It’s more than just dealing with toxic people.
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Some people think that speaking up is about defending themselves from toxic and rude people or saying no to other people’s requests. They imagine speaking up as this epic and loud confrontation that ends in bloody breakups and forever enemies that never speak again.
The reality is that speaking up is important for most interactions with other people where there is a purpose for that interaction.
For example, a random chit chat about the weekend that has no clear outcome doesn’t require you to speak up.
But if you want something out of that interaction, if you have a clear purpose, then you are in speaking up territory, you are deliberate and on a positive mission.
Sometimes the purpose of speaking up is as complex as getting a promotion. But sometimes the purpose of speaking up is as simple as feeling heard and understood. That’s why speaking up is purpose driven. It is about expressing yourself to other people with an intention.
That’s why the more control you want to have over your own life and career and the faster you want to advance your goals, the more you need to speak up.
Here are 50 opportunities to speak up at work that will bring you closer to your dreams, to your desired lifestyle, and success.
- Share your perspective in a conversation
- Contribute in meetings
- Share your values to your team or in your company
- Disagree with your boss or a superior
- Ask for the opportunity you want
- Ask for the resources and training you want or need to be more successful
- Ask for the pay that you deserve
- Ask other people to change their behaviors
- Ask to take time off or use your vacation days
- Ask to leave early or come in later to better attend to your personal needs
- Ask for clarification when you don’t understand something
- Protect your time and energy
- Say no to unreasonable requests
- Get your boss to stop micromanaging you
- Get your rude colleague to stop saying bad things about you to others by email
- Fight for what you believe
- Refuse to be silenced
- Tell people to back off politely
- Politely deal with people who interrupt you
- Interrupt others in a respectful way
- Handle credit stealing
- Give people candid feedback without hurting their feelings
- Share honest praise
- Receive compliments in a way that makes people want to give you more
- Express appreciation
- Reach out to your networks
- Show others what you’ve accomplished
- Share your vision
- Get other people’s buy in for your idea
- Express your expectations to others
- Better understand other people’s feedback
- Stand up for others
- Stand up for yourself
- Help promote someone else
- Protect and amplify your power
- Negotiate for what you want
- Find a mentor or sponsor
- Get yourself into the meeting you want to be in
- Get the appreciation you deserve
- Build rapport and deepen connections with people
- Get people to respect you
- Get people to take you seriously
- Negotiate better pay or working conditions
- Fight for your team’s growth and safety
- Bring joy to the hard conversation
- Put people at ease in an uncomfortable conversation
- Push people to be better and more productive in a motivating way
- Make people feel heard and valued while still getting your point across
- Share your elevator pitch when networking
- Ask for an introduction
What you have to say is valuable, important, and meaningful, no matter your status, title, or age. Your speaking up voice will help protect what is important to you, resolve conflict, achieve greater things, have better relationships, and find lasting happiness.
Make speaking up a part of your daily life. Make it a proactive step rather than just a reactive defense. And get comfortable and good at speaking up for massive confidence in your ability to lead the life of your dreams.
Assertive communication is a skill that helps you speak up in a respectful and effective way. Start to learn assertive communication today by taking this free crash course on how to be assertive without being rude here.
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“Speak your truth, even if your voice shakes.” – Maggie Kuhn