Monday, May 25, 2020
Say No But Dont Take No - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Say No But Dont Take No - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Be able to say âno,â but donât take ânoâ for the answer. First, understand that ânoâ is the standard answer or response from peers, bosses, and subordinates to test or challenge you, sometimes out of laziness, sometimes for reasons of budget and time. âNoâ is a complete sentence, but it isnât a complete answer. Donât take it as a matter of course if you believe that it could, or should, be otherwise. âNoâ doesnât always mean âno,â nor do nada, nein, nyet, not now, not ever, no way, negative, never ever, not as long as I live, over my dead body, not even if hell freezes over, not only no but hell no. More often than not it means, âmaybeâ or âIâm not sure.â Unless you come back and fight for it, your opponents figured they were right. So take ânoâ and go on. If you ask for something and are told âno,â accept it; then ask for something different: âCan you donate $500 million to the new college of business building?â âNo.â âCan you buy two tickets for the fundraiser next month?â âWell, sure.â The above example is not âapples and applesâ, I know. Still, taking ânoâ is acceptable for some people, but it doesnât have to be for you. If you get âno,â figure the person you are speaking with just didnât understand and you have to explain another way. My point is to keep trying, without being tedious, without just giving up. Ask 3 (or 13) times and in 3 (or 13) different ways before you even consider giving up. When people learn that you only redouble your efforts when you are told âno,â you will get them trained to just saying âyesâ right away.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.