
3 Words Influential Leaders Avoid
Your words matter. Every single one. Influential leaders know that what they say—and what they don't say—directly impacts their credibility. Weak language undermines authority. Here are three words influential leaders never use:
"Try"
"I'll try to get that done." "We'll try to meet the deadline." "Try" is a built-in excuse. It signals doubt before you even start. Influential leaders commit or they don't. They say "I will" or "I can't." No hedge. No wiggle room. When you use "try," you're already communicating that failure is likely. Your team hears it. Your clients hear it. Stop trying. Start doing or don't commit at all.
"Maybe"
"Maybe we should consider this approach." "Maybe that's a good idea." "Maybe" is indecision disguised as thoughtfulness. It communicates uncertainty and lack of conviction. Influential leaders make decisions. They say "Yes," "No," or "I need more information to decide." They don't leave people hanging in maybe-land. Decisiveness builds confidence. Maybe destroys it.
"But"
"That's a good idea, but..." "I hear you, but..." Everything before "but" gets erased. It negates what came before it and immediately puts people on the defensive. Influential leaders replace "but" with "and." "That's a good idea, and here's what we need to consider." "I hear you, and let me share another perspective." This small shift maintains connection instead of creating opposition.
Language shapes perception. Perception shapes influence. When you eliminate weak words from your vocabulary, you communicate with clarity and conviction. Your team stops wondering if you mean what you say. They start trusting that you do. Monday to Monday, choose your words intentionally. Your influence depends on it.



