Handling Difficult or Negative Responses
Purpose
Not every outreach will be welcomed positively — and that is normal.
This page provides guidance on how to respond to negative, difficult, or non-responsive replies in a way that is respectful, calm, and sustainable for volunteers.
Guiding Principles
When in doubt, remember:
- Do not escalate the tone
- Do not take it personally
- Do not argue or persuade
- Keep responses brief and respectful
- Leave the door open whenever possible
- If a situation goes beyond a simple response, see:
Your goal is not to “win” the interaction — it is to maintain goodwill.
Common Situations and How to Respond
No Response
This is the most common outcome.
What to do:
- Send **one optional follow-up**
- After that, stop outreach
Example follow-up: Just checking in in case my previous message got buried. No need to respond — just wanted to make sure you knew there’s someone local if you ever want to connect.
Then stop.
“Please stop contacting me” / Strong refusal
Respond once, briefly, and stop immediately.
Need to figure out how to make sure request for no contact is followed by others. TOUGH
Example: Understood — I’ll respect that and won’t contact you again. Wishing you well.
Do not:
- Ask why
- Defend the outreach
- Continue contact
“I’m not interested”
Acknowledge and close politely.
Example: Thanks for letting me know — I’ll leave things here. Take care.
Optional (only if appropriate): If that ever changes, you’re always welcome to reach out.
Negative tone or frustration
Do not match tone or argue.
Example: I hear your concerns. I’ll make sure your request is respected and won’t contact you further. Wishing you well.
Then stop.
Confusion about why they were contacted
Clarify briefly without defensiveness.
Example: I reached out as part of helping connect local members, but I understand if that’s not of interest. I’ll step back now.
Requests for removal or privacy concerns
Refer them to the National website for updating their contact preferences. This isn't maintained at the local level.
Example: Of course — I’ll make sure your information is not used for further outreach. Thank you for letting me know.
Then stop all contact.
Hostile or aggressive responses
Do not engage emotionally.
Recommended response (if any is needed): I understand. I won’t contact you again. Take care.
Then disengage.
Do not:
- Defend the organization
- Correct misunderstandings
- Continue the conversation
When NOT to Respond
Do not respond when:
- The message is abusive and does not require clarification
- A prior “stop contact” request has already been acknowledged
- Further response would escalate tension
Silence is sometimes the most appropriate response.
Emotional Boundaries
Volunteers should remember:
- A negative response is not personal
- You are representing connection, not control
- Many members prefer minimal or no contact
- One respectful attempt is enough
Best Practices
- Keep messages short
- Avoid explaining too much
- Never argue or justify outreach
- Always assume good faith, but respect boundaries
- End interactions cleanly
Key Takeaway
Success is not measured by how many people respond positively.
It is measured by how respectfully you handle all responses — especially the difficult ones.