Assertiveness - Overcome Conversation Power Plays

Assertiveness – Overcome Conversation Power Plays

When you know you are supposed to “just shut up and listen,” and you really want to get your point across, you have options.

How should you deal with Conversation Power Plays?

Assertiveness – Five Steps to Success

When you know you are supposed to “just shut up and listen,” and you really want to get your point across, you have options.

Follow these steps to reclaim your own power.

You know how frustrated you feel when you’re in a one-sided conversation, you have something important to say, and you just can’t seem to get through.

Overcome Conversation Power Plays

In conversation power plays, it is assumed that if someone can successfully avoid responding to you, then they win.

You are supposed to fold your tent and silently steal away, the modern equivalent of just shut up and listen and act as if the most powerful person is in control.

If you stay quiet, you agree and she wins.

But…You don’t have to be a loser.

Assertiveness Techniques

Instead of just fantasising about violence or giving up in disgust, use these steps.

1. Repeat yourself

Yes, the first conversation power play step is that simple, just repeat the words that were ignored before.

If you don’t get a response…

2. Answer whatever they have said, briefly

Then immediately say

“And I just said…” and repeat yourself again.

If he doesn’t respond yet and goes on with his original point…

3. Feedback What They Have Just Said

Feedback exactly what they have just said using these words.

“I understand that you (want, believe, intend) to (repeat his point). What I don’t understand is how that relates to ….” Now repeat your original point again.

Still no response?

4. Up the Assertiveness Pressure

Up the assertiveness pressure again by commenting on the conversation.

“I have said this 3 times, and you are acting as if you have not heard me at all.”

Now, depending on your objective, you have two more conversation power play ploys to try. Here are two possibilities.

5a. Cooperation

If your objective is to get cooperation, say this:

“I need your view (or response to what I told you) in order to help you accomplish (a mutual objective).”

or

5b. Defuse the Situation

If you want to defuse the situation and allow him to save face while you de-escalate the power struggle you can assume the blame for the uncomfortable conversation.

“I’m sorry, I must not have communicated clearly about….”

Frequently a power play will be stopped at step one or two.

You can go to step 5 a or b, at any time, in order to refocus the conversation.

This article was contributed by Laurie Weiss, Ph.D., author of Dare To Say It!

Assertiveness – Overcome Conversation Power Plays

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