Practical Techniques
Technique 1: Use Assertive Continuation Phrases
Develop a repertoire of respectful but firm phrases to reclaim your speaking turn:
- “I’d like to finish my thought…”
- “Let me complete this point, then I’d love to hear your perspective.”
- “I appreciate your input—let me just wrap up what I was saying.”
- For persistent interrupters: “I notice I haven’t been able to finish my thoughts. I’d appreciate being able to complete my point.”
Deliver these phrases with calm confidence rather than frustration for best results.
Technique 2: Implement Strategic Pausing
Use strategic pauses to discourage interruption:
- Take a brief pause in your natural speaking rhythm, then continue
- When interrupted, pause rather than competing by speaking louder
- After pausing, calmly resume with “As I was saying…”
- Use a slightly raised hand gesture during your pause if needed
This technique avoids escalating into competing monologues while maintaining your speaking space.
Technique 3: Create External Conversation Structures
Introduce frameworks that naturally balance participation:
- Suggest turn-taking: “Let’s each take a couple of minutes to share our thoughts.”
- Use a visible timer for important discussions where balance matters
- Propose a “talking object” that designates the current speaker
- In groups, suggest a round-robin format for important topics
These structures externalize the turn-taking process, removing personalization.
Why These Approaches Work
These techniques work because they:
- Maintain respect while asserting boundaries
- Address the behavior pattern without attacking the person
- Create clear expectations for conversation flow
- Avoid escalating into competing interruptions
Remember Boundaries
While these techniques help manage interruptions in the moment, persistent patterns that don’t improve may require a direct conversation about communication preferences and mutual respect.
Additional Considerations
- Some interruptions stem from enthusiasm rather than dominance—acknowledge positive intent
- Cultural and family backgrounds influence conversational rhythm and expectations
- For those with certain thinking styles, interruptions can be collaborative rather than controlling
- Consider whether the conversation setting (formal vs. casual) changes appropriate responses
Related Tips & Concepts
See also: Establishing Communication Ground Rules, Maintaining Your Conversational Space, Understanding Interrupting Pattern