The Mel Robbins Podcast - The “It” Factor: How to Hack Charisma & Use Body Language to Boost Your Influence, Income, and Impact
Episode Date: December 1, 2022Buckle up and get ready to take notes because this episode is a masterclass. The tools you’re about to learn will help you become more confident, influential, and even make more money. Today, we�...�re talking about The “It” Factor. Some people just seem to have IT, right? When I think of The It Factor, people like Oprah, The Rock, Taylor Swift, the Dalai Lama, and Martin Luther King, Jr. come to mind. These people make you want to lean in, join in, and learn more. So today we’re asking… What is “It” that some people have that makes us automatically trust and like them? And, more importantly, how can you get it? Here to answer that question is Vanessa Van Edwards, a best-selling author, researcher, and founder of the behavior lab The Science of People. I cannot wait for you to dig into what she has researched. Turns out The It Factor has another name: charisma. And the good news? YOU can learn how to have charisma, starting today. You’re going to want to. Research finds that charismatic people are more influential, earn a higher income, and have a bigger impact at work, in their communities, and in their relationships. The secret to hacking it? Social cues, like body language and the way you speak. That’s why today’s episode is a masterclass. You’ll learn… Shocking research from Princeton about how people size you up3 things you must do in the first 10 seconds of a Zoom callTips for nailing an interviewThe major mistake you’re making as you speakHow to ask for a raiseA simple test that will help you figure out how charismatic you areWhy you never want to fake a smileTips for charisma for introvertsWhy a second impression is as important as the first That’s just the tip of the iceberg. Today’s episode is jam-packed with simple, tactical research and tools that will help you and anyone you care about develop the skill of charisma. And you deserve that. Xo Mel Join the free 5-day Wake Up Challenge with me and master your morning routine here. All show notes for this episode can be found at melrobbins.com/podcastCheck out the video version of this podcast on my YouTube channel here.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to an amazing buckle up your seat belt episode
of the Mel Robbins Podcast.
Guess what we're talking about today?
You and me, baby.
We're talking about the it factor.
That's right, the it factor.
I don't know how to say it, but we're talking about it.
Some people just have it, don't they?
Just think about who you admire that has the it factor.
I'll give you my list, Oprah, the rock,
the Dalai Lama, Taylor Swift.
Oh, and the late Robin Williams and Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr. Those folks, they have the it factor.
Why? Well, because they have this ability
to make me lean in and care about what they're saying.
We not only admire folks like this, but we like them, and we trust them.
That is the heart of having the it factor.
And based on the research, when people have the it factor, you know what it means? It means they have
charisma. Charisma is a really cool thing because charisma will make you more influential.
It'll help you make a bigger impact and charisma absolutely is going to help you make some
more money because according to the research 82% of people's impression of you is based on
whether or not you display charisma. Did you hear that 82% of someone's impression of you is based on whether or not you display charisma.
Did you hear that 82% of someone's impression of you?
Based on whether or not you got charisma. I know I said it twice.
That's how important it is.
But here's the coolest thing about charisma.
It's actually so easy to hack when you know the simple things to do.
So today, here's what we're doing on the show.
You're going to meet one of the world's leading researchers and experts on charisma and body
language, Vanessa Van Edwards.
She's a behavioral investigator, the founder of the research group, science of people, the
author of the best-selling books on these topics, captivate and cues, and she's here to prove
to you that you have the it factor.
Yes, I'm talking to you.
And the skill of charisma, that is how you are going to bring your it factor to life
so you can make an impact, you can influence people, and you can make more income.
Let's go, man. Classes in session. I am so excited for this.
So, let's dial up the skill of charisma.
Let's bring the it factor to life.
Let's increase our influence, impact, and income people.
And let's welcome Vanessa to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I'm so excited for this.
Vanessa, I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so happy to be here.
I can't even tell you.
Well, let's just jump right into it
because you have written the book on both charisma
and body language.
And so I want to start with what is charisma and why does it matter?
So it's funny about charisma.
I've always been fascinated by this trait.
I'm a recovering awkward person.
Charisma does not come naturally to me.
I've always been fascinated by the cool kids.
You know, I watch them and I'm like,
oh, how did they know what to do?
And so I was for many years trapped
by this mistaken belief that to be charismatic,
you have to be extroverted.
You have to be bubbly,
if you life of the party.
And I am not an extrovert.
And so I always thought, well, I guess I can't have it.
It's in an eight tray, you have to be extroverted. But research actually finds is that
charisma has nothing to do with your extroversion, your attractiveness, your
athleticism, even your intelligence. The actual definition of highly
charismatic people, what makes them different is they send a very specific set
of social signals. Specifically, they are constantly signaling high warmth,
so trust like ability, friendliness,
along with, this is the key, a balance of high competence,
capability, power, effectiveness.
And what's magical about this is if you're with someone
and you are drawn into them,
you immediately are able to answer two questions.
I can trust you and I can rely on you.
And so highly charismatic people, that's what they're signaling, warmth and competence at all times.
Wow. Okay. So let me see if I just can bottom line this. Yes. If you display charisma,
other people are left with the impression that they can trust you and that they can count on you.
Is that right? That is exactly right. And what people don't realize is that charisma,
more than any other attribute, is the single most important aspect of you being successful.
It helps you in your relationships, it helps you professionally, it helps people take you seriously,
it helps you also feel more confident and purposeful in your interactions. So charisma is that
missing ingredient that we need to trigger or activate our success.
Wow. I mean, you hear so much about confidence, you hear about extroverts versus introverts.
But how is it that charisma impacts all those things more than your personality or confidence?
When research looks at highly charismatic people, they find that we are looking for people who are signaling high charisma because it shows all
those other things. Highly charismatic people are confident. They are competent. They are warm.
They are likable. And so the most amazing astrophotive charisma is it can be learned. It is not
an innate trait. You don't have to be born with it or not. Anyone can learn how to be more charismatic
through a very specific set of cues.
The social signals human send to each other.
That's crazy, because you know what you're basically saying?
It's possible for anyone to learn how to have the it factor.
Yes.
The hard part about this is, you can be the warmest, most
competent person in the world.
But if you don't show those signals,
the world does not believe you.
And this comes from amazing research
out of Princeton University, which
found that under signaling, so not signaling enough.
And this is what happens, I think, with very smart people.
So most of my students are off the charts, intelligence,
high achievers.
And they think, oh, my smarts will speak for me.
I'm really smart.
I can make it through anything,
I'm super prepared, I have great answers,
and the problem is they under-signal
the warmth and competence cues.
And when Dr. Fisk found the creator of this research,
she found that without enough warmth,
people do not believe your competence.
So the problem of smart people is they think
their smarts work for them,
but if they're not using the right signals, the world literally cannot believe them.
Wow.
So is this why charisma matters?
So I think of charisma like a lubricant, right?
So we're in the same situation.
Yeah.
A social lubricant.
Exactly.
The word I use, that I thought they were the metaphor I thought you were going to use.
Okay, so charisma is so true.
Lover again, everybody.
Yeah, it makes me some mood.
You know, because because, well, it's in my interactions, my social interactions before I learned
this science were like the opposites move. They were crunchy, like not in a good way.
Okay, so you said you were awkward. Give us an example. Come on Vanessa.
So awkwardness.
Let's talk about awkwardness.
This is one of my favorite topics.
Awkwardness dresses up in different ways.
So my awkwardness, and everyone has different things.
Some curious milk, you have any awkwardness, how it dresses up.
Some people, they feel awkward because of fear.
They're fear being rejected,
fear being criticized, fear of saying something silly
or sounding stupid.
And so their awkwardness will dress up as shutting down. So for me, my awkwardness, I'm an overthinker.
I'm the person who I get in bed at the end of the night, and I literally rethink every conversation
I've had the whole day. Right? Or like I overanalyze my answers before I even say anything,
which makes me a terrible conversationalist listener. So my awkwardness would make me shut down.
And so my introverts listening, this is often what happens
when you feel awkward, you're afraid of a silence
or being judged, you shut in, you close down,
you stop talking.
Other people, my extroverts, their awkwardness
stresses up is something else.
Their awkwardness stresses up as showing off over the top,
being a drama queen, talking too much. some of my extroverted awkward friends,
they'll say, sometimes I just can't stop talking,
literally my mouth just keeps going.
So awkwardness is this really interesting way
that we try to cover our fear.
So when I say I'm a recovering awkward person,
I've had to conquer a lot of internal fear
to be able to have interactions
that I desperately, desperately want to have.
That could be in a professional setting, sharing my ideas, but it also could be just
trying to make good friends, trying to be open with my partner. And so I think that charisma is
this lubricant because awkwardness makes our relationships, our conversations, our communication
crunchy, awkward, halty. We talk too much, we talk too little.
There's an awkward silence.
We don't know what to do with our hands, right?
Like, what do I do with my body language?
We make weird faces.
We awkwardly nervous laugh.
So my goal with charisma, what I've found
is that it's a smoother.
It's a lubricant, which I just,
we have to stick with that metaphor.
Well, it's hilarious.
And it also makes it, when you use the word crunchy
about those moments when you feel awkward, that makes a lot of sense to me.
Because whether you're an overtaker, oversharer, nervous laugh, interrupting people,
because you're extroverted, but you feel afraid of how people are going to view you,
or whether you withdraw because you're afraid, that crunchiness is that sort of disruption you
feel internally. And so I love this idea that charisma, which you say is a skill that anybody can develop,
that charisma helps you be yourself,
and it helps you be more influential,
and it helps you enjoy social settings,
whether you're introverted or extroverted.
That's what I'm kind of getting from this.
Oh, that's it.
The key here is the balance.
Most of us have an imbalance. So there's four segments of the population. This is what the research finds. There's the sweet spot of highly charismatic people, high warm, high competence. That's the rare birds among us.
So if we're around someone who's warm and competent, it makes us feel like our best selves. If you think about the most charismatic person, you know, so just think about them for a second. They make you feel better. They make you feel like you're
best self. Now, can you give us an example of somebody who is highly charismatic? Let's
do the classic Oprah. Okay. Oprah is highly charismatic. And here's why. She can be in
an interview and she can make the other person feel so comfortable.
They share their darkest secrets. That's one. That's trust.
She can cry with the other person. She can mimic their facial expressions.
She, her warmth literally draws out other people's warmth.
However, you also take her very seriously.
You know she is smart. She knows your answers. You can't sneak something by her.
And that's her signaling, I'm competent.
I'm going to make sure that I get to the truth here.
You can rely on me to ask the hard questions.
So that's an example of someone who's very nice balance and kind of uses her warmth and
competence as a dial.
Can you give me an example of the kind of charisma that is the quiet type of
introverted person? Like who is that person out in the world?
Okay, so this is a historical example that it's a great one, Jackie Kennedy. So
Jackie Kennedy is an interesting case study. She's the perfect example of
someone very introverted. She was a very
introverted person, but she knew that to achieve her goals, to be able to make an impact on people,
she had to find her flavor. Now that did not mean that she was out there making speeches every day,
but her character, her charisma, was so powerful that people were drawn to her. And that wasn't because
she was loud. That wasn't because she was more words,
but she had that unique kind of quiet power
that made people drawn to.
And she had to learn it.
She had to learn how to harness that.
That's really interesting.
Yeah.
Let's look at, for example, Steve Jobs.
So Steve Jobs is not warms.
Zero warms.
Zero warms.
So he is the perfect example of high, high, high competence.
He's constantly signaling, take me seriously.
I'm powerful.
And most importantly, what highly smart people don't realize
is if they over-signal competence,
people see them as cold, intimidating,
not a collaborator, not a team player, hard to talk to.
So yes, he was brilliant,
but his lack of warmth made people feel like he wasn't a collaborator,
he wasn't a good team player.
And his legacy is changing the world, but also being not kind.
So that's an example of high competence,
my highly smart people, my engineers,
my really technically brilliant folks,
they often get trapped and high competence
because they don't know how to signal warmth.
By the way, they might have all the intention
to be a collaborator, but we are not taught
how to signal warmth, and so they go,
well, guess I don't know how to do that.
Wow.
Okay.
That's one bucket, and by the way,
so as you're listening, I want you to think about
what sounds like you, what feels like you.
So do you feel like you have the balance? Do you feel like, no, you're off as you're listening, I want you to think about what sounds like you, what feels like you.
So do you feel like you have the balance?
Do you feel like, no, you're off the charts in competence?
You know, you're high in competence.
If people always think you're in charge, you know you're high in competence.
If people have ever told you that you're intonating or hard to talk to, you know that you're
in a relationship or have a partner who's high in competence.
If they constantly Google
fact check you. So highly competent folks, their mission is to get it right. They're very
dominated by the idea of get it right, get the facts. And so they'll be in a competition
and be like, let me Google fact check that. Let me just see if that's that's right.
Do they share their emotions if they're high
competent? Usually less. They're much less comfortable sharing their emotions because vulnerability,
sharing emotions is an aspect of warmth. That is one way that competent people can hack warmth
is sharing more of their emotions, but usually they don't like that as much because emotions
aren't correct. It's hard to be right with emotions.
So they'll often, the reason why I highly comp it to the partner, I have one of those, is
I'm going to use the word afraid of emotions or uncomfortable with emotions is because
it can't be fact checked. If someone says as a partner, I feel upset with you. How do you verify
that? How do you fix it? Where's the solution?
A highly comps and partner, they love solving things, right?
You come to them and you're like,
I'm just having a bad day and they're like,
let me fix that for you.
And you're like, I don't want you to fix it.
I just want you to listen.
And they're like,
no, I don't know how to do that.
Cause they're fixers.
Got it.
So highly comps people,
you have that super strength of getting it right,
being fixers. Warm folks. So highly common to people you have that super strength of getting it right being fixers.
Warm folks, my warm folks. So my highly warm folks, you are filled with empathy, your cheerleaders, your supporters, your
mission. So if compton people want to get it right, highly warm people want to be liked. They want
everyone to feel good. They want everyone to feel comfortable. Typically, highly warm folks, their super strength is empathy,
nurturing, making you feel loved and warm,
but they often give too much of themselves in sacrifice of being light.
Got it. So like people pleasing door mats is what you're talking about.
That's the far end.
People think is what they struggle with.
So I think that highly warm folks in the workplace,
this is the other really important thing to understand
is if you are highly warm,
you are fighting a battle in yourself,
which is your desire to be liked,
gets in the way of your need to be respected.
Mm.
Okay, stop.
I need everybody to hear that.
If you default and you are too warm, especially at work, your need to be liked is getting in
the way of your need to be respected.
And when you are too focused on getting it right, and too focused on being smart,
and too focused on dominating the conversation
or the knowledge bank.
Your need to be right is dominate.
How did you say, your need to be right
is getting in the way of your need to be liked.
Yes, yes, your need to be right
is getting in the way of your need to be liked. That, yes. Your need to be right is getting in the way of your need to be liked.
That even rhymes. That's amazing. I didn't even do that on purpose.
You know what I love about your research? What I love is that first of all, you're about to teach us all
how to become more charismatic. You're also about to give us hacks related to body language and getting intentional about
what we're displaying and signaling.
But what I also love about your research is that I need everybody listening to understand
something.
Right now, you are unintentionally sending signals and cues to people. That's it. You are walking around and
whether it's a negative mood or it's anxiety or it's insecurity or it's awkwardness or
you're so focused on being right that you don't realize that you're sending signals and
cues that make people not like you and not trust you, or you're so focused on being liked and
that you're sending these signals of being a warm pushover, which is why you're never respected and why you're passed over at work.
And so what I love about this research is that you're
helping us focus on two
factors that you're helping us focus on two factors
that you can display that will increase
influence impact and income.
And it doesn't matter whether you're shy
or whether you're bossy.
These strategies are gonna work for all of us.
One thing I would love for you to talk about
before we talk about the cues is this.
So in that study that you cited from Princeton,
they also found that charisma accounts for 82%
of how people evaluate you.
So can you unpack that?
Because I think it's really important for us to understand.
This is not only a good idea because you're going to make more money, be more influential,
and make a bigger impact. Based on the science, this is how people view you. And so can you unpack
this for us? So I was also shocked by that number.
By the way, it's very rare to see a number
that big in science, right?
Especially because if I were to ask someone,
how do you want to be perceived?
You're going to get a list of 100 adjectives,
funny, extroverted, bubbly, attractive, whatever.
Actually, when someone is interacting with us,
and by the way, this is not just in person.
This is on your LinkedIn profile.
In Zoom, on the phone, in chats, in Slack, in DMs,
in your email inbox, people are using warmth and competent
signals to make up 82% of their judgment of you.
Okay, stop.
Everybody, did you do this here, then?
People are using warmth and competence,
which are the two things that make up your charisma.
82% of how people judge you, evaluate you, size you up, decide to hire or date you,
has to do with whether or not you're warm or competent. That's bananas.
It's bananas and it's not just your first impression. It's actually every single impression.
So yes, your first impression is important,
but even if you don't feel you've had a good first impression,
that's okay.
We are re-evaluating this on every Zoom call.
If someone sees your name pop up in their inbox,
they're also wondering, is this a warm and competent email?
In other words, can I trust this email?
Can I rely on this email?
The more warm and competent your email is,
the faster response rates you're gonna get.
We as humans have a really hard time
responding to, connecting with, building rapport
with being impacted by people who under-signal
or who lose signal in an imbalanced way.
So what we're talking about here, that 82% is making it easier
for people to interact with you.
I believe that your warmth and competence
tells the world how they should treat you.
Wow, and here's what I believe, Vanessa.
You wanna hear what I believe, Vanessa?
I believe we all have a huge blind spot
when it comes to what we're signaling other people.
That you may think you know how you come across
and what you're displaying, but I have a feeling that we are about to learn from
Vanessa, that we have a massive blind spot when it comes to warmth and confidence and how you're
displaying charisma or not. So how can we, number one, figure out how charismatic we are? What do we do,
Vanessa? Okay. All right. So first, we're, the first kind of diagnostic that I talked about was just which one
sounds more like you.
That's where we start, right?
So, where do you think you fall, you hire an warm tire and competence, you have a balance
or you under-signalling, right?
Do you shut down and not signal enough?
Okay.
The next thing you can do is you can actually do our diagnostic.
It's totally free, and I love this because there's two ways that you want it.
I want you to do this.
You can take this as many times as you want
The reason I put it up from the research is because I want people to be able to
Take a diagnostic see how they come across. So they're gonna be very simple. Does that mean a test? Yes, it's a test
Science of people calm slash charisma
We will put that in the show dot so you can take this test as many times you want
And so first I mean take it as you and we're gonna take it as you. And we're gonna take it as you,
and I want you to take it,
not on your ideal self, your real self.
Okay.
Okay, so on a normal day,
I want you to screenshot your results.
Then what I want you to do,
is I want you to do a 360 review.
I want you to send the quiz to a partner,
a friend, a colleague,
and ask them to take it as you.
This is the key because it's going to show you how other people see you and have them
screenshot the results and then go to dinner because it'll be a great conversation.
So do you find that most people have no idea how they're showing up with other people.
You are right.
Most of us have a blind spot.
Okay.
So, I feel like everybody needs to grab a pen and a piece of paper because we are about
to get the cheat sheet everybody for how to nail charisma, whether you're in a virtual
meeting, whether you're in an interview, whether you're in a virtual meeting, whether you're in
an interview, whether you're sending an email.
So what are your top tips for displaying charisma and being more influential on a Zoom call?
So what I want to do is actually I want to do the first 10 seconds of your video, the
first minute of your video, that actually helps us break it down, because actually the first 10 seconds are really important,
the first 10 seconds of you being on camera.
Really?
So, yeah, because it sets you up for the rest of the time.
So if you can nail your first 10 seconds, it makes the next hour easier.
Wow.
I wanted to dig into that, but we got to take a break to hear from sponsors.
Let's talk about that when we come back.
So you're about to tell us in the first 10 seconds of a Zoom meeting,
you must do this in order to be influential.
What do you do?
Okay, first 10 seconds.
Number one, in the first second,
you should try to show your hands.
I know this sounds really weird,
but they use eye-tracking studies
and they found that one of the first places
the brain looks when they're trying to gauge someone's warmth is hands.
Why?
Disactious survival mechanism.
Back in our caveman days,
if we were approached by a stranger caveman,
we wanted to see if they were carrying a rock or a spear, right?
So this still remains.
Something interesting happens.
I'll do a little experiment for you.
So if you're watching the video,
I'm gonna hide my hands.
If you're listening, I'm hiding my hands right now.
Yeah.
The moment you can't see someone's hands, so if I were to give this entire interview with
my hands behind my back, something interesting would happen in your brain and
mel's brain, which is that you're a mig-dallowed begin to activate.
And that's because when you can't see someone's hands, you wonder, what is she holding?
What's her intention?
And so longer I keep my hands behind my back, the more distracted you should become.
Yes. You must have my hands behind my back. You want them to come back out, right? Yes.
Good to back. Okay. There they are. Hello. That is so much better. So this is survival
mechanism. The moment you hop on video, walk on stage, walk into a boardroom, like what
you're having to do. Like, hey, everybody. Hey, good morning. Okay. Okay. So the first 10 seconds, we turn on the cameras coming on. We put the hands up. Hi everybody.
Or just one, right? A little wave. I see you. You're walking to a crowded restaurant to see your date. Hey, good to see you. That
hand gesture immediately deactivates their fear processing. Easy. Okay. So I want them visible. Second little bonus tip here is the space,
the distance. I literally want you to measure this. The distance between your nose and
the camera. The reason for this is because in person, we are very aware of what's called
Proxemics Zones. Proxemics Zones are the space between people. So we know, and this
is a little bit different culture to culture. So hand gestures universally, we like to see hands. But culture to culture, we also like to know how, what's the distance between
people. So I highly recommend, make sure your camera is at least a foot and a half away from your face.
Okay. The reason for this is because imagine if I were to give, now I'm going to get really close
to the camera. Imagine if I were to give my entire interview really close. You'd be like, Vanessa, backup. Back up. Oh my God. I totally lean into the camera. I have no space above
my head. I like my whole face right in there. So maybe I got to back off a little bit on
the camera. Let's talk about this for a second. So there are no bad cues in the sense of,
they're all purposeful.
When you are really, and I love your videos,
I've seen your close-up videos, you should know,
on purpose, if you are very close to the camera,
right up in your face, you are signaling intimacy.
You are signaling, I'm right up in it.
And that's because as humans,
there are four different proxemic zones,
the public zone, the social zone, the personal zone, and the intimate zone.
We reserve the intimate zone, which is 0 to 8 inches away, 0 to a foot and a half away,
for people we feel really close to it.
So our partners, our parents, so does our best friends.
And so actually when I watch your videos where you're really close, I feel like we're
besties.
Now tell me, tell me everything.
So I would say reserve those videos
for your intimate moments.
Okay.
You're literally singling that.
The normal zoom call, I want you at least a foot and a half away.
It also helps you show your hands.
It helps have those gestures.
So smart.
Okay, so the first 10 seconds everybody,
we got the hands up and we got to be about a foot and a half away because this is, oh, and there's more. Oh, there's more. Okay. Okay. Second, vocal.
So that was a nonverbal cue. I want you to make sure you are not accidentally using the question
inflection on your name or an important information. The question inflections when we go up at the end
of our sentence, so it sounds
like we're asking a question. And so often we found in our lab that people would use the question
reflection in the first 10 seconds, which made people doubt them. So I want to share this study
because this study gave me the chills when I first heard it. And I think it's so incredibly important
for people who are listening who want to be taken seriously. So what they did in this study,
I promise I won't get two into the science.
Very simply, they brought doctors into their lab and they wanted to know if people would
change their perceptions of charisma based on their voice tone.
So they asked the doctors to record 10 second voice tone clips.
So these clips, they had to say their name, where they worked and their specialties.
So it sounded like this.
Hi, my name is Dr. Edwards.
I specialize in oncology, and I work at Children's
Specificitarian Hospital.
It took these clips, and they warbled the words.
So you could hear the volume, the pace, the cadence,
but not the actual words being said.
So that sounded like this.
How did you know that?
How did you know that?
How did you know that?
How did you know that?
Okay.
They asked participants to then rate these doctors on warps and competence. Hagi lao, haja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja ja gobbledy-goop clips on, do they like this person, this person smart? They found the doctors who had the lowest warmth and competence ratings had the highest rate of
malpractice lawsuits. What? The doctors with the lowest warmth and competence ratings simply
based on their voice tone had the highest rate of malpractice lawsuits. This implies that we don't just dislike people
based on their skills.
We dislike people based on our perception of their skills
and that happens in the first few seconds of hearing them.
The biggest pattern, it was such a shockwave
to the community because these are doctors
who are very well trained.
What they found was patterns.
There were certain doctors who across the board were rated as highly charismatic from Gobblygook.
And there were certain doctors that over and over again, they were rated as not very smart,
not very likable. Here was the biggest pattern, uptalk. The doctors who had an introduction like this,
hi, my name is Dr. Red Edwards, I specialize in oncology,
and then we're called Children's Hospital Hospital.
Right? What it did is it changes the way that we listen.
They found that when we hear the question inflection
accidentally used on a statement,
our prefrontal cortex shifts from
listening to scrutinizing? We think, why did they just question themselves? I guess I should
question them. We hear this all the time in sales calls, where someone is killing it in a pitch
or in a salary negotiation. I'd love to work for your company. I think I'd be a great fit for you. I love your mission. And I'm really looking for a salary range of over $100,000.
Oh, everybody, do you hear that question? I'm really looking for a salary range of $100,000. When you ask your price, you are begging people to negotiate with you.
You're telling people, I don't really believe this number and you shouldn't believe it either.
So what happens in the first 10 seconds is we're nervous, right?
We're really nervous.
We've been holding our breath, we're waiting for some call.
And so we accidentally give away all of our vocal power in the first 10 seconds.
We say, hey, everyone, my name is Vanessa.
We'll get started in a few 10 seconds. We say, hey, everyone, my name is Vanessa. We'll get started in a few.
Whoa. Okay. Now you have three research-back, incredibly subtle, but profound behavior changes
that you need to make immediately. Immediately. Hands up.
You got to have the right distance,
which is a foot to a foot and a half,
nose to camera.
No up-talk, everybody.
And I would imagine that most people
don't realize that they do it.
No idea.
That's why I've seen yourself.
That's why we don't realize
when we walk into a solar realize what we walk into a
salary negotiation or walk into a pitch meeting with a client or we're going on a date
and we think it went well. Right? How often have people been sideswiped? And they think,
yeah, I think that went great, but I didn't get a call back or I didn't get a second date.
It's because you are accidentally telling the world how to treat you. And if you under
signal warmth, people don't like you. If you under signal competence,
people don't take you seriously. And the up talking everyone is when you're under signaling
competence, you might be the most competent and and qualified person. But if you walk into
that interview and you don't, you know, not sure like my last job was great. I think I'd do great here. I'd, you know, 100,000, that would be, that'd be great.
Like, you just shot yourself in the foot. Yeah. And you don't even realize it
because you don't hear it. I bet people do this with dating all the time.
All the time. And the problem is it's a permission seeking behavior. So if we
really get down to the root cause, which is one's a permission seeking behavior. So if we really get down to
the root cause, which is one thing that fascinates me is this is a piezment body language. So this
is, do you like me? Do you agree with me? So oftentimes highly warm people who really,
really desperately want to be liked, use more uptalk because they're asking, do you agree? Do you like me? The crazy thing is the actual opposite
effect, right? So that I also want you to get really to the root cause of if you hear yourself
to uptalk. And by the way, please go listen to your voice recordings. If you've sent any voice
recordings or voice memos in the past few days, go relist into them and see if you accidentally
use uptalk and go re-record. Okay, when we come back, here's what I want to know.
Coach us on how we stop using up top when we speak.
So, how do you coach somebody who has a style of speaking where they naturally end sentences
with this uptalk?
So it's almost like you've got a statement and as you speak it, it sounds like a question
at the end.
And do women do this more than men?
Yes.
So women do this more than men? Yes. So women do this more than men.
Also, the research finds that women typically,
but not always, are seen as higher and warmth.
And that's because from a very young age,
women are often taught to be liked.
And so they tend to dial up their warmth earlier,
typically, but not always men are seen as higher in competence.
And that's because often men are told to be right.
So we also have to be aware of those gender differences.
So yes, women typically more often use up-talk or high warmth.
So luckily, this is actually a very easy thing to fix.
So we're going to do it.
We're going to do it with breath and pausing.
So one of the things that can happen with up-talk is we're nervous and we're speaking very quickly.
And so what I want you to think about is, what do you want to say with purpose?
And how can you deliver it with purpose?
So there's three kinds of inflection.
There's uptalk, so going up at the end of our sentence.
There's neutral, going up, going, say neutral at the end of our sentence.
And there's the downward inflection, which is very commanding,
which is going down at the end of our sentence.
Okay, so all three of those things,
signal something very, very different.
What I want you to pay attention to is the tension in your vocal cords.
So when we are tense, we're nervous.
We tend to take in a breath and talk at the top of our breath.
It's really, really hard to sound confident when we're up here.
So what I want you to do is when you say hello or your first few words, I want you to
speak on the out breath.
Okay.
What most people do is they hold their breath
before they get out of a Zoom call or a phone call.
So they go, hello, all the way up here.
Oh my gosh, you're right.
Because you're like, hi, hi, hi.
Oh, so good to see you.
So when we did this experiment
where we had people submit recordings
of important phone calls and we found the highest part
of the entire call.
Uptalk and vocal tone was the first 10 seconds.
Literally people would go,
hey, it's so good to see you.
So how's it going?
That's a thousand percent, right.
So this is really easy to fix.
What do you do?
Instead of holding your breath, I want you to speak on the out press. So I'll do easy to fix. What do you do? Instead of holding your breath,
I want you to speak on the out breath.
So it's a little experiment.
I want you to hear the highest end of your range.
So the highest end of your range is when you speak
at the top of your breath.
So on the count of three, I want us to say,
and wherever you are, you can do this in your car,
tell your kids to do it with you.
So I want you to take in a deep breath
and say hello at the top of your breath.
So it's going to sound like this.
One, two, three.
Hello. So you want to try it with me, Mel's gonna sound like this, one, two, three. Hello.
So you wanna try it with me, Mel?
Yeah, I do.
One, two, three.
Hello.
Hello.
Yeah, hi.
That's very high.
That's the highest end of your breath.
If you hear your rain going up there,
you are speaking too high.
You hear yourself go there.
What I want you to do is try to relax your vocal cords
by speaking on the out breath.
Hello.
So this time, there you go.
That was it.
So you just heard the difference.
So here's my difference, ready?
Hello.
Hello.
Those are both me, but they sound totally different.
So this time, we're going to take a deep breath in on the count of three.
And I want you to say hello on the out breath.
I want you to sit in a downward and flex your hair.
Ready? One, two, three.
Hello.
Hello.
Mm.
Mm, mm, mm.
Nice that sounds good.
Yes.
Okay, so signaling competence,
we now have a bunch of things that you can do,
including, and probably one of the most important
is learning how to take a breath and then talk on the
out breath.
Yes.
What are mistakes that introverts make when it comes to body language?
Okay.
So, one of the biggest mistakes that we have identified, there's a lot of them, is with
our facial expressions.
So I think with our facial expressions, we forget how rich our face is in demonstrating
emotions or queuing emotions.
So a big mistake that I see is people will fake smile.
I love smiling, but there is nothing worse than fake smiling.
I do not believe in toxic positivity.
So people have been told, smile, smile more, which I think is like the worst advice.
I'm like, smile purposefully, don't smile more.
So a really simple mistake is someone will say,
yeah, I'm so happy to be here.
In congruent.
In congruent.
So what happened is introvert really wants to show up
as their best self.
They're come with the best intention
or someone will hop on a video call and they're trying
to be positive.
And so they'll have a lot of incongruent messages by trying to show warmth to fake smile.
The problem is Dr. Barbara Wilde and her associates, they actually looked at fake smiling.
And what they did is they showed people pictures of smiling people, fake smiling people,
and neutral people.
She showed people pictures of real smiling people and people caught the happiness.
It actually infected their positive mood.
They felt happier.
When people saw the fake smiles,
they caught nothing.
They happiness makes you less memorable.
Nothing happens.
The biggest mistake that will happen with
introverts is they want to come across as warm
and their only tool in their toolkit is smiling.
The good thing is there are many other warm cues.
So what are the other warm cues that you can use?
Okay, so if you're gonna smile, smile for real.
And please, please go look at your LinkedIn profile picture.
Please, please go look at your dating profile pictures.
I either want you neutral, sexy,
or smiling all the way, no fake smiles, okay?
So make sure that smile is all the way up into your eyes
because if you have a fake smile
in your LinkedIn profile picture,
you are literally signaling fake happiness in authenticity.
So if you don't want to actually smile,
that is totally okay, that's not your only warmth.
Q, here are your other warmth options.
One, a head nod.
So a slow triple nod, one, two, three, is an immediate one.
Oh, one, two, three.
Okay, we can do that, people.
Yes.
So, and by the way, the funny thing about this,
the research found, this just tickles me,
that when someone does a slow triple nod,
mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
The other person speaks 67% longer.
Wow. It's like a nonverbal dot, dot, dot.
You're literally saying to someone,
tell me more, I want to listen.
I want to hear you.
So a slow triple knot, very easy.
You don't have to smile.
It's a one-th-cute.
The other thing that we found,
we did this a LinkedIn profile pictures.
If you add a simple head tilt,
doop, you are seen as warmer.
So if I tilt my head to the side,
this is a universal response.
If I wanna hear something better,
so if I say, Mel, do you hear that?
We automatically tilt our head, next pose, our ear.
That's a way that we wanna hear better.
And so when you are on a video call,
on a date in your LinkedIn profile picture,
if you want to be seen as warm,
you can tilt your head to the side
as if to say, I am deeply listening.
I am really trying to hear you.
It's much more natural than smiling maniacally.
This is fascinating.
We've got the triple knot, everybody.
We've got smile with your eyes.
We've got tilt your head slightly.
What are other warm cues?
Okay.
Okay.
So other warm cues vocal.
Let's talk about vocal.
Those were three nonverbal cues.
Vocal one that we often forget.
You have a lot of power in your voice.
So another warmth vocal cue is what I call vocalizations.
Ooh, do we love vocalization?
So vocalization is surround sound listening.
It's showing that you're listening.
So this is going to immediately make me sound warmer.
Mm.
Oh, I just did that.
Ooh, I'm very warm.
Mm.
Yes.
So actually you have a very good balanced smell of warmth and competence.
I was going to say you when you asked for an example,
but I was like, that's way too brown-nosey, so I didn't.
But you have a very good warmth and competence because you will localize for me.
When you nod at me, I can see you nodding right now.
Oh, yeah.
I'm just doing it naturally.
Yeah, and that encourages me as a speaker. I'm doing good.
That makes my crunchiness smoother. Oh, that's so awesome. So your warmth cues are gifts
to awkward people. When you show someone who's crunchy, awkward, afraid, I'm listening to you.
someone who's crunchy, awkward, afraid, I'm listening to you. Mmm, that was interesting.
Oh, aha, you are gifting them lubricant.
You are saying, you've got this girl.
Like, I'm listening, I am hearing you.
This is super smooth, which then makes me more smooth.
And so, there's two sides of why I wrote this book.
Yes, I want you to be more charismatic.
But I also want you to be more inspiring.
I want you to be contagious in a way
that's gifting more of the competence.
And so adding vocalizations is a very easy way,
especially for my introverts.
Remember my introverts,
I want to teach you how to be heard without being loud.
So nonverbal cues, vocalizations,
that's a way for you to participate in conversation
without saying a word, right?
So, mm, that's fantastic.
All right, do that again.
What are the other ones other than, mm, mm.
Ooh.
Ah, wow.
What?
Those are all warm vocalizations.
In fact, doing them right now
to kind of give you the warm
and fuzzies like a little bit, she'd be like,
mm, that feels so good.
I say vocalizations are kind of like a warming blanket
and like makes the other person feel like,
wow, I'm doing so good.
So you're doing better than good.
You're doing fan-tastic Vanessa.
Is there any phrase or something that you suggest,
particularly somebody who shy or introverted
to say or do during a virtual meeting
to be more influential?
We didn't even talk about words.
So words are incredibly important
as part of our charisma that we also need to address, right?
So for verbal power, what you wanna do,
especially for my introverts,
and especially on a video call,
is use warmth verbal cues.
We actually did a study where I wanted to know
if saying warm words could stimulate connection.
So in other words, I'm on a video call.
If we were in person Mel, you and I would be hugging,
we'd, you know, high five, we'd have some sort of touch.
I want to know, could you replace that verbally?
What we found was we had people wear software
that measures their skin conductance, their physiology.
When I say, I'm sending a virtual high five,
I wish I could give you a digital hug.
I'm giving you a warm wave from here.
When I say those words, it actually triggers
a physiological response on your skin.
So one thing that you can do in the very start of a call
or at the very end of call is, I wish I could give you a hug.
A virtual one will have to do.
Or, you know, this has been so lovely talking to you.
I just feel so much warmth and I just had such a great time connecting with you.
Using warm words, connection, warmth, trust, hug, handshake,
they actually trigger a physiological response
to the other person.
So if you can use those warm words,
it's a very easy way to trigger more warmth.
That's fantastic.
Okay.
Terrific.
What are the danger zone cues on a virtual meeting?
What should you never do?
Okay, so great. Okay, so danger zone cues in a virtual meeting. What should you never do? Okay, so great. Okay, so danger zone cues in a virtual meeting. One, I always,
always, always, always want you to front with the camera. So research is very,
very clear on me. What does that mean front with the camera?
Fronting. Okay, so when we are aligned on parallel lines with someone, our brain
likes it. So, fronting is what I angle my toes, my torso, and my top towards the camera.
Research has found that if I were to give the entire interview with one shoulder angle
back and my toes angled out, it would actually make it hard for you to believe me.
It would make it really hard for you to open up to me.
That's really interesting.
And so, a mistake that I often see on Zoom calls is people will either angle out or the
worst of the worst.
They have their camera on their side and they're typing like this.
Oh.
So I, yes, I hate that.
I hate that.
I'm like, just turn the damn camera off.
Yes, I would rather.
So one thing I want you to make sure I have is you're set up.
Not only are you a foot and a half away,
you are on parallel lines with the other person.
So you're angling your toes,
your torso and your head towards them.
This is both on zoom and in person.
Even in person when someone is kind of angled out
and they're trying to talk to you,
you can literally feel the disengagement.
The reason for this is because our toes
are sort of secret windows
of the soul. So I like to call them your toes, the way that they're pointed, usually indicate
a secret direction that you want to go. So I have noticed anecdotally that when someone
is ready to leave a conversation and you're out of networking events or out of holiday
party and they have to go to the bathroom or they're kind of done, they will angle their
toes toward the exit.
Wow.
That is kind of, their body is like, we gotta go.
We wanna go.
So I'm angled away from you with my toes angled towards the exit.
Your subconsciously picking up on the fact that part of me is left the conversation.
Yeah.
All right.
Now, what are strategies for dialing up charisma and influence, warmth and competency,
in emails?
Okay, emails, yes.
So what I like in an email is I want you to have warm words, a couple of warm words, warm
words, cheer the warm and fuzzies.
So so happy to connect with you last week.
I'm so looking forward to collaborating in our meeting next week.
When people read words like collaborate, they are literally more likely to be collaborative.
Okay?
So you're actually gifting behavior.
What I want you to think about when you're writing an email.
This is a really weird way to write an email, but it works.
How do I want someone to think, feel, and behave after reading this email?
If you want them to be warm and collaborative and open and happy and trustworthy, use those words.
You are literally gifting them that feeling.
But if you want them to get it done,
be productive and efficient,
let's brainstorm, let's power through, onwards,
let's do it, I want you to gift more competent words.
So the perfect email has a balance of,
let's connect, let's collaborate.
I can't wait for the meeting next week and let's blast through this agenda.
I can't wait to hit our goals.
We're going to do everything together on Words Vanessa.
You know what I hear?
Is I hear enthusiasm?
I hear confidence in those words.
You're displaying that, which then signals to me that I'm on a team that wants to do that.
Vanessa, I freaking love you because you know what you're basically saying?
It's possible for anyone to learn how to have the it factor.
Yes, that is true.
That is absolutely true.
That is a skill that is learnable and anyone can learn it.
Okay, I want to take a minute on behalf of absolutely everybody listening to Thank You.
Oh, it's such an honor.
This was so tactical.
This was so smart and informative.
I love it.
And so just Thank You, Thank You, Thank You.
That was three, maybe four or five head nods in a row because I mean it and I'm going
lower on my voice to command the fact
that you're a frickin superstar Vanessa. Thank you. Oh my goodness. Thank you so much for listening and I also want to thank you for the space to talk about this and
empower people that remember you tell the world how it should treat you. So the more purpose we are,
your cues, the better people will treat you and you deserve that. So thank you so much for having me.
Oh my God, thank you.
It's best.
Wasn't that awesome?
I mean, Vanessa's awesome.
And you know what else is awesome?
You.
You are awesome.
You have the it factor and now you know how to hack charisma and how to use body language
to get what you want.
And before we take off here, I want to tell you something else.
I love you.
I really do.
And I believe in you.
And I believe in your ability and that it factor inside of you.
In the charisma you are going to bring to the surface and display everywhere you go.
I believe that you are going to use that to create a better life.
And that's why I'm here to remind you of that twice a week, every week, with this podcast.
Oh my god, I just love you. Alrighty, you have an awesome day now, and I'll talk to you It's Stitcher.