An action-orientated review model to convert past experience into practice.
Give feedback that is clear, specific, and actionable by combining Feeling, Fact, and Comparison.
For understanding how great leaders and orgs inspire action by starting with a clear sense of purpose.
Summary of typical conflicts in the workplace, discover proven strategies
A framework enhances understanding, empathy, and responsiveness.
Using dual concern theory to understand and resolve conflicts.
A simple practice to accept the anxiety, anger or sadness and start embracing them.
Deliver objective feedback by separating situation, behavior, and impact.
Your presence speaks louder than your words.
A simple way to start conversations.
A simple way to evaluate your relationships.
Make your pitch or message clear, logical, and action-oriented.
Sharpen your stakeholder management skills via finding who matters most.
Apply five communication elements to make ideas memorable and repeatable.
Gives you a simple and clear structure to build trust fast.
Change up the content every two minutes to keep people engaged.
Structure 30-minute meetings into focused parts for better feedback.
Reveal your points step by step.
Deliver clear, structured arguments by stating your point first, proving it, and closing with clarity.
Expand self-awareness, uncover blind spots, and strengthen trust through structured feedback.
Separate facts from interpretations to respond to feedback calmly and solve the real problem.
Help groups move from information gathering to action in a structured and inclusive way.
Six negotiation principles help both sides get more of what they want.
A practical negotiation concept that defines where a deal is actually possible.
Allows you to handle challenges with clarity, whether you need to see the big picture or focus on the details.
Help individuals and groups connect personal stories to collective action.
Aim to eliminate confusion and miscommunication in both verbal and written forms
Turn complex ideas into clear cause-and-effect stories people remember.
An easy framework to answer "Tell Me About Yourself" in a job interview.
A storytelling framework that makes your message relatable, memorable, and impactful in any context.
Narrate how an idea was born, built, and scaled to demonstrate its real-world impact.
Persuade and inform with clarity by structuring your message.
Deliver clear, non-judgmental feedback by separating facts, impact, and next actions.
Emphasis on timing, ensuring actions are strategically aligned with deadlines for effective goal setting.
Grow your influence via focusing what you can control.
Being a great manager without losing your humanity.
Help people to deliver strong messages or express complex ideas.
Bring clarity, reduce friction to the stakeholder communication.
Capture feedback, act on it, make changes stick, and report back with clarity.
Increase engagement and commitment in the workplace.
Structure your answers and emphasize takeaways to show real growth.
Strengthen alignment between your priorities and your manager’s expectations.
Help you persuade effectively, build trust, and gain support in any professional setting.
Speak their language, not yours.
Helps communicators control emotional rhythm and attention over time.
Resolve complications with concise, executive-ready solutions.
Structure complex messages into a clear narrative that leads the audience to your conclusion.
Structured communication framework which is supporting your point with logically organized details and effective information delivery.
Being a great manager without losing your humanity.
Have you ever struggled to give feedback without hurting someone’s feelings? Or have you held back honest thoughts, worrying it might damage relationships?
If so, the Radical Candor model can help.
Developed by Kim Scott, a former leader at Google and Apple, this model teaches us how to give feedback in a way that is both honest and caring. It is widely recognized as a powerful communication and management tool, showing leaders how to balance candor with empathy.
The goal is to help people improve while maintaining strong relationships and strengthening team culture.
Radical Candor is not a communication technique. It is a diagnostic framework.
Overall, Radical Candor is about balancing two things:
Kim Scott explains this idea using a 2x2 framework. Each quadrant represents a predictable failure mode.

Direct feedback delivered with genuine care for the person's growth.
This is the ideal way to give feedback. You tell the truth, but in a way that shows you care.
How to improve:
This happens when you care about someone but avoid telling them the truth because you don’t want to hurt their feelings.
While this seems kind, it actually holds them back from improving.
How to improve:
Harsh, critical feedback given without regard to the person's feelings.
This happens when you challenge people directly but do not show that you care and when you speak out, it makes others defensive or demotivated.
How to improve:
This is the worst approach because it happens when you don’t care personally and don’t challenge directly. It includes fake praise, silent disapproval, or avoiding real conversations.
How to improve: