Communicating with Charisma | ||
Instructor: Vanessa Van Edwards | ||
Released: 2/11/2020 | Course Details 22m General | |
Skills Covered Interpersonal Communication | Course Link | |
Professional Certifications and Continuing Education Units (CEUs) Project Management Institute – PDUs: 0.25 hour | ||
Join behavior expert Vanessa Van Edwards as she teaches actionable ways to be more charismatic. Vanessa begins by dispelling the myth that one must be born charismatic, and shares how this skill can be learned. Discover where you fall on the charisma scale and explore ways to make people more comfortable. Learn about the characteristics of highly charismatic people, and how you can become more charismatic without becoming inauthentic. Learning objectives – The science of charisma – What is charisma? – How to be warm and charismatic – How to be competent and charismatic – Are you charismatic? – Communicate with charisma – Sending and receiving charisma cues – Charismatic words – Charismatic body language – Make a charismatic first impression – Charismatic gestures Source: LinkedIN Learning |
Understanding Charisma
What is charisma?
- Warmth – how approachable we are
- Competence – intelligent/capable people
Warm + Competence = Charisma
Just Competence
- Smart, not approachable
- Efficient, not collaborative
- Important, not kind
Just Warmth
- Sweet, not smart
- Compassionate, not competent
- Related, not impressive
How to be warm and charismatic
Warmth judgments have a great impact on others’ overall attitude toward you. Warmth helps you make a great first impression. Warmth helps you as a leader.
Ideas to increase your warmth
- Nod to people as you pass them in the halls.
- Always greet people when they walk into a meeting.
- Ask questions about their personal photos people have on their desk.
- Share a personal story from your weekend on Mondays.
- Ask people their weekend plans on Fridays.
How to be competent and charismatic
Competent people have more influence. Competent can help you be more persuasive.
Ideas to increase your competence
- Keep meeting notes and give a summary
- Support ideas with facts, figures, or research
- Follow up with people on important projects they’re working on
- Set aside time each week to learn one new skill
- Think about becoming a mentor
- Read one new book each month
Charisma quiz
A quiz using five groups of statements to select either Warmth or Competence. The most successful people are flexible with their charisma. Up your warmth during first impressions. Increase your warmth if you’re leading people. Increase your competence during interviews and negotiations. Increase your competence during a pitch or presentation.
Charismatic Words and Body Language
Use charismatic words
Warm Words
Words that invoke feelings of trust, familiarity, empathy, and rapport.
“We”, “our”, and “us” increased the positive feelings of people in a conversation.
Warm Words
- Collaborate
- Excited
- Engaged
- Together
- Connect
Competent Words
- Efficient
- Productive
- Strategize
- Effective
- Streamline
- Brainstorm
Make a charismatic first impression
Warm Body Language Cues
- Genuine smile
- Firm handshake
- Hug
- High Five
Competent Body Language Cues
- Angling your body towards the person you’re meeting
- Keeping your shoulders down and relaxed
- Keeping your torso open
- Keeping your hands free to gesture as you speak
Make authentic eye contact
Eye Contact
- Important for building connections because it produces oxytocin.
- We make different kinds of eye contact, specifically three types.
- Power gazing – when someone’s eyes bounce between someone’s eyes and forehead. Gaze is very eye on someone’s face.
- Social gazing – eye contact between eyes and the mouth and stays in the center of the face.
- Intimate gazing – between the eyes and the collarbone, suggests romantic interest.
Use charismatic gestures
We give more weight to gestures than to words. Think of your hands like a moving outline of your words.
Hand Gestures
- Personal – gesture to the heart region
- Listing – any time you mention a number, show it.
- Sizing – small or big issue
Remember! To experience the full benefit of this guide, I highly recommend you watch the full training session. |