Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 78: 7 Powerful People Skills to Make Your Voice Heard
Episode Date: January 17, 2021I’m guessing you don’t just follow my work for love life advice... Unless you discovered my content yesterday, you will have realized by now that the communication skills I teach have massive pr...actical application for your business relationships, your ability to network, your ability to persuade, to captivate, and to navigate challenging conversations in every part of life. I’ve not just used these skills in my own love life. They have been the fundamental people skills I have used to create every opportunity I’ve ever had and get to where I am today. And I know that in 2021 you have goals outside of your love life that are deeply important to you. I want to help you achieve them. This episode is going to show you 7 techniques I use time and time again to make an impact on whoever I’m speaking to and create new opportunities in my life. I also have a value-packed surprise at the end for you (also free!). See you there! --- ►► Discover My Personal Secrets for Impact & Success. Tap Below to Watch Your FREE Training... → http://www.SecretImpactVideo.com
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When someone says something we don't like, instead of saying you're wrong, we can say
here's my issue with that. Now when we say here's my issue with that,
we're allowing it to be that, not them. And there's a huge difference. hello everyone and welcome back to the love life podcast i am stephen hussey and today we are going
to focus more on the life side of the Love Life podcast because we are talking about
powerful communication, having impact, being able to convince, persuade and move others with your
words. It's one thing in life to be competent, but it's another to be able to tell compelling
stories, to be someone who can walk into a room and change people's minds.
Get your point across.
Leave people thinking about what you said.
These are crucial life skills.
And I have the best person to give you them.
Of course Matthew Hussey who has had many years of honing his craft in the area of personal impact.
So I'm going to hand over to him. Before I do, Matthew mentions a secret video
at the end of this clip and I want to make sure you have the link before you go away. So the link
is secretimpactvideo.com. Go there and you're going to see a clip of Matt talking to a small
audience where he gives some of his best tips for having major
impact. If this is something you are serious about developing in 2021, go there, secretimpactvideo.com
and check out the free training. All right, that is it from me. I will see you very soon. Over to Matt.
I've always felt that when it came to success in life, there are two major things
that we can control. One is how hard we work. And the other is how much of an impression we make on
other people. I'll allow this video to assume that you're already working hard. But let's talk about
the making an impression part. I want to talk about seven things that we can
all do to have more influence better persuasion more respect and make more of a lasting impression
on the people we speak to and have conversations with number one silence is a virtue. We should all master the art of not speaking
when we don't have anything to say.
So often, especially in business meetings,
people speak for the sake of filling air time.
It's a vanity play.
It's a discomfort with silence,
with being seen to not be speaking.
But we must resist that temptation
and instead wait for a moment
when we can actually say something
that's gonna make an impact.
Number two, fight the urge to interrupt.
If the previous point was about not speaking
when you don't have something to say,
this one is about not interrupting when you't have something to say. This one is about not interrupting when you
do have something to say. We've all felt that moment where someone is saying something and we
feel this unbelievably overwhelming urge to slice their sentence in half as we jump in to demonstrate
our perspicacity. Look how insightful I am, look how interesting I am. But they
don't care because they're too busy being resentful or frustrated that they didn't get
to finish. You've essentially blue balled their point. Do not confuse having something
to say with this being the right moment to say it.
Number three, attack with humility. One of the greatest things you can say
when you disagree with someone's opinions
or their plan is, okay, I'm gonna lay out my argument
and you tell me why I'm wrong.
This has such humility because you're first engineering
the space for them to call you out afterwards.
So now you're going to get their full attention because they know you've made space for them to disagree with you when you're finished.
But there's also humility because it's almost assuming a kind of naivete.
I'm going to tell you all of the things I think are wrong with what you said, and then you can tell me why I'm wrong. So,
and this is particularly effective by the way,
if you're ever in conversation with people who are experts in an area that
you're not,
you could be in a company where you're having to hire website designers or
coders or someone on a project that you don't understand the ins and outs of
because they're the expert. Then you feel a bit insecure.
How do I call someone out on something?
How do I tell them that I think this project's
gonna take too long or is too expensive
or I don't like the plan when they're the expert
and I'm not?
This sentence allows you to do that.
I'm gonna lay out my opinion
and you tell me why I'm wrong.
There's humility, but it also allows you to go
on the full offensive on their proposal.
Number four, don't be a know-it-all. If someone asks you a question that you don't know the
answer to in life, simply say, I'm not sure about that, or that's not my area, or I need
to think about that. I want to go away and consider that and come back to you. When I'm
on stage, the thing that gives me ultimate confidence is not that I know everything, it's that I'm prepared to not know everything.
When someone asks me a question in front of a thousand people and I don't know the answer,
I am always willing to default to, I need to think about that and come back to you.
Number five, let your arguments wade in before you do. when i say you i mean you personally with all of
your biases with all with all of your emotion sometimes when we disagree with something someone
says we immediately jump in and say well i think this but the truth is people may not necessarily
want to know what you think. In a business context,
some of our job is to add value to the room by putting forward interesting arguments or to put
forward the other side, but not to put forward our own personal bias. So one of the things you can say
when you disagree with something in the room or you think a point needs to be added, maybe you
flat out disagree with something, that's fine. But you can always start with,
I think there's a couple of things worth considering here.
That line allows everyone to be open
to what you're about to say
because you haven't made anyone wrong.
Like if Harry, if I came to a business meeting
with the creative team and I was like,
I want to title a new video,
people who like the movie love actually are trash
it's divisive it's right now you may think we definitely shouldn't do that matt you are a
for even proposing a title like that i'm not saying you're you're calling me a moron. Well, you are, and I am. Right, but let's say you wanted to
know that I'm a moron, but not say that I'm a moron, but still get your point across.
You could say, Matt, I think there's a couple of things worth considering about that. One being that it's possible it could offend some of our audience.
Now, you could also add to that.
We may, of course, decide that we don't mind if this particular video offends some of our audience and that it's worth doing anyway.
But I did want to point out that that's possible and maybe even likely.
Now, everyone's listening. The people that think
we should make that video and call it that and the people that think we shouldn't because the
argument was made in a way that doesn't invest all of Harry's personal feelings into it.
As a follow-on from that point, number six is argue with the argument, not with the person. When someone says something we don't like,
instead of saying, you're wrong, we can say, here's my issue with that. Now, when we say,
here's my issue with that, we're allowing it to be that, not them. And there's a huge difference.
I have been in so many debates with people
over subjects that are very dear to them,
where ordinarily they may be inflamed, hurt, offended
by something someone like me would say in that moment,
but they're not because I make it about the argument,
not about the person.
Here's my issue with that conclusion.
Here's my issue with that point of view.
I'm allowing them to have some distance
from their arguments, even if ordinarily,
they would see them as the same thing.
This is something that's become increasingly rare
in our world, of course, with ad hominem attacks
having become the norm.
When people are going after someone's argument,
they attack the person directly, and that's why very little progress is made of course
because there's no space for people to then be distanced from their arguments
in order to agree with you I have to dismantle my own ego and if your
arguments if the way that you speak to people right now requires people to
dismantle their own ego
in order to agree with you,
people are not gonna agree with you very much.
But if you make their argument your opponent
and make them the person, your ally,
you will gain many friends and win many arguments.
And lastly, number seven, don't oversell your point. We've all had that moment where we've
made an interesting point to somebody or said something particularly insightful and we feel
that click. We feel that moment where they nod and we realise, yes, I am the most intelligent
person in the room. They do think I'm wonderful. I can see it in their eyes.
They may even confirm this by saying,
that's a really good point.
And when they say that, we feel this giddy high
that makes us now want to continue making the point
that we've already made.
I was once watching a TV show.
I can't remember who even said this,
but there was a guy who said, I just want to reiterate.
And the other guy said, you don't need to reiterate it you've already said it and we often feel the need to
reiterate things that we have said over and over again i've done this so much in my life i cringe
when i watch myself do it and i have the problem of seeing myself do it on video in real interviews
when you catch yourself stop and say I've already made the point.
They're already appreciating it. Let me now allow that point to detonate in their mind and do the
work for me. If they want to ask me another question about it, they can. Look, when we're
talking about these things, we're talking about effectiveness, impact, persuasion, the ability to
stand out, the ability to have a distinct unique
and powerful voice to make an impression on people wherever we go I have truly
found these these tools to be some of the most useful in my life and I started
them age 11 when I was reading how to win friends and influence people but
I've never stopped learning it keeps keeps getting more advanced. Every new person I speak to, I hang around with some really amazing, successful
people who continue to teach me and I think, oh my God, I'm just getting started. It never
ends. And anytime someone says to me things like, oh, I know all of that stuff. I think
you must be playing a different game to me. I don't know what your understanding of this area is,
but for me, the learning never stops in this area.
I'm always focused on how to be more effective as a person
because it affects everything from my business
to my relationships, to the new opportunities
that I bring in, all of it.
If this is an area that you find yourself
as interested in as I am, and i mean as i am privately
because it's not something i talk about every week in my videos but it's something that i am
personally massively invested in i have something that you i know you're really going to love what
i'm about to show you as a free training this is going to be my gift to you today is from an event
that i got invited to that was a closed door event for a group of
powerful influencers and entrepreneurs who are all looking to improve their impact out there build
their audiences build their brand become more known and i sat with them and i gave them some
of my secrets that i've learned over the years i've pulled 18 minutes of this into a video
training that you get to watch right now for free.
And you know, when I say something is free, it actually has value. Like this free video you're watching right now, it has massive value.
So if you want more of that, come with me and watch this.
If you're someone who just wants more impact in your own personal life,
if you're a business leader, a CEO,
or if you're someone who has interest in building a personal brand,
this video is an incredibly valuable thing for you to watch
and ignore the production value.
It's not great, but that's because it was never intended
to be shown to the public.
You really are getting a peek into something
that was only reserved for a handful of people.
I'll leave a link here, check it out,
and I'll see you in the free training.
Oh, the only favor I ask is that when you get there, you leave me a comment. I'll leave a link here. Check it out and I'll see you in the free training. Oh,
the only favor I ask is that when you get there, you leave me a comment. I want to see your reaction. Thanks guys. Thank you. you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you I see the blog sites.
Got a new wife.
Shorty got a new boo.
Yeah, love beautiful.
I'm looking for love.