In business, “maybe” often sounds thoughtful—but it’s usually expensive.
It creates the illusion of openness while hiding the real variables behind a decision. Over time, I’ve learned that most professional hesitation isn’t about lack of interest. It’s about lack of clarity.
The shift that changed how I approach conversations is simple: replace “maybe” with “if / then.”
Behind every “maybe” is a silent equation. When we articulate the conditions—salary, scope, location, timing—we transform ambiguity into structure. And once the variables are clear, decisions move forward much faster.
Most maybes aren’t indecision.
They’re just undeclared math problems.