Catalog
softaworks/difficult-workplace-conversations

softaworks

difficult-workplace-conversations

Structured approach to workplace conflicts, performance discussions, and challenging feedback using preparation-delivery-followup framework. Use when preparing for tough conversations, addressing conflicts, giving critical feedback, or navigating sensitive workplace discussions.

global
Allowed Tools
ReadGlobGrep
0installs0uses~1.8k
v1.1Saved Apr 20, 2026

Difficult Conversations Skill

A structured framework for approaching challenging workplace conversations including conflicts, performance issues, sensitive feedback, and emotionally charged discussions.

When to Use This Skill

  • Preparing for a challenging conversation with a colleague
  • Addressing performance issues with a team member
  • Delivering difficult feedback to a peer or manager
  • Navigating conflict between team members
  • Discussing sensitive topics (salary, promotion, termination)
  • Handling emotional or defensive reactions
  • Following up after difficult discussions

Core Framework: Preparation-Delivery-Followup

Difficult conversations succeed or fail based on three phases:

Phase 1: Preparation (Before)

Purpose: Set yourself up for a productive conversation

  1. Clarify the Issue

    • What specifically happened? (Observable facts only)
    • What is the impact? (On you, team, work)
    • What do you need to change?
  2. Check Your Emotions

    • What am I feeling? Why?
    • Am I calm enough to have this conversation?
    • What might trigger me during this conversation?
  3. Consider Their Perspective

    • How might they see this situation?
    • What constraints or pressures might they have?
    • What do they care about that I can acknowledge?
  4. Define Your Goal

    • What outcome do I want?
    • What is the minimum acceptable result?
    • What am I willing to compromise on?

Phase 2: Delivery (During)

Purpose: Have the conversation effectively

  1. Open Neutrally

    • Start with facts, not judgments
    • Express intent to understand, not accuse
    • Create psychological safety
  2. Share Your Perspective

    • Describe behavior, not character
    • Focus on impact, not intention
    • Use "I" statements, not "you always"
  3. Listen Actively

    • Ask clarifying questions
    • Acknowledge their viewpoint
    • Look for shared interests
  4. Seek Resolution

    • Propose specific actions
    • Agree on next steps
    • Set check-in timeline

Phase 3: Followup (After)

Purpose: Ensure lasting resolution

  1. Document Agreements

    • What was agreed?
    • Who does what by when?
    • How will you measure success?
  2. Check Progress

    • Follow up as promised
    • Acknowledge improvements
    • Address continued issues promptly
  3. Maintain Relationship

    • Separate issue from person
    • Rebuild trust over time
    • Watch for regression

Key Principles

Separate Impact from Intent

What happened: Observable behavior What I felt: Your emotional response What I assume: Their intention (often wrong)

Focus conversation on behavior and impact, not assumed intentions.

The SBI Model

Situation: When and where did this happen? Behavior: What specifically did they do/say? Impact: What was the effect on you, the team, or the work?

Managing Emotions

If You Feel Before Acting
Angry Wait 24 hours, write but don't send
Hurt Talk to neutral party first
Anxious Practice the conversation
Defensive Identify your contribution

When to Escalate

Escalate when:

  • Safety is at risk
  • Legal issues involved
  • Repeated conversations haven't worked
  • Power dynamics prevent resolution
  • You need documentation

Conversation Types

Performance Feedback

  • Lead with specific examples
  • Connect to expectations/standards
  • Focus on future improvement
  • Offer support and resources

Conflict Resolution

  • Hear both sides separately first
  • Identify underlying interests
  • Look for win-win solutions
  • Document agreements

Sensitive Topics

  • Choose private, neutral setting
  • Allow time for processing
  • Be direct but compassionate
  • Respect confidentiality

Receiving Feedback

  • Thank them for feedback
  • Ask clarifying questions
  • Don't defend immediately
  • Reflect before responding

References (Load When Needed)

Detailed Frameworks

See Also

  • feedback-mastery skill - SBI feedback model (overlaps but more feedback-focused)
  • professional-effective-communication skill - General communication patterns

Example Scenarios

Scenario 1: Addressing Missed Deadlines

**Issue:** Team member missed 3 deadlines in past month
**Impact:** Project delayed, others blocked
**Goal:** Understand root cause, agree on prevention plan

**Opening:** "I wanted to check in about the recent deliverables. I've noticed
the last three have come in past deadline, and I'd like to understand what's
happening and how we can address it together."

Scenario 2: Peer Conflict

**Issue:** Colleague publicly criticized your work in meeting
**Impact:** Embarrassed, trust damaged
**Goal:** Address behavior, rebuild working relationship

**Opening:** "I'd like to talk about what happened in yesterday's standup.
When you said my code 'missed obvious issues,' I felt called out in front
of the team. I'd like to understand your concerns and find a better way
to handle code quality feedback."

Scenario 3: Asking Manager for Raise

**Issue:** Feel underpaid relative to market/contribution
**Impact:** Demotivation, considering leaving
**Goal:** Discuss compensation, get timeline or adjustment

**Opening:** "I'd like to discuss my compensation. I've been here two years,
taken on the payments project leadership, and want to make sure my salary
reflects my contributions and the current market."

Anti-Patterns to Avoid

In Preparation

  • Scripting every word - You'll sound robotic; prepare themes, not scripts
  • Building a case - This isn't a trial; seek understanding, not winning
  • Waiting too long - Issues compound; address promptly

In Delivery

  • Starting with "You always..." - Triggers defensiveness immediately
  • Burying the lead - Get to the point; don't soften excessively
  • Asking leading questions - "Don't you think..." isn't asking

In Followup

  • Forgetting to check in - Without follow-up, nothing changes
  • Holding grudges - Issue resolved means relationship continues
  • Over-documenting - Not everything needs written record

Success Metrics

A successful difficult conversation:

  • Both parties feel heard
  • Specific actions are agreed
  • Relationship is preserved or improved
  • The issue doesn't recur (or has clear escalation)
  • Neither party is blindsided later
Files6
6 files · 43.8 KB

Select a file to preview

Overall Score

88/100

Grade

A

Excellent

Safety

95

Quality

88

Clarity

87

Completeness

82

Summary

A comprehensive framework for navigating challenging workplace conversations through a structured three-phase approach: preparation (clarifying facts, managing emotions, understanding perspective), delivery (opening neutrally, sharing impact, listening actively, seeking resolution), and follow-up (documenting agreements, checking progress, maintaining relationships). The skill provides templates, scripts, emotional regulation techniques, and guidance for performance discussions, conflict resolution, feedback delivery, and sensitive topics.

Detected Capabilities

Structured conversation frameworksPre-conversation emotional regulation techniquesOpening and closing scripts for various conversation typesResponse phrases for handling defensive reactionsPreparation worksheets and templatesReframing techniques for managing blame and conflictPost-conversation follow-up guidanceEmotional trigger identification and managementDocumentation and agreement summarization

Trigger Keywords

Phrases that MCP clients use to match this skill to user intent.

prepare difficult conversationgive critical feedbackaddress performance issuenavigate workplace conflictdiscuss compensationhandle emotional reactionresolve team disputedeliver tough feedback

Use Cases

  • Preparing for performance discussions with team members
  • Addressing conflict between colleagues
  • Delivering critical or difficult feedback
  • Navigating compensation and promotion conversations
  • Handling emotionally charged workplace discussions
  • Mediating disputes between team members
  • Discussing sensitive personal topics affecting work

Quality Notes

  • Excellent documentation structure with clear phase-based organization (Preparation-Delivery-Followup)
  • Comprehensive reference materials properly documented with file paths and descriptions
  • Multiple templates provided at different time scales (10-minute quick prep, 30-minute full prep) for different scenarios
  • Strong use of practical examples across conversation types (performance, conflict, compensation, sensitive topics)
  • Well-organized tables, checklists, and frameworks (SBI model, emotional triggers, anti-patterns)
  • Emotional regulation section is thorough, covering pre-, during-, and post-conversation states
  • Scripts are specific and contextual rather than generic
  • Clear anti-patterns section helps users understand what to avoid
  • Success metrics clearly defined so users know what 'done' looks like
  • Strengths: All supporting reference files are present and well-structured; skill is self-contained and actionable
  • Minor gap: No explicit guidance on documenting conversations for HR/legal purposes (mentioned as option but not detailed)
  • Minor gap: Limited guidance on group/team-based difficult conversations (focus is primarily one-on-one)
Model: claude-haiku-4-5-20251001Analyzed: Apr 20, 2026

Reviews

Add this skill to your library to leave a review.

No reviews yet

Be the first to share your experience.

Version History

v1.1

Content updated

2026-04-20

Latest
v1.0

No changelog

2026-04-12

Add softaworks/difficult-workplace-conversations to your library

Command Palette

Search for a command to run...