Career Growth

Stop rambling, deflecting, and hedging—how to sound confident when you’re put on the spot


No one enjoys being blindsided. Even seasoned leaders often confess: *"What do I do when I'm asked a question I didn't see coming?"* The fear is real—will I ramble? Hedge? Sound defensive?

As a workplace psychology expert and executive coach, I've spent 15 years helping leaders at organizations like Google and Amazon master high-stakes communication. And I can tell you this: few moments test your executive presence more than having to think—and speak—on your feet.

When attention suddenly shifts to you, composure is everything. Freeze, and you risk appearing unprepared. Stay centered, and you demonstrate the clarity under pressure that defines strong leadership.

Here are four research-backed strategies to navigate unexpected questions with poise—so you're never caught off guard again.

 1. Anchor Your Answer in Your Lane  

Your instinct might be to deflect (*"I'm not the best person to ask"*) or dilute your response with hedges (*"I'm not sure, but maybe…"*). Both undermine your credibility.

Instead, intentionally frame your response within the boundaries of your expertise: your role, your direct experience, or the information you legitimately hold. This isn't a limitation—it's precision. It signals confidence without overreach.

**Try saying:**  

> "From my work leading the onboarding redesign, I've observed…"  

> "Based on the client data I manage directly…"  

> "In my scope as [role], here's what I can confidently share…"

You contribute meaningfully while staying authentic—and that builds trust.

 2. Pause with Purpose: Clarify Before You Answer  

When surprised, your most powerful tool isn't an instant answer—it's a thoughtful question. Asking for clarification does two things: it buys you crucial seconds to organize your thoughts, and it ensures you're solving the *right* problem.

Deliver your question with genuine curiosity, and you'll be perceived as attentive and deliberate—not evasive.

**Try asking:**  

> "To make sure I address what matters most: what part of this is top of mind for you?"  

> "Are you looking for context, options, or a recommendation right now?"  

> "Help me understand the outcome you're hoping for here."


This isn't stalling—it's strategic listening.

 3. Decode the Real Request  

Most questions aren't really about the words asked. They're requests for one of three things:  

🔹 **Reassurance**: *"Is this under control?"*  

🔹 **Clarity**: *"How should I think about this?"*  

🔹 **Direction**: *"What do I need to do next?"*  


The head of operations asking about Q3 projections isn't auditing your model—they want to know whether to prep their leadership team for a course correction.

Before you answer, quickly assess: *What do they actually need right now?* Then tailor your response to that need.


**Try responding:**  

> "We're on track to meet our targets. If that changes, you'll hear from me by EOD." *(reassurance)*  

> "I see two viable paths forward. Here's my recommendation—and why." *(guidance)*  

> "Launch is confirmed for Monday. Your team can begin outreach on Tuesday." *(action)*


Answer the need, not just the question.

 4. Own the Follow-Up—With Intention  

Sometimes, you simply don't have the answer—and that's okay. The key is framing the pause as a *choice* that serves them, not a gap in your knowledge.


Avoid: *"I don't know, let me check."*  

Try: *"I want to give you the most accurate insight here. Let me pull the latest data and circle back by 3 PM."*


Position the delay as diligence, not deficiency.

**Try saying:**  

> "This deserves more than a gut reaction. Can I send you a thoughtful response by tomorrow morning?"  

> "Let me verify those numbers so you're making decisions on solid ground."  

> "I'd like to consult with [team] to ensure we're aligned before I weigh in."


You're not buying time—you're investing in quality.

 Why This Matters Now More Than Ever  

In an age where AI can polish any email or script any reply, your ability to think clearly and speak authentically in unscripted moments has become a rare—and valuable—differentiator. People aren't just listening to *what* you say when you're put on the spot. They're watching *how* you show up.

Master these four moves, and you won't just survive unexpected questions—you'll use them as opportunities to demonstrate the calm, clarity, and credibility that define true leadership presence.