This Cheatsheet Method Prevents You From Getting Triggered at Work (And Actually Enjoy Your Job)
Work is 90% communication and 10% trying not to lose your mind over miscommunication.
Ever had a coworker who spams you with emails when a simple Slack message would do?
Or a manager who loves last-minute meetings that could’ve been an email?
Or worse—someone who takes three days to respond to a simple yes/no question?
Misaligned expectations = Frustration.
Solution? Create a How to Work With Me Cheat Sheet.
Here’s how to build your own personal user manual—so people know how to work with you before they drive you insane.
How to Work With Me Cheat Sheet: Set Expectations Before They Set You Off
You know what’s worse than a tight deadline?
A tight deadline + people who don’t know how to work with you.
Work would be 10x smoother if people just knew what you need:
Most of the frustration at work isn’t from the work itself—it’s from poor communication.
So instead of waiting for people to “figure it out,” just tell them upfront.
Here’s how to create your How to Work With Me Cheat Sheet.
Step 1: Communication Preferences (So No One Wastes Your Time)
How do you prefer to communicate? Short messages? Detailed emails? Voice notes?
🔹 Best way to reach me: Slack? Email? Carrier pigeon?
🔹 Response time expectations: Do you reply instantly or check messages twice a day?
🔹 When NOT to contact me: Nights? Weekends? When I’m eating lunch and watching YouTube?
Example: “I check Slack every morning and after lunch—don’t expect an instant response. Email me for important stuff. And for the love of God, no long voice notes.”
Step 2: Decision-Making (So People Don’t Leave You Hanging)
How do you make decisions? Gut feeling? Data-driven? Need time to think?
🔹 What I need to make a decision: Bullet points, a spreadsheet, a 2-minute pitch?
🔹 How fast I decide: Immediate? A few hours? 24 hours?
Example: “I make fast decisions when I have clear options. If you send me a novel-length email, I will ignore it.”
Step 3: Work Style (So People Don’t Drive You Insane)
🔹 How I handle meetings: Daily check-ins? Weekly reviews? No meetings unless necessary?
🔹 Preferred working style: Collaborative? Solo deep work?
Example: “I work best when left alone for long stretches. Need me? Send a message first instead of booking a random meeting.”
Step 4: My Pet Peeves (A.K.A. How to Stay on My Good Side)
What tiny things unreasonably annoy you? Meetings without an agenda? People who “circle back” 15 times?
🔹 Biggest productivity killer for me is…
🔹 If you want to frustrate me, do this…
Example: *“If you book a meeting with no clear agenda, I will fake a Wi-Fi issue and leave.”*
Step 5: Personal Stuff (So People See You as a Human, Not Just an Email Address)
🔹 A few random facts: Favorite coffee order? Do you have pets? Hobbies?
🔹 What keeps me sane outside of work?
Example: “I drink three cups of coffee before noon, and yes, I am addicted. Also, if I’m not online, I’m probably at the gym or eating tacos.”
How to Use This Cheat Sheet
Once you have yours, share it.
Or just keep it for yourself—so you can be more self-aware and avoid unnecessary stress.
Because let’s be real: 90% of work headaches come from bad communication.
Fix that, and everything else gets easier.
Final Thought
If you don’t tell people how to work with you, they will make assumptions.
And those assumptions will be wrong.
Save yourself the frustration—set expectations early.
The best working relationships start with clarity. And clarity starts with you.
Until next time ✌️
Ben