• News
  • etimes
  • Use these 5 phrases to sound more professional and confident in meetings

Use these 5 phrases to sound more professional and confident in meetings

You know that feeling when you're in a meeting and someone says something that just lands differently?
1/7

You know that feeling when you're in a meeting and someone says something that just lands differently?


You've probably noticed it. Someone in a meeting says something and suddenly the whole room shifts. People lean in. They actually listen. It's not that they're smarter or better looking or anything like that. It's just that they sound like they know what they're talking about. The difference between someone people take seriously and someone they ignore usually comes down to a handful of words.

"Let me be direct about this"
2/7

"Let me be direct about this"


This one works because it's a small signal that something real is coming. The key is not to use it constantly. Say it three times in one meeting and it loses all its power. But when you genuinely have something important to say, it lands differently. "Let me be direct about this—we need to change how we're approaching this deadline" creates actual emphasis. You're not just another voice in the meeting. You're someone with a point.

"I'd recommend we consider..."
3/7

"I'd recommend we consider..."

This phrase does something sneaky but smart. It sounds assertive without being pushy. You're not asking permission. You're not hedging with "maybe" or "possibly" or "if we have time." You're saying "here's something worth thinking about." The word "recommend" matters here. It implies you've actually thought about whatever you're saying. You have reasons. You're not just throwing ideas at the wall. "I'd recommend we consider pushing this to next quarter" sounds way more confident than "Maybe we could wait until next quarter?" Same idea. Different energy.

"Based on what I'm seeing, here's what I think..."
4/7

"Based on what I'm seeing, here's what I think..."

This works because you're connecting your opinion to actual information. You're not pulling stuff out of thin air. You noticed something. You're responding to what's actually happening. It shows you're paying attention. It shows you're thinking critically instead of just reacting emotionally. Even if your observation is pretty informal—like "I've noticed our response time on customer emails has gotten slower"—people trust it more when you ground it in something real.

"That's a good point, and here's what I'd add..."
5/7

"That's a good point, and here's what I'd add..."


This might be the most underrated phrase in professional communication. It does two things at once. It tells the other person their idea actually mattered. They feel heard. And then it gives you space to add your own perspective without making them feel dismissed.

"I want to flag something important"
6/7

"I want to flag something important"

The word "flag" is perfect because it's professional but it doesn't sound stiff. It's become normal enough in workplaces that nobody's going to think you're being weird. Use it when you've noticed something others might have missed. Use it when you genuinely think something needs to change.


The actual secret
7/7

The actual secret


All of these work for the same reason. They force you to be deliberate. When you use them, you're committing to clarity. You're not hedging. You're not over-explaining or apologizing for your own thoughts. You're just saying what you mean in a way that makes people listen. That's the whole thing. That's what professionalism actually is. It's not about being stiff or formal or pretending to be someone else. It's about respecting your own ideas enough to present them clearly.

Follow Us On Social Media