People-Pleasing at Work
A 30-Day Boundary Program with Scripts and Templates to Say No, Push Back, and Stop Over-Explaining
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- £4.49
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- £4.49
Publisher Description
Many individuals strive to be helpful team players, but the pressure to meet every request and appear agreeable can quietly spiral out of control. You may recognize moments where, despite a full workload, you offered to take on an extra task, stayed late to please a colleague, or spent time crafting lengthy justifications to avoid disappointing your manager. These small accommodations, while well-intentioned, can accumulate into chronic overcommitment and exhaustion. Left unchecked, this reflexive people-pleasing erodes productivity and morale, creating a cycle that feels increasingly difficult to break.
When people-pleasing becomes the norm at work, it compromises your ability to manage priorities and deliver high-quality results. Overextension causes missed deadlines, rushed outputs, and projects that are not completed to your satisfaction. Colleagues and supervisors may begin to expect instant agreement or unconditional support, which undermines your professional credibility and your ability to set clear limits or advocate for your needs. This pattern increases stress, depletes energy, and blurs the line between being a team player and being taken advantage of, ultimately harming professional growth and reputation.
It's easy to believe that saying yes or going along with every request is necessary for career success, but the reality is more nuanced. Over-apologizing, avoiding disagreement, or repeatedly over-explaining your decisions often has the opposite effect: it signals indecision and can weaken your perceived reliability. Genuine respect at work is built on clear, consistent boundaries and the capacity to communicate assertively, even when it's uncomfortable.
This guide was developed for anyone who notices a pattern of over-accommodation at work and wants actionable support to break the cycle without alienating colleagues or taking unnecessary risks. You will not find advanced negotiation tactics, psychological diagnoses, or advice for situations involving harassment or bullying.. Instead, the focus remains on situations most people face daily: navigating requests, holding limits, and communicating with confidence when you're tempted to say yes but know you should not.
In this guide, you will discover:
How to identify people-pleasing patterns in your own behaviors using a targeted diagnostic checklist.
Methods for building new habits with a structured 30-day boundary-strengthening program.
Ready-to-use scripts and templates for handling common workplace scenarios.
Troubleshooting guidance for overcoming setbacks.
Decision tools to help you prioritize requests effectively.
Strategies for sustaining your progress through behavioral systems and peer support models.
If you have ever felt boxed in by your own good intentions or wondered how to set limits without burning bridges, know that these challenges are common. The following chapters offer not just advice, but specific frameworks and resources to help you chart a new professional path, one that protects your time and energy while maintaining your valued relationships at work.