
State the Situation and Behavior precisely, then describe Impact with neutral language. Add a curiosity bridge: ask what they noticed, intended, or would change. This prevents lecturing and surfaces context you may have missed. In role-play, time-box your opening to ninety seconds, then listen without interruption. Practice summarizing what you heard before proposing adjustments. This small discipline reduces misalignment and earns the trust needed to move from observation to agreement.

Describe the issue, Express its effect, Specify what you need, and outline Consequences for follow-through or continued gaps. Keep it behavioral and time-bound. In rehearsal, test different wordings to sound firm without hostility. Pair DESC with written follow-up that lists deliverables, owners, and dates. Practice asking for the other person’s proposed path first, then integrate your non-negotiables. This balances autonomy with accountability, increasing the odds that commitments become real change.

Observe facts, name feelings responsibly, clarify needs, and make a clear request. Avoid passive-aggressive hedges that blur accountability. In practice, emphasize warmth and specificity simultaneously, such as acknowledging effort while confronting repeated misses. Rehearse statements that respect dignity and plainly protect standards. For instance, appreciate late-night work while stating that quality failures still require a reset. This honest blend supports psychological safety while keeping your bar clear, fair, and achievable.
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