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    Home»Business»How to speak with authority
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    How to speak with authority

    December 7, 20255 Mins Read
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    A meeting drags on. People are talking, but no one is saying the thing that needs to be said. Direction is unclear, the energy dips, and everyone is waiting for someone to speak with authority.

    When you finally do speak, the words come out softer than you intended:

    –   “Maybe we should consider . . .”

    –   “I think it might be good if . . .”

    –   “Sorry to interrupt, but . . .”

    One of the biggest challenges leaders face isn’t just what they decide, it’s how they communicate it. Clarity, confidence, and authority are what set the tone for the room.

    If you tend to soften your tone or worry about sounding pushy, being more direct can feel uncomfortable. I coach leaders through this all the time, and here’s what they learn quickly: Directive leadership isn’t about being harsh. It’s about being clear. And clarity is what builds trust, drives ownership, and gets results without raising your voice.

    Your words signal your authority or they undermine it.

    From Apologetic to Authoritative

    One of my clients, a senior director at a biotech firm in South San Francisco, was brilliant, respected, and deeply collaborative. But she had one blind spot: Her communication was consistently too soft. Her requests sounded tentative, her decisions felt optional, and her team often left meetings unclear on priorities.

    She told me, “I know what I want to say, but in the moment, I don’t want to sound demanding.” In one meeting, a project was slipping. She needed to make a call. Instead, she said, “Maybe we could try moving the deadline? I’m not sure, what do you think?”

    The team debated for 15 minutes with no direction.

    We worked on one shift: aligning her language with the authority she already had. Not louder. Not more forceful. Just clearer.

    Two weeks later, when another deliverable slipped, she said, “This is a priority. We’re keeping the original deadline. I need everyone aligned.” The room settled. People nodded. The project got back on track.

    Afterward she told me, “It felt clear, decisive, and grounded. I felt in command rather than trying to keep the peace. This is what leadership is supposed to feel like.”

    What the Best Leaders Do Differently

    Think about the leaders who command respect in your organization. Listen to how they speak.

    –   They don’t hedge.

    –   They don’t apologize for having an opinion.

    –   They say what they mean.

    And here’s the part many leaders get wrong: This isn’t about personality. A significant number of the leaders I coach are introverts. They’re thoughtful, measured, and often worried about coming across as too direct. But directive communication doesn’t change who they are. It simply changes how clearly the room understands them.

    Ready-to-Use Leadership Language

    If being directive doesn’t come naturally, you need the actual words you can use in real situations.

    Set clear expectations

    • “I need you to . . .”
    • “This is a priority. Please focus here first.”
    • “This needs to be done by Friday. Let me know if there’s a barrier.”

    Give direction confidently

    • “Here’s the plan we’re moving forward with.”
    • “I’ve decided we’ll handle it this way.”
    • “I’m asking you to take the lead on this.”

    Own your authority respectfully

    • “I’m making this call.”
    • “Let me be direct . . .”
    • “I’m accountable for this outcome, and I need your partnership.”

    Hold people accountable

    • “This didn’t meet our standard. Let’s discuss how to improve.”
    • “What we agreed on didn’t happen. Let’s get back on track.”
    • “We missed the mark here. How do you plan to fix it?”

    Notice what’s missing from all of these: apologies, hedging, and room for endless debate.

    The Leadership Mindset Shift

    These aren’t just communication techniques. They reflect a deeper shift in how you see your leadership role. You’re moving from:

    • Seeking permission → Providing direction
    • Hoping for consensus → Making decisions
    • Avoiding discomfort → Addressing issues directly

    Clarity gives your leadership weight. Your team doesn’t need you to be louder. They need you to be clearer. They don’t need you to wait your turn. They need you to step forward when direction is required.

    Put It Into Practice

    Pick three phrases from the lists above that match what you’re dealing with right now: an unclear deadline, a drifting project, or a team member who needs firmer expectations.

    Then choose one upcoming situation where you tend to get soft. Prepare your words in advance. Practice them out loud once or twice. Then use them in the moment.

    The shift is immediate. People stop debating. They start executing. And you feel the difference between managing the conversation and leading it.

    Because when you speak with clarity and authority, people don’t just listen, they follow.




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