Overview: A clear message makes it easy for people to understand what you need, why it matters, and what should happen next. These five practical tips can help you make your ask easier to see and act on.
A message can be well written and still be hard to act on.
That often happens when the ask is buried, vague, or missing altogether. The reader may understand the topic, but not what they are supposed to do next.
Do they need to approve something? Make a decision? Review and comment? Prepare for a meeting? Share an update? Confirm a deadline?
When that next step is not clear, people have to guess. That can lead to extra follow-up, slower decisions, missed details, or work moving in the wrong direction.
Clear communication is not only about choosing the right words. It is about making it easier for people to understand what you need, why it matters, and what should happen next.
Here are five ways to make your ask clearer.
1. Put the Ask Near the Top
If you need something from someone, say it early.
Many workplace messages start with background, context, and explanation before getting to the actual request. That can be useful in some situations, but it also makes the reader work harder to figure out what they are being asked to do.
A clear ask near the top helps the reader understand the purpose of the message right away.
For example:
“I’m looking for your approval on the revised project timeline by Thursday.”
“I’d like your feedback on the attached draft, specifically the introduction and call to action.”
“Can you confirm whether your team can support the client meeting next Tuesday?”
Once the ask is clear, you can add the context that helps the person respond.
2. Use a Specific Action Word
Words like “Thoughts?” or “Just checking in” can be fine in casual messages, but they are not always clear enough when work needs to move forward.
A stronger ask uses a specific action word.
Try words like:
- Review
- Approve
- Confirm
- Decide
- Prepare
- Share
- Send
- Choose
- Update
- Respond
The more specific the action, the easier it is for the reader to know what is expected.
Instead of:
“Can you take a look when you have a chance?”
Try:
“Can you review the attached draft by Thursday and let me know if the recommendation is clear?”
The second version tells the reader what to do, when it is needed, and where to focus.
3. Give Enough Context to Act
Clear communication does not mean stripping out all background. People still need context to understand why the request matters and how to respond.
The key is to include the context that helps the person act, not every detail you know.
Before sending a message, ask yourself:
- What does this person need to know to respond?
- What decision, deadline, or constraint matters most?
- What background can be left out or moved below the ask?
This is especially helpful when sending updates to busy people. The goal is not to oversimplify. The goal is to make the message easier to use.
4. Be Clear About Timing
Timing is part of the ask.
If you need a response, say when. If a decision is connected to a meeting, deadline, launch, client conversation, or project milestone, include that too.
“As soon as possible” can mean different things to different people. “By end of day Thursday” is clearer. “Before our 10 a.m. meeting tomorrow” is clearer still.
Clear timing helps people prioritize. It also reduces the need for follow-up messages asking, “When do you need this?”
5. Make the Next Step Easy to See
Before you send the message, look at it from the reader’s point of view.
Can they quickly tell what you need from them?
Can they see where to focus?
Do they know when you need it?
Do they understand what will happen next?
If the answer is yes, your message is easier to act on.
That does not mean every message needs to be short. Some messages need detail. Some situations need care. But even complex messages become easier to handle when the ask is clear.
A clear ask helps people respond faster, make better decisions, and move work forward with less guessing.
Before your next email, Teams message, meeting follow-up, or project update, take a minute to check the ask.
It is a small habit that can make communication clearer for everyone.
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