The School of Greatness - 582 Build Your Confidence with Jordan Harbinger
Episode Date: December 29, 2017"Our first impressions are always made non-verbally” One of my favorite guests I’ve had on this show is Jordan Harbinger, from The Art of Charm. Previously, he gave great advice on how to lea...ve the right first impression, and most importantly it’s not made through what we say. So little of the impression we give off is through our words. Our body language, says so much more than anything that comes out of our mouths. This 5 Minute Friday will give you tips to build your confidence and create the impression you want, on Episode 582. In this episode you will learn: When first impressions are really made (00:50) How to test the way we make perceptions (1:54) Ways to create a good first impression (3:12) The doorway drill (4:27) Plus much more...
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This is 5-Minute Friday!
You know, a lot of times I get people reaching out to me and saying that they're struggling with their life or their business.
They tell me different things that are holding them back, the challenges to make more money, challenges in their relationships, challenges with their
family. And so today we're covering about how to build self-confidence with Jordan Harbinger.
One of the sort of common misconceptions is that our first impressions that we make on other people
are the first thing that we say or the first interaction that we have. And that sounds reasonable when you're thinking about making
a good first impression with people in general. However, what we know from science and what we
know, and I'll back up and prove this real quick, is that our first impression is not made when we
open our mouth. It's made when we become a blip on the other person's radar. And so what I mean by that is our perception of other
people, and this is evolutionary psychology 101 here, is that we do snap judgments of people based
on what we see. And we have to do that. It's a safety thing. Women are 10,000 times better at
this than men. That's not a scientific measurement because they have a they have a safety question that that is just the
elephant in the room this is person safe is the person safe right whereas you and i i don't i
only think about that when it's like face tattoos and serious like dark alley type stuff dude yeah
and other even then if i'm in a civil if i'm in a movie theater and there's a guy who's six six
and has face tattoos i'm like hey man yeah pass the popcorn. I don't care. Right. But
if I'm outside at night in Hollywood or something like that, then it's a different story. But for
those perceptions that we make, they're made completely non-verbally. And you can test that
just by going out for a walk right now. And then, or maybe after the show, go out for a walk and see
when you make a judgment of the next people that you see. And it's going to be before you talk to
them, unless they sneak up on you, in which case you've got other issues.
But the reason this is important is because
since we're making those judgments the second we see people,
and it's happening at a subconscious level in our brain,
that means that our first impressions are always made non-verbally.
And so this is really, really important
because people who spend a lot of time thinking,
what do I say? How do I start this conversation?
What do I do to approach this person and get them to like me?
That all becomes far less relevant.
It's not as much important about what you say or even how you're saying it.
It's more about who you're being and the way you're saying it beforehand.
Exactly.
Yeah, it becomes far less relevant to the actual connection that you have with that person. And so what we try to do
is create positive first impressions that we now know have to be nonverbal and they have to be
positive. They have to be open and they have to make sense and they have to portray the intent
that we have, which is hopefully positive, friendly, open, loving, whatever positive
adjective we want to throw in here. Right. So what's the drill then?
So the drill, I call this a doorway drill. This is kind of an art of charm staple. And what this
is, is when you're confident, you naturally are upright. You basically just did this. Upright,
open body language, smile on your face, chin up, ideally, chest forward, shoulders back. You don't
have to be like Superman pose or anything. Those power posing things have kind of been,
those studies are hard to replicate, I'll put it that way.
But if we remember what we look like in this position
and we're doing this socially
and this is how we feel positive, open, loving, open-hearted,
I think is the word that you used.
If we do that every time we walk through a doorway,
we no longer have to do this manually.
Because what a lot of people do is they
go, oh, good, right, open, tall, positive body language, put a smile on my face, that's going
to work next time I go into a place and start a conversation. But the problems crop up when
you're trying to do what we just talked about, what you just talked about, and you're trying
to remember to do that at all times. Not going to happen. It's kind of like telling yourself,
remember to notice things.
It's an impossible task, right? You can't do it. You can't be mindful of your verbal and nonverbal
communication and stay present in a conversation. It's too many things for your brain to concentrate
on with different parts at the same time. It's very difficult. I don't know anybody who's good
at it and still looks natural doing it. So we have to relegate the positive, open,
friendly, nonverbal communication to the level of habit. And the way that we do that is with
the doorway drill, doing that upright, shoulders back, chest up, chin up, smile on your face.
Every time you walk through a doorway, even in your own house, when we have that, when you have
that posture going, I don't know how I should count how many times I walk through a doorway.
And I'll tell you to illustrate my earlier point, I've tried to count how I should count how many times I walk through a doorway. And I'll
tell you to illustrate my earlier point, I've tried to count in a day, how many times I walked
through a doorway, but you can't because you just can't remember to count every time you walk
through a doorway, just like you can't remember to straighten up, put your shoulders back every
time you have a conversation. It's impossible. You're not going to do it. You need to make it
a habit. If you do it every time you walk through a doorway, let's say you walk through a doorway a hundred times on an average day in your office or house, you will eventually
have the habit of having upright, positive, nonverbal communication. And you got to do it
every day because I just got off a plane. I've been sitting like this for two hours. You got to
reset and you have to constantly reset every time you sit up, stand up, whatever. This is great
because if you do this and you relegate this and you create this habit over time, when you walk
downstairs to Starbucks or when you go to that networking event or when you go to that next
meeting, it's automatic. And then you can focus on your verbal communication, which is so much
more difficult for us to stay present in the conversation. Think about, all right, what am
I trying to do with this conversation? Where do I want this to go? What am I going to say next? That's a whole different set of, I would say,
skills slash problems of self-management and self-actualization and authoring that get us
past that. However, to not then worry about your nonverbal communication is so powerful.