Hold the Silence
Say it. Then stop. Let the silence do the work.
After making a key point or asking an important question, stop talking. Don't fill the silence. Count to five in your head. Let the discomfort sit. The other person will almost always speak first — and what they say in the silence is usually more honest than what they said before it.
You're in a negotiation, a difficult conversation, or any moment where you've just said something that needs to land.
The silence would read as hostile or passive-aggressive rather than intentional — read the room.
Why it works
People often rush to fill silence because it feels uncomfortable. The person who can hold it controls the tempo of the conversation — and discomfort makes the other party reveal information they wouldn't volunteer unprompted.
Silence after a statement creates social pressure that people often can’t tolerate. They fill it — and what comes out is almost always more revealing than their prepared response. In negotiations, the pause after a number forces the other side to react rather than recalculate. In meetings, silence after a question communicates that you actually expect an answer, not a performance. The instinct to fill silence is so strong that overcoming it gives you an immediate advantage: you seem more composed, your words carry more weight, and you create space for information the other person didn’t intend to share. Comfort with silence is a trainable skill that compounds.