Few things sting like public embarrassment. When you damage someone’s dignity, you may get compliance, but you lose loyalty.
Saving face means giving the other person a way to recover without shame. Correct in private when possible. If a mistake surfaces publicly, protect the person while fixing the issue: shift attention to the solution, avoid sarcasm, avoid “I told you so.”
This isn’t softness. It’s respect applied under pressure. People will tolerate correction when they feel valued. They will resist—or quietly sabotage—when they feel humiliated.
Small moves matter: choose gentler words, acknowledge what was done well, allow an explanation, give the person a path to make it right.
Let someone stand upright after you correct them. They’ll remember the dignity you preserved, and they’ll be far more willing to improve.