Connecting to Admired Leadership
Delivering a Tough Message in the First Two Sentences
Episode Summary
A conversation with Admired Leadership Executive Coach and Partner Katie Angstadt and Wes Bender from CRA | Admired Leadership, exploring one of the most universally mishandled leadership challenges: delivering tough messages. This session unpacks why leaders bury the lead, how avoidance damages both relationships and credibility, and what the best leaders do differently — from priming the conversation before it happens to reframing feedback as an act of care. Katie draws on real client examples and practical guidance for delivering difficult messages up, down, and across the organization.
Episode Notes
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Key Highlights
- Not all tough messages are the same: Performance conversations, unwanted decisions, and feedback delivered upward each carry different dynamics and require different preparation — knowing which type you're in shapes how you approach it
- Avoidance is a leadership problem first: When leaders delay or soften tough messages, they're not protecting the relationship — they're eroding it, and everyone around them notices
- The breadcrumb drop: The best leaders prime the conversation before it happens — a simple heads-up that you want to discuss something gives the other person time to prepare emotionally, so they don't feel blindsided or ambushed
- Don't bury the lead: Loading a tough message with context and excuses before delivering it actually undermines the feedback — by the time it lands, the other person has already been handed a justification for their behavior
- Reframe confrontation as care: The leaders who are best at this have stopped thinking of feedback as something they do to someone and started thinking of it as something they do for someone — clarity is an act of respect
Notable Quotes
- "Clarity is really an act of care — being able to deliver a message cleanly, directly, with genuine compassion is more respectful to the other person."
- "People can smell intent from a mile away — if I'm smelling intent that's like, this person just wants me to feel bad, I'm gonna show up in that conversation differently."
- "The first time they give the feedback is the first time they've heard it out loud themselves."
- "You're hurting their feelings if you're not giving them feedback."
- "The only way you get better at this sort of thing is by actually doing it — it may not always feel good, but that's how you become a master at it."
Featured Speakers
- Katie Angstadt is a Partner at CRA | Admired Leadership, specializing in executive coaching and strategic communications. With 18 years at the firm, she brings deep experience advising senior leaders across industries on some of their most consequential conversations — including the ones they've been putting off. Katie used Alex to prepare for this very session, pressure-testing her thinking and making sure she wasn't leaving anything on the table.
- Wes Bender serves as a facilitator and thought leadership coordinator at CRA | Admired Leadership, helping leaders connect the dots between great coaching conversations and the everyday moments that define their leadership.
Resources Mentioned