Jonathan Justus
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Why 85% of Us Avoid the Conversations That Matter Most

By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | 20 June 2026

Two colleagues sitting across a table in a candid, serious conversation

Photo by Amy Hirschi on Unsplash

Most of us would rather do almost anything than say the hard thing out loud. According to the Quantum Connections 2026 American Dialogue Report, published in May, 85% of Americans avoided at least one conversation in the past 30 days because it might lead to conflict — and 35% did so four or more times. The report, based on a survey of 1,000 adults conducted in March 2026, captures a quiet retreat from the very conversations that hold teams, relationships and organisations together.

The cost of that retreat lands squarely at work. Research from the Achievers Workforce Institute, surveying 1,500 employees across the US and Canada, found that two-thirds of workers actually want to have tough conversations — yet just one-quarter of managers say they have had sufficient training to lead them. One in three employees say they feel unsafe raising a difficult issue with their manager at all. The appetite for honest dialogue is there; the skill and the safety to deliver it are not.

Avoidance is not neutral — it compounds

When we duck a difficult conversation, we tell ourselves we are keeping the peace. In reality we are deferring the problem at interest. The unspoken feedback hardens into resentment. The missed expectation repeats. The small misalignment that could have been settled in five minutes becomes a project delay, a lost client, or a resignation. Silence feels like the safe option precisely because its costs arrive late and arrive elsewhere — which is exactly why so many professionals keep choosing it.

Why the brain treats candour as a threat

There is a reason avoidance is so universal. The prospect of conflict triggers the same threat response as physical danger; our instinct is to flee. But the professionals who communicate well are not the ones who feel no fear — they are the ones who have practised a method that overrides it. They separate the person from the problem. They lead with curiosity rather than accusation. They state the issue plainly, then stop talking and listen. Structure, not bravado, is what turns a dreaded confrontation into a productive exchange.

How to make the hard conversation routine

The fix is not a personality transplant; it is a repeatable habit. Open with your intent so the other person knows you are on their side: "I want us to get this right together." Describe the specific behaviour or gap, not the character of the person. Ask a genuine question and give them room to answer without interruption. Agree one concrete next step before you close. Done early and done often, these conversations stop feeling like crises and start feeling like ordinary maintenance — the everyday upkeep of a healthy working relationship.

Key statistic: 85% of Americans avoided at least one conversation in the past month for fear it might lead to conflict, and only a quarter of managers feel trained to handle tough conversations. (Quantum Connections; Achievers Workforce Institute, 2026)

Master Professional Communication with Elevana

Avoiding the hard conversation is a skills gap, not a character flaw — and skills can be built. Elevana's PRO Communicator programme is built precisely for this: it gives professionals the frameworks to raise difficult issues with clarity and composure, to listen well under pressure, and to turn tension into trust. If you lead a team, manage clients, or simply want to stop swallowing the things that matter, this is where the practise begins.

Explore the Programme →

The conversation you are avoiding is usually the one your career most needs you to have.

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