102 Improve your Communication Skills
again, looking at the new arrangement in terms of how
it might work, how you might help and how the
interviewee might make the work more their own.
• Part
. Now make your request a formal one. Give
timescales or deadlines, as well as conditions of
satisfaction: standards or targets to be achieved, how
you will monitor progress and check for success.
Make it clear to the delegate that they have four possible
responses.
• They can accept the request and make a commitment. ‘I
promise that I will do
x
by time
y
.’
• They can decline. They must be free to say ‘No’, while at
the same time being clear of the consequences of a
refusal.
• They can decide to commit later. ‘I’ll get back to you by
time
z
, when I will give you a definite response.’
• They can make a counter-offer. ‘I’m not willing to do
x
;
however, I can promise you that I will do
w
(or maybe
part of
x
) by time
y
.’
The result of this interview should be a clear commitment by the
delegate to action: to the task originally
intended for delegation,
to part of the task, to another task, or to refusal.
In accepting a
newly delegated responsibility, the delegate
must be clear about three limits on their action:
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