Turning Ambiguity into Action (How Normalizations Shape- and Sometimes Cloud- Professional Communication)
Consider these common phrases:
• “The Implementation faced resistance.”
• “We need better alignment on expectations.“
• “The transition caused disruption.”

Consider these common phrases:
• “The Implementation faced resistance.”
• “We need better alignment on expectations.“
• “The transition caused disruption.”
These abstract nouns—called nominalizations—serve a purpose in professional communication. But like politicians who rely on them to avoid clear accountability, we often use them reflexively, obscuring who’s responsible for what action.
Why We Rely on Nominalizations
They help us:
But when overused, they:
Spotting Nominalizations
Listen for:
• -tion, -ment, -ance, -ity endings
• Nouns that could be verbs (“decision” vs. “decide”)
• Sentences where no one is clearly taking action
Three Ways to Restore Clarity
“When you mention ‘resistance,’ who specifically is resisting what?”
“We need expectation alignment” → “Let’s align on what we expect from each other”
“Could you share an example of the disruption you’re seeing?”
When Nominalizations Work Best
The Professional’s Rule: Use them intentionally, not as a default.
Recent Blogs You Might Like

It happens to everyone. Someone's words or actions land in a way that makes you feel small. Overlooked. Dismissed. Disrespected....

-From "Why" to "How": The NLP Shift That Drives Real Change- Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) emphasizes that asking "How?" is far...

The belief that genius is innate is perhaps the greatest limitation to human potential. Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) shatters this myth...


