Bad Boss Survival Guide
You're not on trial. Stop defending every decision like you need permission to exist. There's a critical difference between over-explaining and informing. One signals insecurity and hands a toxic boss ammunition. The other projects competence and shuts the door on scrutiny. This episode breaks down the shift and shows you exactly how to make it. When you over-explain, every extra word becomes an opening - a reason to question your judgment, pick apart your logic, or invent a problem that didn't exist. Informing flips that. You state what's happening, give a brief why if it's needed, and move forward. Signs you're over-explaining: * Justifying routine decisions * Apologizing for normal work processes * Volunteering excessive detail nobody asked for * Defending yourself before anyone objects * Long emails when two lines would do In this episode: * The psychology behind why we over-explain at work * How to shift from explaining to informing * Confident phrases that hold their ground * When explanation actually IS appropriate * Email strategies for chronic over-explainers * How to handle the guilt of being brief * What to say when a boss demands more Over-explaining vs. informing, side by side: OVER-EXPLAINING: "I'm so sorry, but I can't stay late tonight because I have a doctor's appointment I scheduled weeks ago and it's really important and I tried to reschedule..." INFORMING: "I have an appointment at 5pm, so I'll be leaving on time." OVER-EXPLAINING: "I decided to approach it this way because I thought about the other options and they seemed problematic for these seven reasons..." INFORMING: "I approached it this way because it's most efficient for our timeline." The framework is simple: state what, state why (briefly), move forward. No apologies for existing. No anticipating objections. No inviting scrutiny. Here's why it works. Toxic bosses respect confidence more than compliance. Inform instead of explain and you project competence, cut off opportunities for criticism, set professional boundaries, and control the narrative. You'll feel rude at first. But it's not. Being brief isn't rude - it's professional. If they need more, they'll ask. ☕ Support the show: https://donate.stripe.com/6oUaEX31FcHI1Rj9pJ1gs04 [https://donate.stripe.com/6oUaEX31FcHI1Rj9pJ1gs04] 📬 Need one-on-one help with a bad boss? Reach me at badbossguide@gmail.com [badbossguide@gmail.com] ❤️ Get more on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman [https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman] 👉 SUBSCRIBE for more communication strategies that shift power dynamics at work. 💬 Do you do this? How did you break the habit? Let others know in the comments below. State. Inform. Move on. #OverExplaining #ToxicBoss #CommunicationSkills #AssertiveCommunication #ToxicWorkplace #ProfessionalCommunication #CareerAdvice #ConfidentCommunication #WorkplaceBoundaries #ToxicManager #ProfessionalDevelopment #EmailEtiquette #WorkplaceStrategy #CareerTips #SelfConfidence
11 episoder
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