Saying no is half of an executive assistant's job. Saying no without damaging the relationship is the entire skill. Your executive's reputation rides on how their no lands, and a blunt one can cost a relationship you spent months building.
The mindset
A good decline protects two things at once: your executive's time and the other person's goodwill. You are not just rejecting a request; you are keeping a door open while closing an ask. That framing changes every word you choose.
A small prompt library
- The soft decline. "Write a warm, brief no that keeps the relationship intact and offers one alternative."
- The not-now. "Decline this for now without closing it forever. Suggest a better time to revisit."
- The redirect. "Politely decline and point them to the right person or resource instead."
- The boundary. "Firmly but graciously hold this boundary. No over-apologizing. Under 80 words."
The part AI cannot do
The prompt gives you the frame. You still add the warmth a model cannot: a shared detail, a genuine line, the human touch that makes a no feel considered rather than cold. That is the difference between a message that closes a door and one that keeps the relationship warm for next time.