The Power Of The Word "But"
“I think you look great, but that dress has a few
wrinkles.”
“You are doing a great job, but you need to edit your work
more carefully.”
“We think you have a wonderful product, but we don’t have
the budget for it this month.
What do each of these statements have in common? They each
use the word “but” to connect two separate thoughts, and in all
cases, the second part of the statement cancels out the first
part. Let’s look at each and then I’ll suggest some better
alternatives.
Statement #1
“I think you look great, but that dress has a few
wrinkles.”
Excuse me, but how great can she look if the dress has a few
wrinkles? Men, I assure you that she has completely forgotten
the first part about the dress looking great and is only
thinking about the wrinkles!
The entire compliment is completely destroyed by using the
word “but”.
Statement #2
“You are doing a great job, but you need to edit your
work more carefully.”
The same thing happens here. The value of the compliment is
greatly reduced by the use of the word “but”.
As you can see, using he word “but” has the effect of
canceling or diluting the first part of the sentence.
Statement #3
“We think you have a wonderful product, but we don’t
have the budget for it this month."
How wonderful do they think it is?
Apparently not wonderful enough to allocate some of their
budget dollars to it. With one part of the statement, they are
saying how great it is, the other part says that it is not all
that great and canceling out the first part.
Two Better Ways
Solution #1
Use the word “and” instead of “but”. Let’s substitute the
word “and” in each of these sentences and see how it can be
used to preserve the meaning of the first part of the sentence
and still convey the meaning of the second part. Here they
are:
“I think you look great, and that dress has a few
wrinkles.”
“You are doing a great job, and you need to edit your work
more carefully.”
“We think you have a wonderful product, and we don’t have
the budget for it this month.
Solution #2
Reverse the order and use the positive part to cancel the
negative part. You can still use the word “but”.
That dress has a few wrinkles, but I think you look
great”
You need to edit your work more carefully, but you are doing
a great job.”
We don’t have
the budget for it this month, but we think you have a wonderful
product.”
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