Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - CREATE Strong Connections With Your Cues! With Vanessa Van Edwards The Lead Behavior Investigator At Science Of People Title Episode 195
Episode Date: March 1, 2022In This Episode You Will Learn About: The language of cues    Balancing warmth & competence   Taking control of your connections   Purposeful & effective communication  Resourc...es: Website: www.scienceofpeople.com Read Cues & Captive LinkedIn & Facebook & Youtube: @Vanessa Van Edwards Twitter & Instagram: @vvanedwards Take The Charisma Quiz Overcome Your Villains is Available NOW! Order here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com If you haven't yet, get my first book Confidence Creator Show Notes: There is an invisible language being spoken all around us that is impacting our daily lives. That language is the language of cues! We are constantly sending signals through our body language, facial expressions, word choice, and vocal inflections. Vanessa Van Edwards, lead behavioral investigator at Science Of People is here to help us learn how we can utilize these cues to showcase our skills with the MOST confidence. Stop getting lost in the cues and start communicating! About The Guest: She’s a speaker, a researcher, and a nationally best selling author, and today she is here to share her wisdom with us! Vanessa Van Edwards is the Lead Investigator at Science of People, an organization that takes the most interesting research about people, and creates accessible and clearly formulated articles and workshops for people to digest. Her youtube page reaches more than 36 million people, and she’s well known for her viral Ted Talks! Vanessa’s book, Captivate: The Science Of Succeeding With People has been translated in over 16 languages, and she has been leading workshops at some of the top institutions, including MIT and Google, for over a decade. I am SO grateful to have her on today’s episode!   See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I want you to focus on the cues that get you that perfect balance of warmth and competence.
When we talk about confidence, confidence is so important. I think confidence comes from purpose.
I think that if you know you have an important email to send out with a really great announcement, you are confident. The cues that you're using in that email are going to get
you the kind of response you want. Learning cues gave me a confidence in, I know exactly what I
have to do, want the confidence, balance it out, want the confidence. So I want you to know exactly
what cues you're sending. I don't want you to have any more accidental inflection and I don't want
you to give away any more opportunities.
I'm on this journey with me. Each week when you join me, we are going to
chase down our goals, overcome adversity and set you up for better tomorrow.
After no sleep, I'm ready for my close time. Hi, and welcome back. I'm so
excited for you to meet my guest today, Vanessa Van Edwards. She's a speaker,
a researcher and nationally best-selling author. Over 36 million people have seen her on YouTube and in her
viral TED Talk. Her behavior research lab, Science of People, has been featured in Fast Company,
USA Today, CNN, CBS, Entrepreneur Magazine, and more. Her book Captivate, the science of succeeding with people, has been translated into over 16 languages.
For over a decade Vanessa has been leading corporate trainings and workshops to audiences around the world, including MIT, Google,
Doug, Microsoft, podcast. She lives with her husband and daughter in Austin, Texas. Vanessa, thank you so much for being here.
Oh, I'm so excited to be here. Thanks for having me.
Okay, I have to tell you what,
I get a lot of pitches on potential guests for the show.
And sadly, I do not say yes, very often,
but I'll tell you, and I wanna read exactly
what your team sent me that I love,
and I know everybody listening to them, I love this.
This is what they sent.
There is an invisible language being spoken all around us that has an incredible impact
on our daily lives.
The language of cues, cues are the tiny signals
we send to each other 24, 7 through our body language,
facial expressions, word choice, and vocal inflection.
Though our brain is incredibly skilled at picking up
these subtle skills, far too often,
the superpower is left left on tap. Learning
how to utilize cues is critical to showcasing one's talents ideas and skills with confidence.
And that just blew me away because I mean Vanessa obviously we all think about it right now.
We're talking about it makes sense. Oh yeah, that I get it. But never during my day or week and
my ever analyzing or being thoughtful or mindful about
cues that are happening around me. You know it's so funny because I think that
was me for a long time as I was existing in my world I was trying to show up as
my best self. I was trying to bond with people trying to connect and then what
began to happen is I noticed cues that made me feel uneasy. So I started off
with some of the negative cues, right?
So I'd be in the meeting and I would,
I felt off, but I would either catch a funk
or I would be like, does she mean what she's saying?
First, I started this entire process over a decade ago,
looking for red flags.
What are the cues that I should know
that indicate that something is off?
Because I kept having these intuitive hits that something is off, because I kept having these intuitive
hits, that something was off, but I didn't know what I was seeing.
And the very first one, I tell you about the very first QI ever learned about.
Okay.
So, the very first QI ever learned about, I was watching a Lance Armstrong interview.
Way back in the day, he was on a televised interview and he was insisting on live
television that he had never
doked in his life.
He had never used type performance drugs.
Okay.
And he was adamant about it.
And I remember watching this video and going, something's off.
Something's not right here.
He just did not feel right to me.
So I began to look at what he did.
So I watched the recording.
I slowed it down.
I wrote down.
I slowed it down.
And there was a moment right before he said,
I have never taken a form of a stonthanting drug.
So he did a very specific nonverbal cue called the lip purse.
A lip purse is when we match our lips together.
So we press our lips together into a hard line.
So I go into the research, I love research.
I'm a total science geek.
I run a human behavior research lab.
I go into the research and the lip purse
is a nonverbal cue of withholding.
It's literally like your brain is saying,
don't say that, don't say anything more,
keep it in, keep it together, keep it in, keep it together.
And I was like, huh, why if you were about
to share your confession or share the truth,
why would you be with the holding something?
And of course, they came up up many spoiler alert, spoiler alert,
who's knowing, didn't know the end of this story, but spoiler alert.
He was under, had a massive undercover goping scheme.
And I found that like the lip purses, well, I'm very small example
that it's a signal, it's an invisible cue or a visible cue that we don't
realize is happening of internal withholding.
And so when you're in a meeting, when you're in a negotiation and you see your partner,
your colleague, a friend, lip purse withhold, you should stop right in the mirror and say,
are we all good?
This makes sense.
Everything okay?
We're in the same page.
I have found that that one cue opened up my world.
That was one of 93 cues, right?
In the book. That one cue was like opening a world.
It was like opening a world.
Because when you address that or ask the question,
you're giving them the opportunity
to empty their glass to you.
Yes, I think there's two aspects here.
I've always wanted to show up
as the most empathetic, compassionate communicator
that I can, which means that you're trying to hear the truth,
you're trying to accept people's truth. I noticed that looking for cues actually allows me to listen
on a deeper level. So if someone lit purses and I give them permission and safety and belonging to
say, are we all good? Is there something okay? So much so that I'm willing to stop my agenda,
whatever I'm going through whatever I'm talking about, to be like, are you good? Is there anything that I'm missing? So one is I find that people are often
relieved. They're actually like really, one of the very first times I use this, I was in like a
business picture presentation as well. So some people around the table and I noticed from our
decision maker, a lip purse. And I was on a very specific slide. So I said, you know, I'm just
going to pause here. Any questions? And I actually looked right at him and I opened on a very specific slide. And so I said, you know, I'm just going to pause here.
Any questions? And I actually looked right at him and I opened up my hands to him. So I, one of the cues you'll learn is the universal gesture of openness as we open our two hands towards
someone as if they're coming in for a hug. Right? Like it's like the open arms. Yeah, open arms.
It literally exactly. So again, we get these intuitively. So I opened my hands to him and I angled
my body towards him,
which is called fronting. And I said, are we all good? Do you have any extra questions?
I just want to pause for a second and make sure you feel good about this. And he went, oh, you know,
I'm a little hung up on one thing. And it was the smallest clarification on our payment plan
that I could address it immediately. And he was like oh great, great, yes, yes, we're all
on the same page. And I went, whoa, if I had barrelled along in my presentation and not addressed that,
he wouldn't listen to any of the next 10 slides. He would have been hung up on that one cue.
And afterwards, he said to me, you know, I love how responsive you were. I actually was just
looking for cues beyond the verbal. So it opens up people up, but also it shows people that you
really deeply care about what they have to say and what they
have to share.
I mean, this is brilliant.
And as I listen and I'm going through all of your materials,
I'm saying, I want to do this.
However, here's the thing and I'm sure you have an answer for this.
Everyone's moving so fast.
People are nervous going into meetings, right?
The fact that you are presenting and confident enough,
and you know, that you're taking breaths
and recognizing what's happening around you,
back in and of itself, in my opinion, is a win.
Most people are not doing that, right?
They're barreling in, they're panicking, they're nervous,
they're intimidated, whatever.
So how do you advise to people,
or even people who might not be nervous,
someone like me who's saying,
I'm afraid I'm gonna get busy busy and I'm going to forget to do this. You are so right.
So the biggest hurdle we have in this science is cognitive overload.
To our brain is trying to do too much. You are absolutely right. And that is what we have to fight.
So here's the good news is when I started out in the stony and I was cataloging all these
clues, you know, it is spreadsheet, right? And I'm like, how am I going to remember all 93 of these cues, right? So that's when I found
some amazing researches back from 2002, so it's very well established research. And what they looked
at is what are the cues, what are the traits that are most important interaction? We can't get them all,
right? We can't be open and trustworthy and leaders and powerful and capable and likable and friendly is too much, right? So they narrow down there are actually only two
traits that we have to focus on to be most effective. But they found is the most highly
charismatic people differ from control groups. So the high, think about the most charismatic person
you know, that secret sauce, what makes them charismatic, what they found in the research is just two
traits and that highly charismatic people
rank off the charts in just these two traits,
which is warmth and competence.
Here's where it simplifies the process.
I'm writing that down right now, by the way.
Yes, please write down.
I got, so, and by the way, if you're listening
and you can write these down, so warmth,
that's trust, like ability, friendliness, collaboration.
Okay, warmth, that's that bucket. Then you have
competence, power, capability, efficiency. The problem is,
is it the smartest people I know, the most successful people I
know, might focus all of their energy on one of those traits,
they show up, and they try to blow you away with their
competence. They name drop, they mention their accolades, they're like data, data,
term vocab. And what do you think? Wow, they're impressive,
but I don't like them. They're really powerful, but they're not very
friendly. I wouldn't want to go to lunch with them. Whereas on the other
hand, you have people who put all of their eggs in the in the warmth basket.
So they just want to be likable, like me, like me, like me, they tend to be
people, please or they struggle with saying no. And they just want to be likable. Like me, like me, like me. They tend to be people pleasers where they struggle with saying no, and they just want to be as friendly likeables possible.
That's great. Everyone likes them, but people interrupt them. People don't take them seriously.
He wasn't listening to their ideas. So the key, the sweet spot, why cares about people are so rare
and we're so drawn to them is because they hit both warmth and power. We like them and we trust them and we rely on them.
They get stuff done, but we also love chatting with them.
So this is all I want us to focus on
is I want you to focus on the cues
that get you that perfect balance of warmth and competence.
That's it, those the only two.
And so if you know that you're defaulting,
so for people listening just for a moment, which one sounds more like you? So I have this little quiz. Let's it. Those are the only two. And so if you know that your default and so if people listening just for a moment, which
one sounds more like you.
So I have this little quiz.
Let's just do it together.
You want to do it together.
Yes.
Let's do it.
Okay.
So I'm going to read off 12 words.
And I want you to pick the three that sound most like you.
Okay.
So you're only allowed to pick three.
Ready?
Impressive.
Powerful.
Smart. Trustworthy. Collaborative. three. Ready? Impressive, powerful, smart, trustworthy, collaborative, kind, capable,
compassionate, effective, open, expert team player.
Compassionate, effective, open. Okay, so you picked three words, two warm words,
and one competence word. That's incredibly important because that's a snapshot into where you fall
on the charisma scale. Are you higher in warmth or you higher in competence? So if you listening
picked two competent words, one and one word, you're a balance that you lay a little bit higher
in competence. If you picked all warm words, it means you have to balance out with confidence. You've got all competent words and you've got to balance out and warm.
So the only cues that I want you to focus on are the ones that help you hit that sweet spot.
So warm cues and competence cues based on your balance. That makes sense. It's sort of like a
scale that we're trying to balance. So is this something that you truly believe you can teach people
to be charismatic? 100%. I think the biggest mistake that people make is that they think that you could only be born with it,
right? That if you're charismatic, you're their born with it or you're not. Actually, the most
charismatic people are incredibly purposeful with their cues. It happens in two ways. So for
cues, there's two sides of cues. There's the decoding and the encoding.
I don't want to get too sciencey,
but I love that.
I can't help, but I love the science.
So we queue's first, we decode.
We read other people's queues.
And the second thing is we encode.
We send queues to others.
And if you listen to highly charismatic people,
talk about how they communicate.
You'll notice they are always purposefully
dialing up or looking for cues that will help them.
So for example, one of the stories I love is
Neil deGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist,
famous author, TV show host.
He says that he's highly competent, right?
He's an astrophysicist, so he is very obsessed with the facts,
but he realizes if he's too competent,
people tune him out.
It's too much science.
So what he does, he has a test.
He said by the way multiple best-selling books. He says when I'm trying to decide what I'm
going to put in a book, I go on an airplane, I sit next to someone, and I begin to tell them
about my work. Every time that they eyebrow raise, so raise your eyebrows up, he says that I put
in a book. I think they don't eyebrow raise.
I skip from the book.
In other words, he's even using cues to tell him
what's the warmth that he's missing.
What are the warm, interesting things that he can add?
So, eyebrow raise and other warmth to you
that you can show to increase collaboration and trust,
but also that you can look for it
to see if someone's interested or engaged.
Oh, that's so interesting.
And thank goodness that guy didn't sit next to me
on a flight because I purposely put airbugs in my ear
because I can't stand talking to people on airplanes.
That would have been a waste of little airplane ride
for him.
I think he would have seen you as a challenge.
I think he would have liked it.
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You know what's so interesting when you were talking about you know the
warmth and the competence and being self-aware as to which way am I leaning more and how could I potentially
level that off or be more equal on the scale.
This is so crazy.
This is what popped into my mind immediately.
Fact, I was fired four years ago for my job.
I was a chief revenue officer.
Everyone listening already knows this, but I'm sharing it with you in case you don't know.
And the woman that fired me was previously the CFO. She became the CEO and when she
became CEO fired me immediately, that's just backstory. But she was incredibly leaning towards
the confidence side, like very articulate, many awards, you know, very much a numbers person,
always rattling off numbers of blue people away, you know, in any moment time.
She had zero big egg on the warmth scale. However, and I worked with her for 14 years, and woman was complete antithesis of me.
And what was interesting is I remember the last two years, and you'll like this, you'll tell me how the ride coached her.
The last two years I worked with her, she started showing up differently.
So weird, because I knew her.
Well, you know when you know someone,
you know who they really are.
So I knew this is not real.
This is just my opinion,
but nobody else knew that was not in the C-suite with her
that didn't spend a lot of time with her.
Other people was like, God,
she seems just fantastically,
you know, they'd be seeing really positive things about her.
She's really changed a lot as she's gotten older or she's become a mother.
Whatever reasons they would create storyline, they'd create about her.
Yeah.
And I started thinking it from a standpoint that I see something very different about this
person.
I'm very confused.
I don't know what's going on.
However, I see it's landing.
It's landing with the team.
It's landing with people.
It's working.
So, you know, to your point that this can be taught
and it's not ingrained from day one,
you're 100% right, I've seen it.
However, it's very weird to see it happen to someone
when they're not disclosing it openly to you.
Like, hey, I'm working on my warrant
from trying to come, you know,
like that would have been better for me,
the kind of person I am, I would have preferred to have heard that.
So that's exactly right.
I think that as you begin to change your cues, I mean, you're
kind of doing a body language makeover in a sense. By the way, body language is only a half
the book. We also can talk about imagery and verbal and colors. I think it's so important
to broadcast this, right, to say, you know, sometimes I can come across a little cold.
You know, I got in my last feedback review or my team told me I was a little bit intimidating. That's not okay with me. It's really important to me that you feel safe,
that you feel connected. So starting at the beginning of the year, being in the month, I'm going to
be working on my warm, my openness. I want your feedback. I would love to hear from you, but I'm
going to really try to die left because I want you to feel good. That is so powerful because two
things happen. One is it has you state your goal,
gives you permission to reset, right?
Like sometimes we need a president's reset.
Like sometimes we just know that we're like a funk
with someone or like we've had some difficult relationships
and we need a reset.
So that's sort of a softer reset,
like a soft restart on the button.
The second thing is verbal.
So some fascinating science that we don't realize
is the words that we use
change people's perceptions of us as well as their actions in behavior. So for example,
in one study I love this study, I think this is like mind blowing already. This is like,
I literally read it three times, I was like, how? Okay, a researcher named Brian Wansing told
participants to come into his lab and eat a bowl of yogurt. The catch was, is it was all the dark. So they come into the lab, it's completely dark. He hands on the bowl of yogurt.
He has to eat the yogurt and he says, would you please rate the yogurt on its strawberry
flavor? So imagine for a second you're in the dark, you're eating a bowl of yogurt and
you're trying to decide how strawberry is this flavor. 59% of the participants rated the
yogurt as having a nice strawberry flavor. But there was a second trick, there are a few. The yogurt was actually chocolate. Strawberry and chocolate taste totally different.
It was like strawberry and raspberry. What happened was, and this is one of many experiments that shows
the power of our verbal priming, when Brian Wans think as perseverance to look for the flavor of strawberry
and search for the flavor of strawberry.
The brain hurts strawberry, the mouth tastes is strawberry,
and then therefore they felt that it was very strawberry.
We are constantly telling people what yogurt they're eating.
In other words, we say, hey team,
this is how every team calls starts.
Hey everyone, we have some company updates to go over
and so we so review everything.
Let's wait for people to get on
and we'll just get started in a few.
You're basically telling people go to sleep.
This meeting is gonna be like every other meeting
you've been to, the tone of voice I use.
And also I used words that didn't mean anything.
Right? I said, let's hop on a call.
Let's review, we'll get started in a few.
What research has found is that when people hear words like collaborate,
their brain actually begins to prepare to collaborate in their pre-frontal cortex,
and they are more likely to be collaborative. So if you tell people,
you know what, it's so important to me that you feel connected, that you feel that you
can trust me, that you feel that we can be open. So I am working on a little presence reset.
I'm gonna work on my collaboration.
I'm gonna work on my trust and openness.
I want you to feel safe to tell me anything.
Just telling people those words,
changes how their brain is working.
You are actually setting them up
to be more open, trusting,
warm and connected with you, which is incredible.
I think we throw away these verbal opportunities.
Yeah, that's mind-blowing. It makes perfect sense. And I'm a big fan of we throw away these verbal opportunities. Yeah, that's mind blowing.
It makes perfect sense.
And I'm a big fan of we're teaching people how to treat us.
Our word choice is, we are showing people
how to respect us or not respect us either way,
which is similar to what you're saying.
But it makes perfect sense.
But wow, that's incredibly powerful.
And what a great hack you just gave everyone to use.
We make it even more practical.
So I think this makes sense to us, right?
Like intuitively a lot of these cues were like,
oh yeah, that makes sense.
Here's a really practical way to think about it.
I want you to do an email audit.
I want you to open up your sent email folder.
And I want you to open five important emails
that you've sent out in the last few days.
So important emails to whoever your colleagues,
team, and the customers.
And I want you to look at the first 10 words that you used.
But we don't realize is that we are throwing away our words
with words that don't mean anything,
or we're jumping right into a gender,
which is okay when we're rushed,
but you're actually taking away cues
that people need to be successful.
And here's the kicker.
In your email audience and those important emails,
I want you to count how many
warm words you're using and how many competent words you're using. We found in our lab, we can predict
exactly where people fall in the charisma scale based on the email audit. I just asked you to do.
So we can see based on their emails exactly how their colleagues would rate them. And that is
because we are constantly looking for these
warmth and confidence cues. So if you open up an email, highly competent words, trigger productivity
and efficiency, highly warm words, trigger trust and collaboration. So by the way, exclamation points
are highly warm, emotive, highly warm. Of course they are. Right. So we have people who will say to
us, you know, but I don't know why people are not taking me seriously.
I don't know why I can't raise my rates.
I don't know why that I can't charge people more.
I don't know why people feel like they are always showing up
late, they're not our final emails.
We open up their email and I'll count 15 warm words
at one cop to work.
Hey girl, exclamation point.
It was so fun hanging out last night.
Fun, hang out.
I would love to collaborate on this new project coming up.
If you can get back to me, it would be so wonderful, so wonderful.
Exclamation points, my only face. So we're already like eight words. And it's a very, very warm email, but it does not trigger the competent part of our brain that goes, I should get back to her.
I want to pay her rate. I want to make sure that I take her seriously. So the next push is, okay, you do that email audit.
I want you to see, is it warmer competent or nothing at all?
So it'll either be totally sterile,
so no warmer competent words or one or the other.
And then how can you purposefully add verbal cues
that set you up for success?
So that the important email,
it's not every email, no one has time for that,
but in the important emails,
you have a perfect balance of warmth and competence. In my slide, Dex, my presentations on our website,
even on my Instagram, for every warm photo, I have a commentant photo, every commentant photo,
I have a warm photo, because we saw our engagement shot up when we were hitting that balance.
That's unbelievable, but yet makes perfect sense. And of course, I'm thinking of myself, and I just recently won a big recognition about speaking.
And so I purposely and intentionally reached out
to all my past clients, people who are pending in the queue,
just to like try to push people over.
And I'm thinking of the email,
and I, because I didn't want to come across
to I'm the greatest thing in the entire world,
I definitely went way more, more, more, more, more, more.
Externation put, Esther's point.
And I'll tell you, Vanessa, I did not get anywhere near the kind of responses I thought I
would get back.
And now I'm thinking, I don't think I was competent enough in the, in the email.
Yeah, exactly.
And I think that that's you just made of the classic mistake that smart people make is
we don't know how to be purposeful.
And we talk about confidence, right?
Like confidence is so important.
I think confidence comes from purpose.
I think that if you know you have an important email
that's sent out with a really great announcement,
you are confident, the cues that you're using
in that email are gonna get you the kind of response you want.
I think that that's where confidence comes from.
I joke that I'm a recovering awkward person.
I get very socially anxious.
I always doubt myself.
I used to doubt the kind of emails I wrote.
I used to doubt the way that I stood where I did it with my hands.
Learning cues gave me a confidence in.
I know exactly what I have to do.
Work the competence.
Balance it out.
Work the competence.
And that's been my back door into competence.
So the reason I share this is when
you're sitting at a right and important email where your heart is like, you know, this email's
where you're just like, oh, like you're bitter pattern and you're asking for that raise or
you're checking it on your boss or you're staying at email with boundaries. I want to take that
anxiety way by saying, all you have to do is get one of the competence. That's it. If you can
balance it out, it's going to be more effective email. And so I'm hoping that we can take down some anxiety and get
confidence in it in a different way.
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So tell me a little bit
about your new book cues and
how people are going to feel
after they read the book to
apply some of the stuff back
to their life.
Yes.
So I'm hoping this is going to
give everyone a sort of social
blueprint.
Right.
I think that we have all these
goals in our life and a lot of
the times there, you know,
career goals or family goals.
And then when it comes like the actual action steps behind those, especially the social action steps,
let's say that one of your goals, what's a common goal for some of your listeners that I can like play with
two or three common ones? A common goal, a lot of people want to leave their day job. They're not happy
with their day job and they want to make a leap. Okay, so let's say that you want to leave your day job and that requires
doing informational interviews with influencers and that requires setting up some side hustle things by maybe getting a partner.
You could break that into tactical things, but you could say okay, I have to figure out how much inventory is,
I have to do a marketing plan, I have to do a revenue sheet, but there's also a lot of soft skills
involved in that. For example, how can you leave your job on a high so that you can leave on good,
on good terms with your boss? That requires a lot of really good, powerful connecting and
conversations in three or four months, sitting up to your quitting. If you want to reach out to a new
partner, how do you make sure that they want to work with you? St. Yes, it's about sitting at the
coffee meeting, but it's also, okay, if I want this new partner
to take me seriously, if I want them to respect me,
I have to make sure that I have a warm and competent opener.
So like, how do you even open the emails to them?
When to actually get them to the coffee date,
what kind of questions should you be asking
that hit that balance of warmth and conscience?
So for example, a lot of people will start
to coffee date to bond with, so has it been going?
Man, those numbers, right?
Ooh, those COVID numbers.
They are rough.
And you end up on this like awkward downward spiral, and you're like, well, the reason
I wanted to talk to you today is, and you haven't built up any of this report yet.
So one of the things I want you to think about is, how can you use these skills to build
rapport with people that actually work with you?
So for example, in conversation,
warm, competent, competent,
competent, certain things like, instead of how are you?
In fact, try never to ask how are you?
Instead of ask, working on anything exciting these days,
that's like my secret,
competent, because it's both warm and competent, working.
So productive people, exciting, warm, trustworthy, fun. So working on anything
exciting these days, you'll actually see people be like, oh, huh, you know, I am not
something exciting. So you're actually beginning to, from the various, sort of the conversation,
those first 10 words of your opener are beginning to open their mind to trying something
a little bit different. Not just how are you, you know, how's it been, how do you been busy,
but trying something a little bit different?
Wow, that is really very powerful.
And I love that you give these specific examples.
I mean, it's just, it's not something
that we're strategically thinking about every day,
yet this can really be a game changer for people.
I think they're hidden opportunities, right?
Like when my team and I were thinking about how to reach out
so I'm so happy that that reach out worked and let this hidden language. The other aspect of that is that there's
all these opportunities that are just waiting for us. What an amazing missed opportunity to just instead of
saying how are you or how's it been going or how's the fam, just slightly changed to working on
anything exciting. It was the highlight of your week. So what have your goals been this year? Those are the questions that begin
to deepen and make you more memorable and make you talk about things that are more, more
more uncomforted. Those are the opportunities that are like easy to grab once we know how
to grab them.
Gosh, I love that. And I'm totally going to rip in run with, I've been taking notes the
whole time that we're sitting here talking. So to me, you're bringing me a lot of value,
that's what I want you to know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Now, I know you talked about,
there's more to cues than just a word choice.
For example, where you sit in a meeting,
there's actually better decisions to be made there.
Yes, so we don't realize that there's cues in so many aspects.
So obviously we talked about body language, the lip first.
We talked a lot about verbal kind of our open areas.
There's also spatial cues, relational cues.
There's vocal cues you could talk about.
I love the seating ones.
So I was looking at the rules of space.
So cross-cultures and energy races, we have rules of space.
So when we're closer with someone,
we like someone we want to get closer.
Now, research has found that there's actually four different space zones.
Those are the personal zone, the intimate zone,
the social zone, and the public zone.
What happens in our interactions is we're not aware
that we're doing these, we're subconsciously going through them,
but we know, have you ever talked to a close talker
where someone gets really close to your face?
I don't like that.
I don't.
Right, we don't like it, because that person
has gone into our intimate zone too quickly. So what I realized was that when we're sitting around a boardroom table or a conference table, your spatial choice is actually research or the VIP or the decision-makers' front of mind,
you actually want to be in their direct eye line,
their direct sight eye line.
Being the closest one will help you whisper or talk to them,
but if you want to be front of mind or top of mind,
you're actually better off picking seats
that are in their direct line of sight.
They also found that the seat that faces the door,
actually typically is the power player seat.
And that's because they can get everyone's first impression
as they walk into a room.
So if you want to be the power player,
you might consider taking the seat that faces the door
or that seat the door.
So there's all kinds of really interesting rules
that we can think about even when choosing our seat.
Again, it's just an opportunity that we get, right?
It's like one that we haven't noticed our whole life
actually is just waiting for us to pick up and try.
I always thought, you know, if I was with my old boss
and I wanted to be, you know,
I wanted my agenda to win in the end,
I would sit right next to him.
I never thought, sit across the table
so he has to look at you the entire time.
And that never crossed my mind.
Yeah, and that's a goal alignment, right?
Like a lot of these cues, it's like,
okay, what are your goals?
Is your goals to be coming across as competent
and efficient and capable?
You have to get stuff done today?
Okay, competent, dial up the competence.
Is your goal all about collaboration, trust connections,
less about getting things done?
Okay, dial up the warmth.
Is your goal in a meeting to really get in
with a decision maker, sit across from them?
Is your goal to not be seen
and to let someone else take the stage,
so on the side? Is your goal to be whispering in their ear occasionally, but not be front of
mind? Sit right next to them. Right, like there's no right or wrong cue. It's all based on your
goals. Wow. Yeah, that's really, really powerful. So I have to selfishly ask a question.
So I've been told that which I can't believe because I don't see myself like this and I'm sure
you must hear this from a lot of people that you deal with and research you do.
I've been told like me very intimidating in a meeting or in a presentation.
And I don't see my, I think I'm the biggest knucklehead out there and I'm hilarious and
that I should be dialing up on the confidence side.
You know, that's just my opinion.
However, I get feedback sometimes from people who, who I know are trying to help me give
me this feedback.
What suggestions do you make to someone like that
who doesn't really see themselves as having that problem?
Oh, man, I would say that you're in the boat with most people.
What's crazy about that research that I brought up from 2002
that's been repeated by a number of different
academic institutions is that while warmth and competence
makes up 82% of our Dutchman's people, so a huge majority of our people, most
of us are terrible at assessing our own warmth and
competence.
I bet you're terrible at assessing it.
So here's the first thing is I have a little free little quiz
you can take to assess your warmth and competence.
It's scienceeaple.com slash charisma.
It's free.
It's up to take as many times you want because of this exact
problem.
It's hard to step back and say, well, I think I come across this friendly
likeable, but I don't know. So first of all, you take the quiz. Here's the harder one.
I want you to send that quiz to a colleague, a partner, and someone important to you, and
ask them to take it as you. Wow. I bet that is very telling. It's horrifying and very telling and extremely helpful because A, first you start with yours.
Okay, great. I took this. It's 10 questions. It's very simple. You take it. You're like,
great. I see that I, my, how I see myself is highly warm. You said it to a colleague, a friend,
and a VIP, and you get to see how they see you, which is incredibly helpful to know
how accurate am I and how I'm coming across.
I think I'm coming across one way,
but I actually wanna come across a different way.
And it also might be different
based on family versus colleagues.
And that's good, right?
Like we wanna be warmer with our family.
I wanna be with my toddler.
I'm very warm with her.
I don't need to be competent until I'm telling her the rules.
And I, as a parent, use these specifically
with my daughter and my family.
When I need her to be safe,
or I need her to listen to the rules,
I am highly competent, and she knows.
She knows when mom is competent, right?
She knows what I mean, what I mean.
But every other time I'm warm.
And so if you wanted her to see you,
you're trying to get her direction,
you're thinking about the inflection of your voice, the way you're standing and your word choice.
And my eye contact and my gestures.
For example, for competence volume is a word we talk about in the whole vocal section
of the book volume is a really important part of our power.
Most people think that, oh, I just have to be louder to be heard.
Actually, that's not true.
So when I want to be conscious, my daughter, I just have to be louder to be heard. Actually, that's not true. So when I want to be compt of my daughter, I speak really low. And I say, Sienna, it's not okay. These are do that.
That is not okay. What we need to do instead, we need to pack up our bags. I'll need to go home.
Okay. But like, that is much more serious than I was a lower volume. So even using our volume, using our vocal inflection,
another example is a warm inflection
is when we go up at the end of our sentences.
So if I were to say, my name is Vanessa,
my name is Vanessa, I go up the end of my sentence.
That is a highly warm introduction.
And I can usually predict by just listening
to how someone says hello in their voice mail
if they're more competent.
So a highly warm voice sounds like this.
Hi, this is Vanessa.
I can't get back to you.
We have messed up the tone.
Great.
It drives me crazy, but so many people do that.
So those people and go listen to your voicemail
are usually highly warm, and I can
particularly use it that are highly warm.
Highly competent folks use a different inflection.
They use the downward inflection.
Actually, if you want to hear a really
a downward inflection for President Barack Obama,
would sling his words down. That's a downward inflection is very high in competence. really downward inflection for President Barack Obama, would sling his words down.
That's a downward inflection.
It's very high in competence.
So downward inflection, what's not like this?
High in Vanessa.
I'm not here right now.
They have a message after the beat.
So I go down in my sentences.
That is very highly competent.
So even the way that you use your inflection
to your children on your voice smell
at the start of a meeting,
if you're at the start of a meeting, you say,
hey, everyone, I just want to get started. Let's get started. Let's get started. If people are not going to listen,
it's going to be because it's not constant. If you say everyone, let's get started. Let's get started.
Let's get started. You're like, whoa, it's serious. Right? So even I'm the same person,
and both sound like me, but very different kinds of meaning. Very different kinds of meaning.
And you can, you can utilize either one strategically based upon the environment that you're in.
100% I want you in control. I think confidence comes from control and purpose.
So I want you to know exactly what cues you're sending. I don't want you to have any more
extensible inflection. I don't want you to give away any more opportunities.
This book is brilliant. Your work is brilliant. Tell us where everyone finds cues and how
can everyone find you. Oh, I'm very sorry. Thank you. That's so kind.
Our cues available wherever books are sold. It's also already picked up internationally.
So Amazon, your local bookstore and I also read the Audible book. If you want to hear me
do the inflections and the whole book. And the whole book will talk to you after that.
It took a while on Audible. I do the whole out of the book as well.
Oh my gosh.
And tell us about your website
that everybody can go to for the quiz.
Oh, yes, of course.
So scienceofpeople.com,
so if you want to take the free charisma quiz,
as many times as you want,
it's scienceofpeople.com slash charisma.
If you also want to check out some of these phrases,
the words I use,
and you can go to the words I used,
you can go to scienceofpeople.com
slash podcast and download. We have 20 trust warmth phrases and 20 constant phrases. If
you're like, I just don't know how to do this, that will help you with your email audit.
This is unbelievable. So unique. Love the work you're doing Vanessa. Thank you so much for
being here today. Oh, thank you so much for having me. Thanks everyone for listening
and go be warm and competent.
Be your best self.
Absolutely, guys.
Until next week, keep creating confidence.
And if I was you, I would grab views on the hurry.
So next week, see you then.
I'll go right over here.
I decided to change that idea.
And if I'm still around, I couldn't be more
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