This document discusses the importance of body language in communication and provides examples of different types of body language. It emphasizes displaying attentive and open body language during interviews by making eye contact, leaning forward, and having an open posture. It also warns against showing boredom or having a closed posture. The document then discusses presenting to a group in a panel interview, highlighting strategies like making eye contact with all panel members, addressing everyone, and avoiding focusing only on friendly faces.
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Communicate Using Body Language
This document discusses the importance of body language in communication and provides examples of different types of body language. It emphasizes displaying attentive and open body language during interviews by making eye contact, leaning forward, and having an open posture. It also warns against showing boredom or having a closed posture. The document then discusses presenting to a group in a panel interview, highlighting strategies like making eye contact with all panel members, addressing everyone, and avoiding focusing only on friendly faces.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Communicate Using Body Language
Body language is an important part of communication, and it can constitute 50 percent or
more of the message you communicate. You might be surprised by how many different types of body language people use to communicate their message. Body language types include: • Aggressive. You’re showing a physical threat. • Attentive. You have real interest in the conversation. • Open. You’re open and receptive to others. • Bored. You aren’t interested. • Closed. You aren’t open to listening. • Deceptive. You’re trying to cover up a lie or other deception. • Defensive. You’re protecting yourself from verbal attack. • Dominant. You’re trying to dominate others. • Emotional. You’re identifying your feelings. • Evaluating. You’re judging and deciding about something. • Greeting. These include meeting rituals, such as handshakes, smiles, and eye contact. • Power. You’re displaying your power. • Ready. You’re wanting to act and waiting for the trigger. • Relaxed. You’re comfortable and not stressed. • Romantic. You’re showing attraction to others. • Submissive. You’re showing you are prepared to give in. During an interview, it is most important to display attentive and open body language. You can demonstrate attentive body language by: • Ignoring any distractions. Be sure your cell phone is turned off. • Being still, with relatively little body movement. • Leaning forward. • Tilting your head slightly forward. • Maintaining steady eye contact. Looking at a person shows that you acknowledge and are interested in him. • Furrowing your brow to show that you are concentrating. • Begin patient. Wait until the other person is finished speaking before you say something. 164 Active Interviewing: Branding, Selling, and Presenting Yourself to Win Your Next Job You can demonstrate open body language by: • Not crossing your arms across your chest. • Being animated and responding to what is being said. • Opening your hands to show that nothing is being concealed. Don’t sit with your fists tightly clenched. • Sitting with legs that are not crossed. Usually your legs will be parallel, with your feet pointing to the floor or to one side. • Directing your head toward the other person or looking around at others in the rom. Eye contact should be relaxed and prolonged. • Wearing loose clothing that does not appear tight and binding. You don’t want to exhibit (or see from the interviewer) bored or closed body language. If the interviewer displays boredom or closed body language, your interview is in trouble, and you need to change you strategy. The language of boredom includes: • Appearing distracted by looking anywhere but at the person who is talking. • Doodling. • Talking with others or looking around the room. • Taking an “important” call in the middle of the interview. • Performing repetitive actions, such as tapping toes, swinging feet, or drumming fingers. The repetition may escalate as the boredom increases. • Displaying tiredness by yawning or slouching. The person’s face may show a distinct lack of interest and appear blank. Closed body language includes: • Having arms closed with one or both arms across the central line of the body. Less obvious arm-crossing may include resting an arm on a table or a leg or loosely crossing the arms at the wrists. • Having legs crossed, such as the ankle cross, knee cross, figure-four (the ankle on the opposite knee), or the tense wraparound with the foot tucked behind the calf. • Looking down or away. The person’s head may be inclined away from the person who is speaking, or it may be tucked down. Presenting to a Group You may be interviewed by a panel of people. In a panel interview (also called a group or committee interview), you will be interviewed by several individuals at the same time. My clients have been in panel interviews with up to six interviewers. Panel interviews, first used in academia and the healthcare industry, are becoming more popular in the corporate sector due to efficiency and the ability for all interviewers to observe the same behavior and hear the same responses. 165 Chapter 16 Present with Impact “If I went back to college again, I’d concentrate on two areas: learning to write and to speak before an audience. Nothing in life is more important than the ability to communicate effectively.” —Gerald Ford, 38th U.S. president Interview presentations are very successful in panel interviews. One candidate wrote: 166 Active Interviewing: Branding, Selling, and Presenting Yourself to Win Your Next Job “Last but not least was your recommendation that I use an interview presentation. I gave the presentation about nine times during the course of interviewing—six with my eventual employer. The three biggest things it did were: • Gave me confidence knowing that I was going to be prepared. • Separated me from the rest of the competition and provided the employer with a leave- behind document that was thorough and professional. • One last very important benefit of using the interview presentation was that, in my group interview, when I indicated that I had prepared a presentation, you could immediately feel and see the tension leave the room. “I believe they were all impressed and, as a result, I got a better offer than they intended to make. They just promoted my title to senior sales engineer. It was truly amazing.” —Robert, biomedical sales engineer In a panel interview, use the presentation strategies discussed in the following sections. Make Eye Contact with Everyone As you present, scan from one face to the next, pausing for two to three seconds on each. When you’re asked a question, make eye contact and address your answer to the individual who asked the question. Then make eye contact with the other interviewers. As you finish your answer, return your focus to the person who asked the question. Be careful not to break eye contact with a person in the middle of a sentence or a thought. Learn the Roles In the initial part of the meeting, ask about each person’s role. It is important for you to understand each person’s responsibilities and how she interacts with the position. Do not go by title alone; ask for a description of the interaction. As each person speaks, take notes. It is often helpful to make a seating chart with names, titles, and roles that you can refer to during the interview. Also, during the interview, don’t make the mistake of ignoring people at lower levels; their opinion has weight in the ultimate selection. Address Everyone In a group interview, often one or two individuals are quiet. However, even though they are quiet during the interview, they will have an opinion about hiring you. Try to get everyone involved by addressing questions to each member of the group. You can do this by asking a “supportive” question of the quiet individuals. Without commenting on a person being quiet, you can say, “Larry, I know you work closely with the person in this position, so I value your opinion. What do you think are the critical job requirements?” People like to hear their names during your interview, so be sure to refer to each of the interviewers by name. Don’t Lock on to the Friendly Faces In many panel interviews, there will be one or two people who are attentive and smiling. There may also be several people who appear disinterested and unfriendly. It is easier to focus on the friendly people and avoid the “rejection” of the unfriendly people. However, ignoring the unfriendly may cost you their support. They are in the interview, so pay them the same attention you pay to all the other panel members. This means making eye contact and asking them questions. Avoid Perfection Audiences rarely relate well to people who come across as too polished, and perfection is not the goal in your interview.We are most influenced by authentic people who share challenges similar to our own. Your greatest position of influence is being alongside your audience, not speaking down to them as if you’re a subjectmatter expert. Presenting with Impact Will Fix Your Interviews All sales presentations have a goal of moving people from where they are to where the salesperson wants them to be—from a prospect to a customer. During your interview, you want to actively move a hiring manager from considering you to hiring you. The most effective way to accomplish this is by presenting yourself powerfully. Presenting with impact has the following benefits: • It will make you memorable, differentiating you from your competition. • It will make you more effective in panel interviews where you need to persuade multiple people at the same time. • Your language will be more powerful and exact. Powerful and exact language will make you more credible and persuasive. • Presenting takes pressure off of interviewers to manage the interview and proactively gets them the information they need to make a good hiring decision. • Presenting well will create a conversation that fosters rapport and trust with the interviewer. • A high-quality presentation during your interview demonstrates your presentation ability, which is a critical business skill.