Suggestion
Suggestions can change outcomes when offered thoughtfully. A good suggestion is clear, specific, and focused on helping someone achieve a better result without imposing decisions. Use suggestions to nudge actions, open new perspectives, or solve problems—especially when the recipient wants help.
Why suggestions matter
- Direction: They give practical next steps when choices feel overwhelming.
- Perspective: Well-timed suggestions introduce options the recipient may not have considered.
- Efficiency: They shorten decision-making by proposing tested approaches.
How to craft an effective suggestion
- Clarify the goal. State the desired outcome in one sentence.
- Be specific. Offer concrete steps or resources rather than vague advice.
- Keep it short. One or two actionable items are easier to adopt.
- Explain the why. A brief reason increases buy-in.
- Offer alternatives. Provide one fallback option if the first isn’t suitable.
- Invite feedback. Ask whether the suggestion fits or needs adjustment.
Example
Goal: Improve morning productivity.
Suggestion: Start a 10-minute priority planning routine each morning—write the top three tasks, pick one “MIT” (most important task), and block 60–90 minutes of uninterrupted time to handle it. Why: Focusing on a single high-impact task reduces decision fatigue and increases progress.
When not to suggest
- If someone hasn’t asked for help and clearly doesn’t want advice.
- When you lack context to make a safe or useful recommendation.
- If the suggestion could cause harm without professional oversight.
A well-made suggestion respects autonomy, provides clear value, and is easy to act on.
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