It sounds like you’re caught in the classic "Professional Purgatory": stuck between a senior leader who loves the sound of his own voice and the urgent need to actually get work done.
The feedback from your colleagues suggests that while your intent was right, your delivery might have come across as a challenge to his status. In corporate hierarchies, "keeping things moving" can sometimes be heard by senior leaders as "be quiet, you're irrelevant"—even if that's not what you meant.
Here is a breakdown of how to navigate this without further bruising his ego or wasting your afternoons.
It sounds like you’re caught in the classic "Professional Purgatory": stuck between a senior leader who loves the sound of his own voice and the urgent need to actually get work done.
The feedback from your colleagues suggests that while your intent was right, your delivery might have come across as a challenge to his status. In corporate hierarchies, "keeping things moving" can sometimes be heard by senior leaders as "be quiet, you're irrelevant"—even if that's not what you meant.
Here is a breakdown of how to navigate this without further bruising his ego or wasting your afternoons.
1. The "Pre-emptive Strike" Strategy
The best way to interrupt a senior leader is to get permission to do so before the meeting even starts. This frames your interruptions as time management rather than personal impatience.
At the start: "We have 45 minutes and four legal hurdles to clear today. To make sure I don't take up too much of your time, I might jump in occasionally to pivot us to the next item so we can get you back to your day on schedule."
The Benefit: You aren't "interrupting" anymore; you are "honoring his schedule."
The best way to interrupt a senior leader is to get permission to do so before the meeting even starts. This frames your interruptions as time management rather than personal impatience.
At the start: "We have 45 minutes and four legal hurdles to clear today. To make sure I don't take up too much of your time, I might jump in occasionally to pivot us to the next item so we can get you back to your day on schedule."
The Benefit: You aren't "interrupting" anymore; you are "honoring his schedule."
2. Use the "Flank and Pivot" Technique
When he starts a tangent, don’t shut it down. Instead, acknowledge its (theoretical) value and pull him back to the task by asking for his specific authority.
What you said (The "Hard Stop") What to say instead (The "Pivot") "I’d like to keep this moving." "That’s an important perspective on [Topic]. Since we have your expertise right now, I want to make sure we get your final word on [Specific Question] before we lose you." "That isn't relevant right now." "I see how that fits into the bigger picture. To make sure I can update the team on our immediate deadline, what is the 'yes/no' on [Item X]?"
When he starts a tangent, don’t shut it down. Instead, acknowledge its (theoretical) value and pull him back to the task by asking for his specific authority.
| What you said (The "Hard Stop") | What to say instead (The "Pivot") |
| "I’d like to keep this moving." | "That’s an important perspective on [Topic]. Since we have your expertise right now, I want to make sure we get your final word on [Specific Question] before we lose you." |
| "That isn't relevant right now." | "I see how that fits into the bigger picture. To make sure I can update the team on our immediate deadline, what is the 'yes/no' on [Item X]?" |
3. Manage Up with a "Pre-Meeting" Email
If he is a poor communicator in person, stop using the meeting as the primary place to get raw information. Try to move the "heavy lifting" to digital formats.
The Tactic: Send a bulleted list 24 hours before: "Hi Bob, looking forward to our call. To keep us efficient, here are the three 'must-haves' I need to walk away with today."
During the meeting: If he drifts, you can point to the list: "I want to be respectful of your time—we've checked off point one, can we quickly touch on point two?"
If he is a poor communicator in person, stop using the meeting as the primary place to get raw information. Try to move the "heavy lifting" to digital formats.
The Tactic: Send a bulleted list 24 hours before: "Hi Bob, looking forward to our call. To keep us efficient, here are the three 'must-haves' I need to walk away with today."
During the meeting: If he drifts, you can point to the list: "I want to be respectful of your time—we've checked off point one, can we quickly touch on point two?"
4. Addressing the Recent Friction
Since your colleagues noted he was frustrated, a tiny bit of "ego-repair" might be necessary to keep the relationship functional. You don't need to apologize for wanting to be productive, but you can smooth over the delivery.
The "Reset" Script: "Hey Bob, I realized I was a bit blunt in our last meeting when we were pressed for time. I really value your insight on these legal matters, I just get a bit hyper-focused on the deadlines sometimes. Looking forward to our next sync!"
Since your colleagues noted he was frustrated, a tiny bit of "ego-repair" might be necessary to keep the relationship functional. You don't need to apologize for wanting to be productive, but you can smooth over the delivery.
The "Reset" Script: "Hey Bob, I realized I was a bit blunt in our last meeting when we were pressed for time. I really value your insight on these legal matters, I just get a bit hyper-focused on the deadlines sometimes. Looking forward to our next sync!"
The Reality Check
Sometimes, "The Bob Tax" is real. If he is senior and influential, you may have to build an extra 15 minutes of "tangent time" into your project timelines. It’s frustrating, but treating that 15 minutes as a relationship-building investment rather than a waste of time can make it much easier to stomach.
How do your colleagues usually handle him? Do they just "grin and bear it," or have you seen anyone successfully redirect him before?
Sometimes, "The Bob Tax" is real. If he is senior and influential, you may have to build an extra 15 minutes of "tangent time" into your project timelines. It’s frustrating, but treating that 15 minutes as a relationship-building investment rather than a waste of time can make it much easier to stomach.
How do your colleagues usually handle him? Do they just "grin and bear it," or have you seen anyone successfully redirect him before?
