bypass it. You try to reason with him that a
last minute change is a bad idea. But he insists the change is
important to the business and it would mean a lot to him personally.
You want to please him so you say yes.
Do you have a pattern of saying yes to requests when you would like
to say no? What's the secret to saying no and making it stick?
The secret is practice.
People who are uncomfortable saying yes but say it anyway are stuck
in the familiar. Practice created the familiarity. They have repeatedly
stuffed their feelings and said yes when they would have liked to have
said no.
It doesn't have to be this way. Communication is a skill. By
practicing anyone can become familiar with saying no and enjoy the
comfort of acting on your thoughts and feelings, which you have learned
to repress.
Let's assume you have this problem of saying yes rather than saying no, which is what you want to say.
I suggest the following steps:
First, center yourself.
Put yourself in the process: Explore your thoughts and feeling about
the issue. Use them to decide whether saying no is the appropriate
answer. If it is, continue with the next steps. Otherwise, say yes and
mean it.
Second, sincerely empathize with the other person's desires.
For instance, for the client who wants you to bypass the change
management system, find out what the client sees as the benefit of
taking that action. Empathize by saying, "Making that change would make
it easier for Jane to navigate through the new use case." or whatever
fits the situation.
Third, say no without equivocation.
For instance, say to the client, "No, I won't change the application without using the change management system."
Fourth, don't explain why you said no. It's non-negotiable.
For instance, if you followed the no in the example in step 3 with
an explanation about why change management is important. You are
opening an opportunity for the client to argue that the benefits to the
business and themselves trump the benefits of the change management
system. Don't offer the person any hope of you changing your mind. That
action will make your no stick.
Fifth, repeat the steps 2 through 4 to whatever objections you hear.
People like to negotiate. You can listen and empathize. But stay on
your message. It won't take long for the other person to realize it's a
non-negotiable answer.
Expect difficulties with your delivery the first dozen times you say
no. You will be in unfamiliar territory. Ask a friend to role play the
situation with you so you can practice your delivery.
Expect that your delivery may sound blaming as you overcompensate
for your earlier placating communication. Don't worry. It's part of the
change process. Your communication will become congruent as you gain
more skill at saying no.
Expect people who know you to be surprised when you say no. It's
something they haven't heard from you. You are behaving differently.
They will be unfamiliar with the new you. They will adapt to the new
you and so will you.
You can learn to say no. Practice. Develop this skill and discover
an unexpected benefit -- when you say yes, that answer will have more
meaning than it did before.
©2007 Steven M Smith
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