Article

Before You Diminish Yourself: Leadership Conversation Checklist

Updated: 03/11/2026
Leadership/Culture
Nonprofit board leadership is essential during times of crisis.
Updated: 03/11/2026
Leadership/Culture

Headed into a conversation? Before you second-guess your worth, downplay your voice, or shrink in the moment—pause.

The beating heart of leadership, especially in fundraising, is not strategy. It’s connection. And connection begins with a real, human conversation.

Not a pitch. Not a performance.

A conversation: where thoughts, emotions, and truth are shared—and trust is built.

Where Conversations Go Awry

Here’s the hard truth: sometimes, without realizing it, we present ourselves in ways that quietly shut the door.

We default to habits that shrink our voice instead of amplifying it.

We make ourselves small.

We undermine our own influence before we’ve even begun.

If you want to be the kind of leader others lean in to—whose words invite trust and energy instead of uncertainty and dismissiveness—you need a better path forward.

That path starts with two essential steps: (1) reframing how you approach communication as a leader, and (2) using a clear, powerful checklist to guide every conversation. Let’s proceed!

1. Approach: Reframing Your Communications

We all want to come across as thoughtful, respectful, and open. But too often, in the name of humility or caution, we unintentionally shrink our voice. You can have the best message in the world, but if your delivery is uncertain, people will hear the uncertainty, not the message.

Here are three common traps that quietly undermine your presence—and how to begin shifting away from them.

1. Take care not to diminish yourself by hedging.

Hedging happens when you add unnecessary qualifiers or soften your statements to avoid seeming too direct. It’s meant to keep you safe, but it often has the opposite effect—signaling uncertainty or a lack of confidence.

Examples of hedging to avoid:

  • “I’m not an expert, but…”
  • “I may have this wrong, but here’s a thought…”
  • “This probably isn’t the best idea, but maybe we could…”
  • “I know you’re busier than I am.”

These phrases create distance between you and your message. Instead, say what you believe with clarity and intention. You can remain collaborative without compromising your presence.

Try instead:

  • “Here’s what I’m seeing.”
  • “I recommend we consider…”
  • “From my experience, this approach tends to work well.”

When your language apologizes for your presence, people assume you don’t believe in what you’re saying. By shrinking to avoid discomfort, you give away the influence you came to build.

2. Recognize when you’re channeling your inner critic.

Sometimes the person most undercutting your leadership isn’t across the table—it’s in your own head. We all have an inner critic who gets in our ear when we’re feeling unsure of ourselves, or simply guarding against appearing ego-centric or know-it-all.

Common ways this shows up:

  • “Sorry if this is off-base…”
  • “This may sound dumb, but…”
  • “You’ve probably already thought of this, but…”

The inner critic tries to protect you from judgment by judging you first. But in doing so, it keeps you small. Learning to notice and interrupt that voice is a leadership skill in itself.

Try instead:

Take a pause. Name the inner critic privately. Then speak from your wiser, more grounded voice—the one that says “You’ve got this!”

  • “Here’s an idea I’d like to explore.”
  • “I’ve been thinking about something that may be useful here.”

You have a valuable voice. Use it.

3. Don’t let “being nice” dilute your message.

There’s a difference between being kind and being conflict-avoidant. Many leaders, especially women and people from historically underrepresented groups, are taught, explicitly or not, that being “nice” means being soft, agreeable, and self-effacing.

But when you overcorrect for likability, you risk losing clarity. And people-pleasing mode can result in others trusting your reliability less.

Examples of over-niceness in communication:

  • “I totally understand if this isn’t what you were thinking…”
  • “I’m happy to go with whatever works best for everyone else…”
  • “I hope this isn’t asking too much…”

Being nice isn’t the problem. Leading with care, empathy, and respect is a gift. But when “nice” means burying your needs, ideas, or boundaries, it becomes a liability.

Try instead:

  • “Here’s what I need from this conversation.”
  • “I want to make sure we’re aligning before we move forward.”
  • “This may be a stretch ask, and it’s important.”

If you’re a fundraiser, what good is likability if it doesn’t translate into desired action responses?

Do you want folks thinking “Claire is so nice, so polite and so gracious.” Or would you prefer “Claire really knows her stuff. I always know she’ll support me and steer me in the right direction.” Or even “Sometimes Claire and I disagree, but she always gives me food for thought.”

Break Habits to Reclaim Your Leadership Voice

These patterns—hedging, self-critique, and performative niceness—aren’t signs of weakness. They’re signs of habit. And they’re habits you can unlearn.

By noticing them in the moment, and shifting toward clear, grounded language, you step more fully into your leadership. You speak not to impress or protect—but to connect.

Next: Let’s make this practical.

The Leadership Conversation Checklist will help you bring presence, clarity, and impact into every conversation—from one-on-ones to high-stakes meetings.

2. Checklist: Communicate More Powerfully

Whether you’re stepping into a donor meeting, leading a team check-in, or navigating a tough decision, your presence sets the tone. Use this checklist to help you “check in” with yourself, so you avoid undermining habits and lead with clarity, confidence, and connection.

Before the Conversation: Anchor Yourself

  • What’s the purpose of this conversation?
    Define your goal. What outcome matters most?
  • What do I know to be true or valuable here?
    Start from a place of grounded belief, not self-doubt.
  • Am I anticipating rejection, or preparing for connection?
    Notice your mindset. One invites openness, the other defensiveness.
  • Have I identified my inner critic’s voice?
    Name it so it doesn’t hijack the moment.
  • Do I trust the value I bring to this space?
    Say this out loud if needed: “I have earned my seat at this table.”

During the Conversation: Beware of “Shoot Yourself in the Foot” Language

Be aware of your words, tone, and energy.

  • Am I hedging or over-qualifying?
    Watch for shrinker phrases like “just,” “actually,” “almost,” and “maybe.” As in “I just think,” “Actually, I disagree,” “I almost want to suggest,” “Maybe we should.” Speak with intention.
  • Am I apologizing unnecessarily?
    Women, especially, have a tendency to say “sorry” for no good reason or for simply taking up space on the planet. Catch yourself whenever you say “Sorry to bother you but …” “Sorry if this is a silly question . . .”
  • Am I suggesting I’m incoherent?
    Questions like “Does that make sense?” “Am I being clear?” or “Do you know what I mean?” imply you’re difficult to understand. Replace them with “I look forward to hearing your thoughts,” or “Let me know if you have questions about this.”
  • Am I using undermining disclaimers?
    Simply say what you have to say. Eliminate qualifiers like “I’m just thinking off the top of my head…,” “I’m no expert in this, but,” or “You know more about this than I do, but . . .”
  • Am I hiding my point of view behind a question?
    Declarative statements are what cause people to trust you as an authority. And it’s not the same thing as being an authoritarian, which is a misuse of authority. Avoid sharing your opinion in the form of an interrogatory, for example, “Does everyone feel sure about this direction?” This conveys uncertainty. Rather, try “My experience tells me this is the wrong direction for us to take.” This offers a level of expertise on which others can rely.
  • Am I using undermining uptalk?
    This is when you raise your tone at the end of what you’re saying so it sounds tentative. There’s a huge difference between an authoritative “Let’s do this!” and a questioning “Let’s do this?” Whenever you raise your pitch, it comes across with less gravity.
  • Am I sounding uncertain?
    Let’s say you’re recommending new software or a technology tool. Would you lead with “I’m not certain this will work” or “I don’t have personal experience with this” or “This may not be for us, but…”?
  • Am I apologizing for taking up someone’s time?
    What you have to offer is valuable, or you wouldn’t say it. Beware of add-ins like “a little bit” or “just a minute” or “just a sec”—anything implicitly suggesting what you have to say isn’t worth much time or space.

Remember to Weave in Warmth

Warmth opens doors facts alone cannot. It reminds people you’re not just a leader; you’re a person they can relate to. Strong communication isn’t just about clarity. It’s also about connection.

Don’t forget to bring a little humanity into the room.

Include a warm, genuine opening or closing when it fits the moment. A personal anecdote, a touch of humor, or a quick glimpse into your life can shift the energy and make space for trust.

One peer shared how everything changed in her team meetings when she started with a small story—something simple, like a funny moment with her child that morning. Then she’d dive into her report, filled with data and strategy. For the first time, her colleagues leaned in. They listened. They even praised her contributions.

Why? Because she’d humanized herself. In just a few words, she invited connection—and quietly challenged whatever assumptions they might have held about her.

Try this:

  • Begin with a light, real-life moment to set an inviting tone.
  • Close by expressing genuine interest: “I’d love to hear your thoughts on this.”
  • Let your tone express awareness and concern. It should say: I’m here. I care. This matters.

After the Conversation: Reflect and Refine

Grow your awareness, not your self-doubt.

  • Did I communicate what truly mattered?
    Not just what was safe or expected.
  • Where did I feel strong? Where did I hold back?
    Notice, without judgment.
  • What energy did I leave behind?
    Did I leave people with clarity? Trust? Momentum?
  • What one thing will I try differently next time?
    Tiny shifts, repeated often, lead to powerful change.

Final Thought: Leadership Is a Conversation

It’s a relationship—built one interaction at a time.

And in fundraising, especially, that relationship begins and deepens through meaningful, human conversation. The most powerful leadership conversations aren’t one-way monologues. They’re two-way doorways to something greater than either of you can build alone.

Every conversation is an act of co-creation.

  • You’re not just presenting your experience—you’re making space for someone else’s.
  • You’re not just pitching your vision—you’re inviting someone else to help shape it.
  • You’re not performing—you’re partnering.

The way you show up—especially in the quiet, human moments—is your leadership.

So, before you diminish yourself, pause. Reframe. Choose to reveal yourself as the kind of leader people want to follow—and join with.

Don’t shrink. Every voice is needed. Yours. Your conversation partner’s.

Start with presence. Lead with clarity. Speak as someone who belongs. Because, you do.

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