Think Fast Talk Smart: Communication Techniques

296. AMA: Speaking Out, Staying Grounded, and Managing Up

15 min
Jun 11, 2026about 1 month ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Matt Abrahams answers audience questions about effective communication techniques, including how to insert your point of view in busy meetings through wedging strategies, managing emotions while listening, and giving constructive feedback to demanding superiors without damaging workplace relationships.

Insights
  • Wedging techniques (questions, paraphrasing, emotion) allow professionals to insert viewpoints into conversations without appearing aggressive or rude
  • Acknowledging emotions without naming them prevents escalation and allows better listening and communication
  • Rewarding positive behaviors in superiors is more effective than direct criticism for changing leadership patterns
  • Framing feedback from personal needs rather than criticism increases receptiveness from authority figures
  • Psychological distancing and grounding techniques help manage emotional interference during important conversations
Trends
Growing emphasis on emotional intelligence in workplace communication and leadership effectivenessShift toward collaborative meeting cultures where diverse perspectives are actively solicitedIncreased focus on psychological safety and non-judgmental communication in professional settingsRising adoption of coaching and communication training as core professional developmentIntegration of mindfulness and grounding techniques into business communication best practices
Topics
Meeting participation and speaking up strategiesWedging comments into conversationsEmotional regulation during communicationActive listening techniquesFeedback delivery to superiorsManaging up and navigating power dynamicsPsychological distancing and mindfulnessParaphrasing as communication techniqueLeadership behavior reinforcementWorkplace emotional intelligence
Companies
Strawberry.me
Sponsor offering accessible, affordable coaching services with 50% discount for first session
Squarespace
Sponsor providing website building and online presence tools for professionals and creators
Stanford Graduate School of Business
Institution where Matt Abrahams teaches strategic communication
People
Matt Abrahams
Host and instructor of strategic communication who answers audience questions about communication techniques
Quotes
"I call this actually wedging. We want to make sure that we wedge our point of view into the conversation, but we want to do so in a timely manner."
Matt AbrahamsEarly in episode
"This is bringing up a lot for me. I want to take a moment or two of a break or let's reschedule the meeting or let me come back to you in a little bit."
Matt AbrahamsMid-episode
"A manager's job, a boss's job is to be in service of you to help you in some way help them achieve their goals, the group's goals, et cetera."
Matt AbrahamsLate in episode
"Growth shouldn't depend on whether you happen to have access to the right mentor or organization. Everyone deserves support and becoming more effective, more thoughtful, and more confident in how they show up."
Matt AbrahamsSponsor segment
Full Transcript
Hi, Matt here. I wanted to remind you that for each episode, we provide English language learning support where we share useful information to help you develop your English skills. Check out these English language learning and other resources along with our newsletter and deep dive videos at fastersmarter.io under resources. Now a word from our sponsors. Their support covers the cost of production, allowing us to bring you this episode free of charge. Strawberry.me makes coaching accessible, affordable, and global, connecting you with a coach who's the right fit for you. I've had the privilege of working with some truly great coaches. And I've also spent many years coaching others. And I can tell you firsthand, coaching makes a real difference. The challenge is that coaching has often felt out of reach for a lot of people. It can be expensive, difficult to access, or something people assume is only for senior executives. That's why I really appreciate what Strawberry.me is doing. Growth shouldn't depend on whether you happen to have access to the right mentor or organization. Everyone deserves support and becoming more effective, more thoughtful, and more confident in how they show up. Visit Strawberry.me slash smart and take 50% off your first session. Make sure you let them know Matt sent you that Strawberry.me slash smart. And now back to our conversation. Getting your voice heard is hard. My name is Matt Abrahams, and I teach strategic communication at Stanford Graduate School of Business. Welcome to this quick thanks Ask Matt Anything episode of Think Fast, Talk Smart, the podcast. I recently held another AMA in our Think Fast, Talk Smart Learning community. As usual, it was lively and fun. Listen in as I answer questions about wedging comments into conversations, giving feedback to a superior and much more. Well, hello, everybody. Thank you for joining me for this month's Ask Matt Anything AMA, and I love to see all the questions that are coming in, so let's jump right into it. I have a question here that's asking, I have something to say in a meeting, but there's so much going on all at once. How do I get my point in? How do I insert my point of view? And this can be very interesting. I totally understand. I call this actually wedging. We want to make sure that we wedge our point of view into the conversation, but we want to do so in a timely manner. I know I've been there thinking about, how do I say what I want to say, and then the conversation has moved beyond my contribution. So we do really need to get in and get in quick, but how do we do it so we don't look overly assertive or rude? To my mind, there are really three ways to do this, and I hope one of you has heard of it. There are three ways to do this, and I hope one of these three ways will help you. First, you can ask a question. So as the conversation is going along, and you want to insert your point of view, lead with a question. I'm curious, how would we, or I'm curious, what does this mean? So a question is a great way to initially wedge. A second way to wedge, and any of you who've listened to me know, I'm a big fan of paraphrasing. Take some key concept that somebody has mentioned, name it, and then, of your contribution. So imagine you're in the midst of a meeting where people are talking about expenses and finances. You might say, cost is really important, and in fact, one element is. So by labeling cost, you are summarizing what you have just heard, and then you add your point to it. So in addition to leveraging questions, you can also use paraphrasing to get your point of view in. Finally, you can lead with an emotion. You can say something like, what I'm concerned about, or that's very exciting. When people hear an emotion, they'll stop, and they want to hear more. So you have questions, paraphrasing, and emotion as a way to lead. Now, you need to know what you want to say before you wedge your comment in, and a great way to do that, or at least the way I do it, is I'll say to myself the bottom line of what I want to say is. So before I wedge my content into the conversation, I'm thinking about what is the specifics I want to say. So I am ready to go. If I jump in and I'm wandering and meandering, one, it'll be disappointing to everybody, and perhaps confusing, and it might set me up for the next time I want to do that in a position or way I don't want it to be. So take the time to use one of these wedging techniques. I hope that helps, and thank you for the question. That was a very useful question. Another question that came in is actually about listening, and you know that listening is very important, and very important to me, and the skill that I am still actively working on. And the question is, what do you do when you get emotional about what's being sad, either excited, concerned, upset, sad, and yet you need to listen? Well, first and foremost, acknowledge and allow those emotions to come. A lot of the times, if this is a really important topic, we can be trying to quell those emotions or put them aside, and that's not good. The emotions are there and they're real, and you need to acknowledge them, but they can interfere. So a couple of things. One, if you find yourself getting very emotional, either positively or negatively, and you believe it's going to impact the interaction, the communication, the session, whatever you're doing, I believe what's really important to do is call it and just say, hey, this is bringing up a lot for me. You don't need to name your emotion because that might trigger or upset somebody else. Just say, this is bringing up a lot for me. I want to take a moment or two of a break or let's reschedule the meeting or let me come back to you in a little bit. So give yourself a little bit of space by just calling it without naming it. Similarly, by the way, and I'm going to come back to more about handling emotion, if somebody else is displaying emotion, you don't want to label their emotion. You don't want to say, oh, you seem frustrated, and they might say, oh, no, I'm not frustrated, I'm angry, and now they're even more angry. So instead of labeling the emotion, you can say that I can see this is bringing up a lot for you or I hear your passion or this clearly is concerning to you. So I'm acknowledging that I'm seeing the emotion, feeling that emotion from them, but I am not labeling it. All right, so what do you do again when you get emotional? So one is give yourself a little bit of space. That is call time out or take some distance. The other thing you can do is psychologically distance yourself. And this comes from the work in mindfulness. Many of you have heard of mindfulness, several of you probably studied mindfulness, but this notion of acknowledging the emotion you're feeling. So you might say, this is me feeling frustrated or this is me feeling excited. And in so doing, you give yourself a little bit of psychological distance where you can then act upon it. So rather than getting swept away with the emotion, when you say, hey, this is me feeling this way, that can help as well. And then finally, get into your body. So in that moment where you're starting to feel upset, excited, concerned, whatever it is, feel the ground with your feet, touch an object, I'm touching the desk in front of me. That can bring us back into our bodies and out of maybe that emotional spinning that's happening. So it brings us back into the present and certainly deep breathing can help. So very common to have emotion play out in our communication. And when we're trying to listen and listen well, it can be an interference. It's a form of noise that can get in the way. That said, there are things we can do. We can acknowledge it, announce it and give ourselves a little bit of a pause. We can give ourselves distance by recognizing to ourselves, this is how I'm feeling. And we can ground ourselves. So those are ways to do it. Now, after the fact or even before the situation, I'm a big fan of journaling or speaking it out with a loved one or trusted other. So emotion doesn't enlarge, it's part of being human. It serves a purpose, but you don't want it to interfere with the communication you're having. We'll be right back to finish our conversation, but first a quick word from one of our sponsors. Their support allows us to bring you this show free of charge. This episode is sponsored by Squarespace. One lesson I've learned from years of teaching communication is that expertise alone isn't enough. People need a way to discover your ideas, understand your work and engage with what you have to offer. Effective communication doesn't end when the conversation is over. People need a place to learn more, explore your work and stay connected with what you're creating. Squarespace makes it easy to build a professional online presence that reflects who you are. Their design tools make it simple to create a website that looks polished and professional without needing technical expertise. And if you create courses, premium content or memberships, Squarespace gives you ways to offer that directly through your site. Head to squarespace.com slash TFTS for a free trial. And when you're ready to launch, use code TFTS to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain. If you enjoyed my recent conversation with Gene and Sherry from the Tiger Sisters podcast, I think you'll really love their show. They take big and sometimes complicated ideas around money, power and love and turn them into clear practical tools you can apply right away. Two fun facts. I coach Sherry for her TEDx talk and I had the chance to join them on their show. They ask great questions and bring a perspective you don't always hear. New episodes drop every Monday on their YouTube channel and across all audio platforms. And now back to our conversation. All right, I think this will be our last question. This question, I think we've all been in this situation. This person has a superior, a boss, who is not taking the time to listen or to consider other people, putting a lot of pressure on and really trying to drive initiative. How do you give feedback to a superior when they are your superior and they're really driving, driving, pushing, pushing their agenda? What can you do? Well, first and foremost, this is challenging, but unfortunately for many of us, common. And a few things I'd suggest. One, when you are trying to give feedback to a superior, a great approach is to reward the positive. So if, in fact, at some point, they demonstrate the behaviors that you are hoping for or at least not demonstrating the behaviors that you would prefer they not do, you can reward it. So after the fact, after the meeting, go up to the person, call the person, send them an email, whatever, just say, I was really appreciative of how we heard from everybody in the meeting this time. Or I really liked how we decided to act on whoever's idea. That was really cool and I think really helpful. So you're not saying, hey, it was great that you shut up and let somebody else do the work or gee, it was really fantastic that finally you didn't do this. No, you're just rewarding the positive. And many of us will hear that as leaders. We wanna be rewarded. It's nice to be rewarded. That kindergarten self of us likes the star for the day. So one way to deal with this situation is to look for the positive and reward it. Another way to do this is own it, own it from your perspective. So instead of saying you're doing this wrong or when you do this, it really causes this for me. Say I am somebody who needs this. It's really important for me when I do the work I do to consider as many options as possible. So I'm wondering if in our meetings we can hear other opinions or have lots of choices because that really helps me process and more deeply understand. A manager's job, a boss's job is to be in service of you to help you in some way help them achieve their goals, the group's goals, et cetera. So if you come to them with something that will help you help them or help the group, it should open up the door to at least them considering what you're saying. And finally, if those two ways don't work, I think you just have an honest conversation but I would start from saying, hey, it's been really helpful when you've given me some feedback on these things, be very specific. And I'm curious if you'd be open to me sharing something that I think could really help me and others. So it's an invitation for them to be open to your feedback. Don't just come in and say, gosh, it really frustrates me when you need to have these conversations. This kind of frustration can be really harmful for your own psyche. It can really ruin your motivation at work but a lot of stress and pressure. A great thing to do is practice this, find a trusted other, maybe even use an AI tool and just speak it out. The coach AI tool is great for this purpose. In fact, this is one of its major use cases, is to talk to it, say, this is the situation, here's what I'm thinking of saying and have it play back for you. Well, these have been really great questions in our Ask Matt Anything AMA. Thank you to all of you who joined. There were many other questions. I certainly will be responding to them in some way, but thank you for taking the time. Thank you for being part of the learning community. And I really look forward to hearing how you do in these very challenging communication situations. So with that, have a great day. I look forward to seeing you in our upcoming author talk as well as some of our upcoming quests. Thank you so much. Thank you for joining us for another Quick Thinks AMA episode of Think Fast, Talk Smart, the podcast. To learn more on a variety of communication topics, check out our extensive back catalog of episodes on your favorite player or at fastersmarter.io. This episode was produced by Katherine Reed, Ryan Campos, and me, Matt Ibrahims. Our music is from Floyd Wonder, with special thanks to the Podium Podcast Company. Please find us on YouTube and wherever you get your podcasts. Be sure to subscribe and rate us. Also follow us on LinkedIn, TikTok, and Instagram. To join us for our next AMA, please consider joining our learning community, where you will also get video lessons, learning quests, book talks, and my AI coach. Sign up at fastersmarter.io slash learning. Before we wrap up, I just wanna say thank you for listening. It really means a lot to hear how people all over the world are using these ideas in their own lives. It inspires me and the whole team that brings you this show. If you want more episodes and resources, feel free to follow, subscribe, and explore past conversations. We're grateful for your support of Think Fast, Talk Smart.