How do great conversationalists do it? How do they know how to connect with people and make them feel good? How do they diffuse difficult situations so well and make everyone feel great?
They get people to like them immediately, they have a cool verbal brand and they’re super confident. They also know how to be influential!
We’ve all been here, right? That time on our first date when we had no idea what to say? Wracking our brains for something interesting to bring up? Feeling like an idiot! Or you started talking, and filler words dominated the scene.
How about at the party where everyone seems to be having so much fun. You’re standing by the hors d’oeurves, wondering how to chat with someone–anyone!
Great conversationalists know what to say.
Before the meeting starts, you’re trying to think of something more creative to say than, “What’s up with you?” “How’s it going?”
Have no fear! You are here! And I’m going to teach you to be a great conversationalist even if you’re shy or an introvert.
Isn’t the better communicator going to increase the bottom line for your firm?
Of course, you want to hire the smooth-talking lawyer and the well-spoken marketer. Sure you’re going to hire the candidate who is well able to articulate her thoughts into words.
There is no mystery here. Communication is a huge part of what we do for work and in our personal lives. It’s at the top of every job description!
What you may think of as soft skills are really the basis for everything you do!
Yes, great conversationalists who have honed their communication skills are trying to leave you in the dust.
But you’re here now and I’ve got you. Let’s do this!
To be an incredible conversationalist you need the following 7 techniques.
You want to be a better talker? Here are the steps in a nutshell and when you continue reading you’ll learn the details. I save the best for my clients but these are awesome too 🙂
- Tell stories containing human emotion.
- Be completely relaxed.
- Love your audience to extinguish shyness or introversion.
- Compliment, don’t comment.
- Use influential intonation.
- Listen, rephrase & repeat. Show empathy.
- Be kind and be brief.
Read on to learn all the details to be an incredible conversationalist.
The best thing to do is to start with The Voice Spa. It’ll teach you to be completely relaxed during all high-stakes situations you find yourself in. Interviewed by Bloomberg? Cool as a cuke!
Then it’ll teach you to be concise! These 2 things alone are priceless. But the course also teaches you to be persuasive. It’s a no-brainer. Of course, you’ll have to practice the skills you learn.
Ok, here’s how it’s done:
The best thing you can do is to get people talking.
And I don’t mean by asking them questions. Nobody wants to be in the hot seat, except the few that will talk your ear off anyway. All over the internet is the bad advice to start conversations by asking questions.
They recommend insane questions that invoke unreal scenarios. Ugh! No! You want to tell a very short story that people can relate to.
Want to be a better talker?
Tell short stories that contain human emotion. I recommend arming yourself with an arsenal of anecdotes. Put some time in and think about your life experiences that have a moral or some human interest.
If you want help arming yourself with an arsenal of anecdotes take a session with me. I’ll extract a couple of good stories out of you, teach you to use the right words, and you’ll walk away with the strategy and the swagger.
Then practice those stories until you’re confident and they feel good. Make sure they’re not longer than about thirty seconds. Shorter is better.
Resist the desire to give a lot of detail. The best stories draw broad strokes so your listener can draw their own picture in their mind. That’s how people feel connected to you.
You can also apply this to your elevator pitch.
How can telling stories get people talking?
Good question, glad you asked! Yes, it does! If your story contains human elements, folks will jump at the chance to tell their own story, the one yours reminded them of.
You know the feeling; you’ve done it before. When a friend told you a story you related to, you rushed to tell a similar tale. You can utilize this to your advantage.
Like when you picked your friend up at the airport and she told you how horrifically bumpy her flight was and you followed with a frightening flying story of your own.
People champ at the bit to tell stories that are similar to the stories they hear at that moment.
Be completely relaxed
Social events usually cause quite a bit of tension in our bodies, from the excitement, the anticipation, and the anxiety over the fear of feeling and looking foolish. We all have it.
Please note that almost everyone at the event feels similarly to you, and most people are too concerned about themselves to be overly observant about what you are doing. So chances are you won’t look foolish no matter what you do.
You’ll want to keep yourself calm, cool, and collected. If someone upsets you, that means you need to FindYourRelaxedPlace. I can teach you how. Do your Convey Relaxation Exercises until you get to a point where you can rid your body of tension at any given moment.
Use influential intonation to be an awesome conversationalist.
Here comes that music bit we talked about earlier. Just like a good song, good conversations have rhythm. So give yourself a few beats before you respond, and make sure you vary the length of your notes just like beautiful music does.
Here’s how:
- Vary the volume of the vowels in your sentence.
- Emphasize the vowels of the words with a great deal of meaningful content.
- Significantly reduce length and volume of all other vowels. There should be approximately a 1 to 7 ratio of “big to small.”
Really listen to your conversational partner,
A compelling conversationalist will spend most of his or her time listening. People want to be heard. They want to spend time with people who understand them. So listen to people when they speak. Try to understand them. React during appropriate times by letting them know that you hear them.
“I understand what you mean.” “I know the feeling.” “I gotcha.”
It makes people feel good to know that they are understood. Try not to fall into the trap of preparing what you’re going to say next while others speak. You will have the opportunity to talk, and when you do, you will have a firm grasp on your communicative partners’ feelings, preferences, wit, etc., and you will be well-equipped to speak.
If you can master the art of telling quick stories that inspire people to talk and really listening to folks as they do, the more you’ll make people feel warm and fuzzy. So it shouldn’t lead to exhaustion for the introverted.
Be kind.
Use kindness and warmth in your voice. Use warm eye-contact. Even on virtual meetings, make sure you’re looking at the person on the screen.
Don’t use negative phrasing that can lead to miscommunications. For example, don’t ask someone what they didn’t understand about what you said; ask them what you can explain better.
By all means, don’t use the expression, “as I said before.” It’s so insulting!
Also, make sure you’re not working so hard to make people like you and respect you that you become bull-doggish in reporting your narrative.
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