The Hidden Power of Filler Words in Your Leadership Voice

Improve your leadership communication: identify and replace filler words that weaken your message, speak with confidence, and develop a clear, authoritative voice that inspires trust in meetings, presentations, and daily conversations.

You wouldn’t follow a GPS that constantly says “maybe turn left,” or “kind of go straight,” right? So why do we let our speech sound that way? Your language is your internal compass—and others follow it.

Why This Matters:
Your Words Steer More Than You Think

In leadership, every word you speak sets a direction. Whether you’re presenting a strategy, motivating a team, or negotiating with clients, the way you speak becomes a signal: it tells others where you’re going – and how confidently you’re headed there.

But here’s the thing: many of us unconsciously fill our language with verbal detours. Little words like “kind of”, “maybe”, or “just” sneak in. We think we’re being polite, thoughtful, or spontaneous. In reality, we sound unsure. Hesitant. Even weak.

And that’s a problem—because people don’t just follow your logic; they follow your clarity. If your verbal compass keeps wobbling, even strong ideas can lose impact.

The Coaching Moment:
A Leader’s Great Talk, Slightly Off Course

Last week during a coaching session, I worked with a manager preparing for a big internal strategy presentation. She had a great structure, clear objectives, and strong ideas. But something didn’t land quite right. As we reviewed her rehearsal, one phrase kept repeating:

“We’re kind of moving to a new model.”

“We sort of want more initiative from teams.”

“It’s basically a shift in mindset.”

At first glance, these seemed harmless. But with repetition, they had an effect: the message felt vague. The strategy seemed tentative. It was like she wasn’t fully behind her own plan.

When I pointed it out, she was surprised. She hadn’t even realized she was saying it. “It’s just how I talk,” she said. Exactly—and that’s the point.

What Filler Words Really Do to Your Message

These words aren’t evil. They’re part of everyday speech. But in leadership and professional contexts, they matter more than we think.

Why? Because they signal your mindset.

Common Filler Words That Weaken Your Message

→ adds vagueness

→ can sound apologetic or defensive

→ softens unnecessarily

→ lacks decisiveness

→ filler, often redundant

→ casual, imprecise

→ reduces strength of fact-based statements

→ lacks ownership

→ implies a contrast with dishonesty

→ often exaggerated, easily misused

→ stalling, distracting from clarity

Using these once or twice isn’t a big deal. But when they form part of your unconscious speaking style, they start shaping your professional presence—and not always in the way you intend.

Take Back Control:
Practical Language Awareness Tools

You don’t need to become a robot or strip all personality from your speech. But conscious language gives you power. Here’s how to begin:

Next time you speak in a meeting or give a presentation, hit record (yes, even on your phone). Then, listen back—not for what you meant to say, but what you actually said.

It’s often a surprising and eye-opening experience.

Start with just one word you want to eliminate or replace. Let’s say it’s “just”. For a week, try to speak in meetings without using it. Catch yourself when you do. Replace it with silence, or rephrase:

Invite someone you trust to observe your language for a few days. Tell them you’re working on eliminating filler words. Ask them to note what they hear and when. It can be funny, humbling, and incredibly useful.

Once you identify a weak phrase, replace it with something that adds presence.

Speak Like a Leader, Not a Maybe

Great communication isn’t about perfection—it’s about presence. And presence comes from owning your message, not kind of offering it.

Think of your language as your internal GPS. Every word points in a direction. If your speech is filled with “maybes” and “justs,” people will hesitate to follow you. But when you speak with clarity, they know exactly where you’re going—and they’ll want to come with you.

So next time you speak, tune in to your verbal habits. Notice your default settings. And above all, ask yourself: