Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Matt Abrahams: Spontaneous Speaking for Entrepreneurs, How to Communicate Confidently On the Spot | E330
Episode Date: January 20, 2025From kindergarten through university, teachers always called on Matt Abrahams first because his last name came first alphabetically. This forced him to think on his feet regularly and, over time, shap...ed him into a master of spontaneous communication. In this episode, Matt shares practical tips for speaking confidently on the spot as an entrepreneur, managing anxiety, and mastering techniques for effective small talk, networking, and negotiation. In this episode, Hala and Matt will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:35) Why Public Speaking Terrifies Most (02:31) How We Communicate: Then vs. Now (05:42) The Key to Navigating Small Talk (10:04) Embracing Mediocrity to Communicate Like a Pro (13:25) The 6 Steps to Thinking Faster, Talking Smarter (15:42) Managing Anxiety in Critical Moments (25:16) Balancing Active Listening and Sharing (29:44) Structures for Speaking Spontaneously (38:22) The Impact of Using Fewer Words (40:11) Reading the Room and Winning Negotiations (45:06) Networking with Confidence (49:20) How Body Language Amplifies Your Message Matt Abrahams is a lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, where he teaches Strategic Communication and Effective Virtual Presenting. He is the author of Speaking Up Without Freaking Out and Think Faster, Talk Smarter, and hosts the popular Think Fast, Talk Smart podcast. Matt has helped individuals deliver impactful presentations, from IPO roadshows to Nobel Prize speeches, TED Talks, and World Economic Forum sessions. He also consults for the United Nations and advises Fortune 100 companies. Connect with Matt: Website: mattabrahams.com LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/maabrahams TikTok: tiktok.com/@thinkfasttalksmart Facebook: facebook.com/stanfordgsb Instagram: instagram.com/stanfordgsb Sponsored By: OpenPhone - Get 20% off 6 months at https://www.openphone.com/PROFITING Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at https://www.youngandprofiting.co/shopify Airbnb - Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at https://www.airbnb.com/host Rocket Money - Cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster with Rocket Money. Go to https://www.rocketmoney.com/profiting Indeed - Get a $75 job credit at indeed.com/profiting   Resources Mentioned: Matt’s Book, Think Faster, Talk Smarter: amzn.to/3PyVXtS Matt’s Podcast, Think Fast, Talk Smart: fastersmarter.io Top Tools and Products of the Month: youngandprofiting.com/deals More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review -  ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting  Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala  Learn more about YAP Media's Services - yapmedia.io
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People would rather be standing on the precipice of
a 30-story building covered in snakes and spiders rather than giving a presentation.
Quite frankly, I think the other 15% are lying.
We can prepare to be spontaneous.
All communication planned or spontaneous
needs to be goal-driven.
How can we get over our nerves
when we're feeling especially self-conscious?
When it comes to managing anxiety,
you really have to, the single best thing you can do
in small talk
is just be curious.
When we're negotiating or trying to convince
even our partner of something,
how should we communicate?
First and foremost, we have to... So, what do you think?
It's a simple question, but one that a lot of us struggle with, especially if you hate
being put on the spot whether at work or at Thanksgiving dinner.
But in today's business world, the ability to speak spontaneously
is more crucial than ever.
Whether you're navigating a job interview,
negotiating a deal, pitching an idea,
or simply engaging in small talk,
you need to be able to communicate effectively
and comfortably.
To help us master this skill,
I'm thrilled to welcome Matt Abrahams,
a professor at Stanford's Graduate School of Business.
Matt is the author of the book,
Think Faster, Talk Smarter.
The host of the podcast, Think Fast, Talk Smart.
And he's dedicated his career to helping individuals
master the art of spontaneous communication.
So let's get started and learn how to think faster
and talk smarter.
Matt, welcome to Young and Profiting podcast.
Hala, I am so excited to be here with you.
Thank you.
I am so excited too, because I'm so fascinated by communication and human behavior.
They're two of my favorite topics and you are just such an incredible expert in this
area.
So I can't wait to jump right in.
We've all heard that old statistic that most people fear public speaking more than death.
And that's just the regular planned public speaking,
but it also sounds like based on your research
that many of us also fear
impromptu spontaneous speaking even more.
So just how scary is public speaking
and spontaneous speaking to the average person?
And why do you think that's the case?
It is really terrifying.
People would rather be standing on the precipice of
a 30-story building covered in snakes and spiders,
rather than giving a presentation.
Up to 85 percent of people report feeling nervous
in high-stakes communication situations.
Quite frankly, I think the other 15 percent are lying.
This is something that's just innate to being human.
Those of us who study it have found it across all cultures it tends to start around the same time young teens are when are our anxiety around speaking in front of others release the takes off.
And you're right it's not just planned communication it's also in the moment spontaneous speaking which if you think about it is most of our communication so it's part of being human.
about it is most of our communication. So it's part of being human. We feel threatened by
the opportunity to be up in front of others. Those of us who study us think it has an evolutionary origin to it. When our species was evolving, we would hang out in groups of about 150 people,
and your relative status in that group meant everything. And when I say status, I don't just
mean who's driving a fancy car, who has the most social media followings. I mean access to and your relative status in that group meant everything. And when I say status, I don't just mean
who's driving a fancy car,
who has the most social media followings.
I mean access to resources like food, shelter, reproduction.
So anything you did that put your status at risk
would cause anxiety,
and getting up in front of others was exactly that.
So it is ubiquitous,
yet it is something we can learn to manage.
But now in modern days, why is spontaneous speaking so important?
Yeah, well, because things come at us so fast and furiously. Think about it. We are
bombarded with information all the time. People are asking us questions. People
are asking us for feedback. We make mistakes, we have to correct things go
wrong, we have to apologize. We're in a situation where we have to make small talk,
the interactions that we're having both in person
and virtually require us to speak spontaneously
and to shift very quickly as we do it.
And do you feel like the internet and things like AI
and all this technology that's going on,
do you feel like that's hurting our communication skills as younger people?
I don't know if I would say hurting. It's definitely changing and challenging it.
There are more ways to communicate and some of those ways are actually really helpful to us.
We can be more efficient in our communication. We can spend more time with it because of
tools that help us get it messages out more quickly.
At the same time, we miss the opportunity to connect.
So I am an optimist when it comes to technology and communication, but we do have to adjust and adapt.
And the big thing we have to remind ourselves is in the workforce, we have multiple generations.
And some of the generations, more likely the younger generations,
are more comfortable and used to using technology and those of my generation or older aren't. So
we're in this transition phase and we all just have to remember that we're all learning and we
learn at a different pace, but I do think technology can help us communicate. We just
have to leverage it appropriately. Do you feel like older generations like boomers and maybe gen X that they're
better at spontaneous communication or do you feel like it's the same across the board?
The need to communicate spontaneously, I think is the same.
I actually think that all generations struggle, but for different reasons.
Younger generations in my observation tend to struggle
with the connection piece. A lot of spontaneous communication is about connection. Older generations,
my generation and even older, tend to struggle with the speed of communication because a lot
of spontaneous speaking happens immediately and it happens quickly. So I think everybody struggles a
little bit but the reasons they struggle
differ based on just their experience and how they grew up communicating. That all said,
we can learn to do this better. Yeah, I was just going to say this is something we can
actually improve. It's not this just natural born skill and you have it or you don't.
Can you share the story of how you got better at spontaneous speaking?
It's a confluence of several things, but it turns out with my last name, Abrahams, A-B,
I always went first through school, literally from kindergarten through university.
I always knew where I sat.
I always sat front row, closest to the door.
So whenever the teachers, and I am a teacher
and I know it's just easier to do things alphabetically,
I would always be called on first.
So growing up, I just got used to
having to speak spontaneously.
My friends whose last names were later in the alphabet
would always thank me.
They said, thank you because you would start
and it would give me time to think and plan and prepare.
So part of my ability to speak better spontaneously, and I can certainly
improve as can all of us came from experience practice and experience is a
large part of what helps us get better at all communication.
It's like an athlete athletes train to be spontaneous.
They do a lot of drills.
So in the game, they can be agile and respond to what happens.
And we can all do the same thing.
I, either through good fortune or dumb luck with my last name, got a lot of reps early on in life.
Yeah. To be honest, this is a skill that I really, really want to be better at,
because I feel like for me specifically, it is so important for my job.
And I always prep for my interviews. I go through the books, but your book,
Think Faster, Talk Smarter, I'm literally gonna go back
and take notes and try to teach other people
and do whatever I can to just retain the information
as much as I can.
So I'm really excited to go back
and literally study it so, so well.
And I don't feel that way about a lot of books.
So Think faster, talk
smarter guys. I highly recommend it. And I think for my skills, I feel like that's literally
the number one area I can improve. And I'm really good at speaking about marketing and
podcasting and business and sales and all the things that I'm an expert on. But I'm
always having to talk to like AI experts and neuroscientists
and biohackers and people that I've like, no, and they're like geniuses.
And then I have to like be smart in front of them.
So just thoughts around that in terms of being comfortable about what you're an expert on
and then talking in situations where you're by far not the expert.
Absolutely.
So first, thank you for the compliment.
The book was written to really be applicable.
There are try this parts of the book.
I think the only way to learn any communication,
but especially spontaneous communication, is by doing it.
And so I've tried to make the book accessible in that way.
And thank you for saying that it was successful, at least for you.
So I'm going to give advice that I give to people when I talk about small talk,
because what you're asking about is really touching on the same issue.
The single best thing you can do in small talk when you're meeting people,
you don't know, or you don't feel that you are at the same level.
They are is just be curious.
We have this pressure we put on ourselves to be interesting. And I think's most important i learned this from a guest on my podcast think fast talk smart her name is rachel greenwald
she taught me this notion of the goal is to be interested not interesting so lead with curiosity you don't have to know everything But be curious, and when you're curious, others will open up and share. And if they're good at what they do, they'll help make their content accessible to you.
So we put a lot of pressure on ourselves to feel like I need to be the expert.
I need to ask the best question.
I need to have the best feedback.
That's a tremendous amount of pressure to put on ourselves.
Instead, we say, hey, I just want to connect, and I'm curious about what the other person
says.
That reduces that pressure. It makes it about what the other person says. That reduces that pressure.
It makes it easier for the other person to share.
So my mother-in-law had a black belt in small talk.
She was amazing, and her secret was three words,
tell me more.
So just expressing curiosity, I think Hala will help you.
Now, you need to do your research.
You need to understand the domain that the person's in.
But just getting the person talking,
demonstrating interest, being curious,
allowing them space to respond,
that's the best way, I think, to get conversation going
and to elevate your knowledge level
and appropriateness of what you're saying.
Related to this, and something that I loved learning about
in your book was your advice to be mediocre, and appropriateness of what you're saying. Related to this, and something that I loved learning about
in your book, was your advice to be mediocre,
to not be afraid to be so dull.
And this is my biggest fear.
I won't say anything if I feel like it's not useful.
I'll just move on to the next thing.
So I'd love to just hear your perspective
on how can we be more mediocre.
To prepare for this work I did
that ultimately ended up in the book, I did a lot of research
across many academic domains, psychology, anthropology, sociology, communication, neuroscience,
and improvisation.
And improv has just amazing insights into communication, especially spontaneous communication.
And in improv, they have this notion of dare to be dull.
In other words, the goal in improv is not to be
an amazing star with everything you say.
Instead, the job is to just get things going,
keep things moving along.
And sometimes the best way to do that
is just to do it, be dull.
So I've transformed that into what I call
maximize your mediocrity. And I teach at Stanford, I teach Stanford Business School students,
and I start my first class every quarter by saying the goal of this class is to maximize
your mediocrity. At Holla, you should see these students' jaws drop. They have never been told
to be mediocre.
But the point is this,
if you think of your brain like a computer,
it's not a perfect analogy, but it works for this.
If you have a laptop or a phone
that has lots of apps or windows open,
each one of those apps and windows is performing less well
because the other ones are open.
You have limited bandwidth and you're spreading it thin.
When I am putting pressure on myself to say the right thing in the right way at the right
time to be perfect, I am actually putting so much pressure on myself. I'm using all
this bandwidth to judge and evaluate and assess my perfection or lack thereof that I actually
have very little bandwidth to actually do the communication.
So when you give yourself permission to just get it done,
I like to say it's about connection, not perfection.
If I just connect with the person,
if I just convey my information,
I then free up all this bandwidth
that allows me to do it really well.
So I end my very first class by saying,
I told you to maximize mediocrity,
and the reason is so you can achieve communication greatness. When we remove that pressure from
ourselves to be right, to be perfect, we actually free up bandwidth to help us get the point
across and do it well. And I'll just say one more thing. This is why memorizing is the
enemy of communication success. And I know
for many people, they're like, wait, wait, wait, wait, if I don't memorize, I'm lost.
No, memorizing makes it harder to actually communicate because part of your brain is
constantly assessing, am I saying what I had memorized, which only leaves the other part
of your brain to actually communicate. So it is better to have a roadmap, a structure,
just bullet points that you are familiar with
than memorizing word for word.
So being mediocre is all about changing cognitive bandwidth
to be in your favor.
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So in your book, Think Faster, Talk Smarter, you have a six-step method.
Could you go over that at a high level for us?
Absolutely.
Let me introduce the method.
It really divides into M&M, my favorite candies.
It's about mindset and messaging.
The first four steps are all about mindset.
When it comes to communication in general, but specifically spontaneous speaking, anxiety looms large. We started by talking about mindset. When it comes to communication in general, but specifically spontaneous speaking,
anxiety looms large. We started by talking about that. Most people are nervous. Most people are
really nervous in spontaneous situations. So step number one is learning to manage that anxiety.
Once we've managed that anxiety, the next thing we have to do is we need to do exactly what we
talked about, not get in that mindset of I have to be perfect.
So we have to focus our efforts
on just getting the idea across.
It's about connection, not perfection.
Third, we have to see these situations
as opportunities, not threats.
Many of us see speaking in front of others as a threat,
and we have to reframe that as an opportunity
that can really help us to be successful.
And then the final step of mindset has to do with listening.
And many people are like, what?
Listening is important?
You're talking about speaking?
No, you have to listen.
You have to be able to focus on what is needed
in the moment, it is critical.
So we start with anxiety, we move to how we focus
on connection, not perfection.
It's about opportunities, not threads.
And then it's about listening.
Then we transition to messaging.
The final two steps are about messaging.
When we communicate, we must leverage structure.
Many of us just take the audience on our journey of our discovery of what we want to say as
we're saying it.
In other words, we ramble, we list, we itemize.
It's very hard for others to remember lists of information. And then the final step is we have
to be concise and clear. Many of us say much more than we need to say. My mother has this wonderful
saying, tell the time, don't build the clock. Many of us when we speak say more than we need to. So
the last two steps are about structure and being concise. So taken together that methodology
can help you feel more comfortable and confident in all communication but
especially spontaneous speaking. And you don't have to be an expert in each of
those steps. Doing any work in any one of those areas will help you. So I want to
drill down and since you broke it apart
in two parts, let's split it, mindset and messaging.
And I'd love to use a personal example.
Yesterday, I interviewed Tom Billy.
Do you know who that is?
I don't, who is Tom?
He's this huge podcaster.
So he's got this podcast called Impact Theory.
He's huge on YouTube.
He's probably top 10 podcasters of all time.
He's huge.
And because he was competition,
my nerves were at a different level.
I've interviewed Matthew McConaughey,
I've interviewed Damon John, Gary Vee,
all these celebrities and I wasn't nervous at all.
But because he was a podcaster,
I just kept feeling like he's judging me.
And I kept feeling like,
oh, he probably thinks he's better than me.
And even my lips were quivering and that never happens.
And I felt like I just wasn't as present as I'm used to.
And I really wanted to impress him, right?
And so I felt like I did a good job.
I had prepared.
I feel like he probably didn't notice,
but I felt I could have done such a better job.
For example, I feel literally a hundred times more present
now than I did yesterday in that interview.
And it's cause I just feel comfortable with you.
I don't feel like you're judging me.
And so I'm able to be myself.
And even this morning I woke up,
the first thing in my mind was you blew it.
You know, that's what I woke up with.
And I was like judging myself.
So I know this speaks to a lot of the things
that you were just outlining when it comes to mindset.
So how can we get over our nerves
when we're feeling especially self-conscious?
What could I have done differently
in terms of internal dialogue or physically
like breathing or whatever I should have done?
One, thank you for being vulnerable and sharing that.
A lot of people keep that inside and somebody as successful as you and who comes off as
confident as you do, sharing that you get nervous I think is great for people to hear.
We all get nervous.
It is
the rare person who doesn't in high-stakes situations. And also, thank you for feeling
comfortable with me. That makes me feel really good.
So when it comes to managing anxiety, you really have to take a two-pronged approach.
You have to manage both symptoms and sources. Symptoms are what you physiologically feel.
You shared some of those. And sources are the things that initiate and exacerbate the anxiety.
So, allow me to share a little bit on both sides of that.
So when you begin to feel nervous, your body is responding to threat.
It's the fight or flight response.
Everything that goes on for you is what would happen if you were being chased by somebody.
So deep belly breathing is perhaps the best thing
you could do.
And when I say deep belly breathing,
I mean filling your lower abdomen.
If you've ever done yoga or meditation or Tai Chi
or Qigong, it's this deep belly breathing.
And the important part is it's the exhalation.
So I like to joke, instead of saying the rule of thumb,
the rule of lung is you want your exhale to be twice
as long as your inhale.
And if you take two or three deep breaths, like a three count in and a six count out, you slow down your autonomic nervous system.
You'll be less jittery.
You'll speak more slowly.
You'll be more present.
So that's a great thing to do to start.
If you're somebody who shakes, you said you, there was a
little quivering going on.
That's adrenaline.
Adrenaline sole purpose is to move you from threat to safety. So we want to move, but we want to move with purpose.
So big broad gestures, if you're standing in front of an audience, you want to walk forward.
Movement in a positive way that supports what you're saying gives that energy a place to go
and you will shake less. My personal symptom that happens to me,
I blush and I perspire,
I turn red and I sweat.
That's because your core body temperature is going up.
Your heart's beating faster,
your body's tensing, it's like you're exercising.
When most of us exercise,
we sweat and we perspire.
We have to cool ourselves down.
Before I ever speak,
before I'm a guest on a show like yours,
I will always
hold something cold in the palms of my hand. The palms of your hand control the temperature
of your body, just like your forehead or the back of your neck. We've done this on a cold
morning. If you've ever held warm tea or coffee in a mug and felt that it warms you up, we're
doing the opposite, cooling ourselves down. So there are things you can do and there are
many other things you can do, to reduce the symptoms.
But we also have to think about sources.
Sources are the things that initiate
and exacerbate anxiety.
In your case, it sounds like you didn't want to look foolish.
You wanted to look your best being.
You wanted to show up as best as you could.
That's a lot of pressure you're putting on yourself.
So by removing
that goal, what's making you nervous in that situation is the goal to come off in the way
you wanted to come off. A goal is a future state. So what's making you nervous is a potential
negative future outcome. So if we can make ourselves more present oriented, by definition,
I'm not worried about the future. So anything you can do to get more present. Some ways to get present are to do something physical,
walk around the building, do some light exercise. You could listen to a song or a playlist like
athletes do to get present-oriented. Start at 100 and count backwards by 17s. That gets
you present-oriented. My favorite way to get present-oriented is to say tongue twisters.
You can't say a tongue twister right
and not be in the present moment.
Plus it warms up your voice.
So by managing symptoms and sources,
you can be more present-oriented,
you can be more focused on what's happening in the moment
and less nervous.
So that was a very long-winded answer, I'm sorry,
but the question is very real
and it's something that most of us can benefit by managing our anxiety.
Yeah, 100%.
And so I started to get better halfway through the interview.
And I think one of the things that I was doing is in my head, I was repeating, you are the
podcast princess, Hala.
He's here because you have a top 100 podcast.
You are a great podcaster.
And I was repeating that stuff.
You're the podcast princess, Alia.
You're the podcast princess, Alia.
I love that.
I have a mantra I use and my mantra is,
you have value to bring.
So I remind myself,
because I can get negative.
I can get my thought, you know, I'm not prepared.
This person I'm talking to is so amazing.
I just say, I have value to bring.
There's something that this person
has chosen to speak with me, be it on a podcast, be it
a student asking me a question, be it somebody I just randomly meet, I have value to bring.
And that alone cancels out that negative talk. So that's great. You found a tool for you,
which is it's called positive affirmation. And that seems to work for you. That's great.
Yeah. And how about the fact that I felt so embarrassed afterwards?
What's the importance of being kind to yourself when it comes to these things?
Grace is really important in this. I think what helps many people is to realize that they're not
alone in this, that lots of people suffer from this. A real quick story. The very first book
I wrote was called Speaking Up Without Freaking Out.
It's all about how to manage anxiety.
I was in San Francisco airport.
They called my name over the loudspeaker
because the chair I was supposed to sit in on the airplane
was broken and they wanted to let me know that.
I come back and the guy standing next to me said,
you wrote that book on speaking anxiety.
I said, yes.
Have you read it?
He said, no, but it helped me.
I was like, you didn't read the book,
but it helped you, what do you mean?
And he said, just knowing that a book like that existed
helped him normalize his fear.
He said, I thought I was the only one
because it might work, everybody's so good,
but I realized you didn't just write the book for me.
So my point here is you have to give yourself
a little grace.
It is normal and natural in the presence
of somebody you admire, in the presence of somebody who is very
qualified and accomplished, to want to do well and to
be nervous.
That makes complete sense.
So allow yourself that permission to be nervous and
then remind yourself that you have value to bring,
that you can do some things in that moment.
And as you said, your conversation yesterday
turned out great.
He didn't even know you were nervous.
So we have to remind ourselves of that.
The biggest thing that can help here is reflection,
not rumination, but reflection.
Reflect now, Hala, on how and what you did
to get yourself through that.
So the next time you interview somebody
where you might feel that way, you remind yourself
it is through that reflection that we can change.
If we don't take the time to reflect, if we don't give ourselves grace, we're going to
fall victim to that same cycle over and over again.
So congrats on doing it and congrats on feeling a little embarrassed.
That means that this was important for you.
Totally.
And I feel like now that I've totally reflected on this, like this conversation couldn't have
came at a better time,
I feel like the next time I interview somebody
who's a huge podcaster and I feel like is gonna be judging me,
I can kind of give myself some grace
and do some of those activities that you mentioned
to just get myself ready, like,
okay, Holly, you are gonna feel nervous.
This is how you're gonna get over it.
So one of the things that I do
when it comes to
spontaneous speaking that I don't know is right or wrong,
is I tend to be comfortable sharing my own stories.
I was doing that a lot,
especially when I first started podcasting,
to the point where I got some bad reviews,
where some people were like,
Hala, stop talking about yourself.
Then I got more careful about,
I'm only gonna share stories that I don't share very often,
and I'm gonna share new stories
and not tell a lot of the same stories
because my listeners listen to more than one episode, right?
So what are your feelings about talking about yourself
when it comes to spontaneous speaking?
This is a great question
because you have to find a very delicate balance.
Those who study communication and conversation distinguish between supporting and switching
tactics.
Supporting tactic is where you reinforce what the other person is saying and a switching
tactic is where you switch to something that you want to say.
And I'll link this to your question in just a moment.
So if we're having a conversation, Holla, and you say, hey, I just got back from Hawaii.
And I say, oh, which island did you go to?
That's a supporting tactic that invites you to say more.
If I say, oh, I just got back from Costa Rica, that's a switching tactic.
You want to balance these out.
And the research suggests you want to be slightly more supporting
than switching because that puts the other person in the position of you demonstrating
interest and you wanting to hear what they have to say.
The same ideas apply to disclosure of our own stories.
We want to share some, but not too much.
We should be communicating in a way that gets the other person to talk more,
but we still have to share some of our stories.
So the rule of thumb that they have in this switching versus supporting approach
is you want two-thirds supporting, one-third switching.
And I think the same idea when it comes to telling stories about ourselves
or that are very personal to us,
versus soliciting stories and input from other people.
So I think you should tell some,
because if not,
it just sounds like you're interrogating people
if you don't share anything about yourself.
But if you say too much about yourself,
then it becomes almost rude.
So I like this one third you talking,
two thirds them talking approach.
Yeah, I feel like that's good,
because people love to talk about themselves.
So if you want somebody to like you,
you actually want them to talk about themselves
because they'll feel like it was like a really happy,
positive experience because they got a chance
to speak about themselves.
Absolutely, absolutely.
And that's why going into those situations,
thinking about questions you might want to ask
is always a good thing.
Even if it's spontaneous, even if I'm going into a party or to some kind of conference setting where there's going to be
people milling around, right before I go in the room, I can come up with two or three questions
that I'm interested in. And that's how I start. Because you're right, people like to talk,
people like to share information about themselves. Having those questions at the ready can really
help you. And When people are talking,
is there certain things we should be listening for
and things that can help us keep the conversation going?
Absolutely. First and foremost,
we need to listen better.
We're just not good listening.
We listen for the top line and then we begin judging, evaluating,
rehearsing. You need to focus your listening.
You need to listen for the bottom line. What
I teach my students and what I try to do myself and when I host my podcast, when I just talk
to people on the street, I try to listen to paraphrase. So as somebody's talking, I'm
saying, what's the core essence? What's the bottom line? If I had to paraphrase or summarize
what they said, what would I say? And when you listen that way, you listen more deeply. So in conversation, I'm listening for the bottom line.
And that's where I start my response.
So I might even comment on what that bottom line is.
I might say, oh, you're really curious about this,
so I name it, and then I add to it.
So we have to listen better,
we have to listen for the bottom line.
So as you're listening to somebody,
think about if I had to paraphrase what
they're saying, what would I say?
So use that as the starting point for what you want to contribute next.
This reminds me of something that Chris Voss does.
Do you know who that is split the difference?
I can't remember what the word is.
Yeah.
I just interviewed Chris for my podcast.
Great guy.
Really interesting insight.
Yeah. I've interviewed him like five or six times
So I should definitely remember what I'm talking about right now
But basically I don't remember what it's called, but you paraphrase what somebody's saying as a question
So yes, then they'll just say more information. He likes to talk about mirroring
And then Charles Duhigg calls this looping. It's
this notion of you start with what the person says you loop
back to it and then you move forward and and they're both
talking about exactly the same thing. It's you recognize what
the person has said, which validates them, which builds
connection and trust, but it also gives you a starting point
for what comes next.
Yeah, totally. Okay, Matt, so I know this is spontaneous speaking, but is there
any way that we can actually prepare? Because when it comes to wanting to prepare for something,
if you know the general topic, I'm assuming that you can at least prepare a little bit,
even if you're trying to talk on the cuff, right? Absolutely, Holly, you are right. We can prepare to be spontaneous and that sounds counterintuitive,
but it really is true.
One of the key ways to get yourself prepared is to become
familiar with structure.
Most of us, when we are nervous and we're put on the spot, we just
list and itemize things.
We just say whatever comes into our mind.
And that makes it really hard for the audience, the person or people we're talking to the spot, we just list and itemize things. We just say whatever comes into our mind. And that makes it really hard for the audience,
the person or people we're talking to, to digest it.
A structure is a logical connection of ideas,
a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Let me give you an example.
If you've ever watched an advertisement,
you have likely seen the structure
problem, solution, benefit.
Advertisements start with some issue challenge that exists.
They then say how their product or service fixes that issue or challenge,
and then how you benefit.
So if you're selling cars,
selling medicine, selling alcohol, it does not matter.
They all follow that structure.
It's a logical connection of ideas.
If you are familiar with structure,
you have a recipe that you can follow for answering questions,
for making small talk, for giving feedback, for apologizing, whatever the situation is.
So if it's okay with you, can I share my favorite structure that I think works in a lot of situations?
Yes, of course.
Excellent. So it's three simple questions. What, so what, now what.
The what is the information you're getting across. It could be your idea, so what, now what. The what is the
information you're getting across. It could be your idea,
your product, your update, your feedback. The so what is why is
it important or relevant to the person you're talking to? And
then the now what is what comes next. Maybe it's do you have
questions for me? Let's go into that other room. Let me show you
something. It's the next step. So let me give you just real
quickly a couple examples of how this might work.
Imagine you're in a meeting and your boss says,
hey, give me an update on that project you're working on.
You hadn't prepared for an update.
You follow the structure,
you answer the three questions.
The what is your update? Here's what I've done.
The so what is, here's why it's important.
It matches our goals or expectations.
Then the now what is,
here are the three things that I need to have
happen before I can progress. Simply by answering what, And then the now what is, here are the three things that I need to have happen
before I can progress.
So simply by answering what, so what, now what,
you've given a structured, packaged,
concise response to the update.
Similarly, let's imagine you're walking out
of a different meeting and somebody turns to you and says,
how do you think that meeting went?
Again, you're not prepared to get feedback.
You didn't know you were going to have to give feedback.
You simply answer these three questions.
I might say, I thought the meeting went great, except when you talked about the implementation
plan.
You spoke quickly without a lot of detail.
That's the what.
When you speak quickly without a lot of detail, people might think you're nervous or unprepared.
That's the so what.
Next time, slow down and add these two additional bits of information,
that's the now what.
In two very different situations,
both spontaneous, by just answering those questions, what, so what, now what,
that structure helps me get through it and it takes
pressure off me because I don't have to think about how to say it.
I know how I'm going to say it,
I'm just going to answer those questions.
I just have to think about what those answers are.
So structure is key and you can prepare and practice structure.
I challenge all of your listeners, when they are done listening to this episode or any
of your other awesome episodes, at the end to simply say, what was the key takeaway for
me?
Why was it important and how can I use it?
And by drilling that, just for 10, 15 seconds, you get more used to using this structure
so it becomes natural to you.
So structure is a really key ingredient to helping with all these situations we've been
talking about.
Yeah.
And when it comes to structure, would you consider storytelling and stories to have
structure too?
Structure is just another fancy word for story.
All stories have a structure, right?
Beginning middle and an end.
When somebody says tell more stories or this is about storytelling or narrative, what they're
really saying and what I am hearing them say is use a structure.
Use a structure that engages people.
So yes, I see those as synonymous and very important.
And what kind of other structures do you lay out in your book or anything else that you want to share about structures?
Oh, thank you.
The first part of the book is about the six-step methodology. The second part of the book is about six specific spontaneous speaking situations,
and for each one of them,
it has a particular structure that I like teaching. So let me give you an example of one.
Many of the people listening to your show are entrepreneurs
or people who have ideas that they wanna motivate others by.
I have a structure that I really like for pitching.
So this is short persuasion, like an elevator pitch.
This structure is different from what, so what, now what.
This structure is just sentence starters.
You finish these sentence starters.
So it's what if you could,
so that, for example, and that's not all.
If you finish those four sentence starters,
you have a good pitch.
So, Hala, I'm going to ask you to put me on
the spot if you're willing to do that.
Okay. Sure.
Pick a particular product or service that I would know,
something I know, just give it to me,
and without any thought,
I'm going to pitch it just using this structure.
So if I do my job right, I'm going to demonstrate spontaneous speaking.
So I don't know what you're about to say.
You didn't know I was going to ask you to do this.
So we're both being spontaneous.
Give me something to pitch a product or service that I would know about.
A Mac laptop.
You did that because I had problems with my Mac. What if you could easily
access all of your information in
a sleek looking device so that you could be
prepared and have the information you need at your fingertips.
For example, imagine you are flying from Los Angeles to New York,
and you have to create
a presentation that you have to deliver when you land.
Wouldn't it be great to have a small, compact, good-looking laptop that you could work on?
And that's not all. You get access to a whole community of applications and users that can be supportive of your efforts.
So by simply answering those specific prompts,
what if you could, so that, for example,
and that's not all, you can craft a pitch.
What if you could gets people's attention.
Attention is the most precious commodity
we have in the world today.
So that makes it relevant.
Here's what's important for you.
For example, grounds it in reality.
We remember detail better than we remember
high-level information, and that's not all, extends and expands whatever you're talking about beyond the moment.
So just knowing those four sentence starters can help you pitch anything in the moment.
And one of the things that can also help us with having our speeches be sticky and having people remember what we say is brevity. So speaking of Apple, you talk about Steve Jobs and he's got the iPod,
and he's got very focused messaging.
A thousand songs in your pocket is the focused message.
But how can we come up with our own impromptu brief message?
What are some tactics for that?
Yes. So two things.
Beyond having a structure,
structure is critical to being more concise.
Two things. One, you have to think about
your audience and what's relevant and most important to them,
and then focus everything you're doing like
a magnet towards that relevance.
So I am constantly thinking to myself,
what is most important to my audience in this moment?
That's what helps me focus.
Second, all communication, planned or spontaneous,
needs to be goal-driven.
A goal has three parts,
information, emotion, and action.
What do I want the audience to know?
How do I want them to feel?
And what do I want them to do?
So before I walk into
a conference room where I might
get questions or be asked for feedback,
I think, what do I want this audience to know?
How do I want them to feel?
And what do I want them to do?
By focusing on relevance and by focusing on your goal,
you will become more concise and clear.
And if you can then convey your message in a structure,
like we just talked about,
that's how you truly become relevant and focused.
And it makes sense because in this podcast,
when we first joined, I was like,
hey, it's a lot of entrepreneurs.
And then you decided out of all examples
to talk about the pitching example.
Yes, exactly.
Because you felt like it would be very relevant
for our audience.
We are getting so meta right now.
Yes, that's exactly what I did.
Yeah.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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So one of the exercises you suggest to help us with focus is called a brevity
challenge. Can you tell us about that? Yes. So most of us, as I said help us with focus is called a brevity challenge.
Can you tell us about that?
Yes.
So most of us, as I said, say more than we need to do.
We can actually challenge ourselves to say what we're saying with fewer words.
This is a game that comes from the world of improvisation, where you start by saying something
and then you cut it in half and then you cut it in half again.
So a great way to do this is to look at something you've written,
maybe even a text or a document or something and challenge
yourself to say it in half the number of words.
How would you do that?
Again, I'm not saying that whatever the result of that is,
in half number of words is the right way to do it.
But what we're training our brain in
this brevity example is we're training to prioritize.
Here's a great use for AI by the way.
If you've written something, an e-mail,
a document, put it in AI and say,
make it half as long or highlight just the key elements,
and then look at what it comes out with.
I'm not saying to leverage what it comes out with,
but just look at what it has done to make it more concise, and then use that as a reference point. Say, oh, you know what it comes out with, but just look at what it has done to make it more concise,
and then use that as a reference point. Say, oh, you know what it did? It cut out all the big words.
Or do you know what it did? It took all of the action verbs and put them up front. So you begin
to see how you can prioritize and get briefer in what you say. So whenever you write something,
you can always challenge yourself and say, how would I say this in half as long?
By training that process,
you train your brain to do that in real time.
I know Mark Twain, I think has this quote,
writing is easy, you just gotta cross out
all the wrong words or something like that.
Absolutely, he's got wonderful sayings
about communication, but right,
it's about self-editing, but doing it very quickly.
And the more you practice it, the better you get at it.
We're talking about business right now.
How do we get better at reading the room
in business situations?
Yes, yes.
So my podcast is Think Fast, Talk Smart.
The book is Think Faster, Talk Smarter.
The think fast and think faster part
are all about pattern recognition.
And we have to remind ourselves that whenever we're communicating, The think fast and think faster part are all about pattern recognition.
And we have to remind ourselves that whenever we're communicating, patterns are at play.
And we have to be looking at those patterns and cataloging those patterns.
Many of us are in repetitive situations.
We have meetings with the same people over and over, or we do similar tasks.
Like you interview, now you interview different people, but you're interviewing, and you can
begin to look and notice patterns.
Many of us are just so focused on getting through our communication that we don't spend
time focusing on the patterns.
And if we can train ourselves to look at those patterns, it helps us read the room.
That's what reading the room is.
It's pattern recognition.
So we might notice that 10 minutes into most of our meetings,
the energy level dips.
Well, that's a pattern.
And I can notice, hey, we're coming up on 10 minutes,
maybe I should do something different.
So reading the room to me is all about just observing
what's going on in the moment,
and then reflecting on it after the fact,
and coming up with a plan on how to deal with it
in the future.
So we have to take the time
to get a little meta in our communication to observe what's going on and then to really reflect
and then be prepared to adjust and adapt when we see those things play out. I remember one of the
first interviews that I ever did on this podcast was with Chase Hughes and he's this behavioral
expert and I remember he told me if people start blinking really fast,
it means that they're not paying attention.
And that if somebody's blinking normally,
that means that they're engaged.
But if they start blinking really fast,
it means that they're not paying attention.
And of course, if they're looking around
at their shoes or like at the door or something like that.
Well, I'm now gonna just,
I'm just gonna stare the whole time
so you think I'm paying attention to it.
Yes, no, you're right, but you have to observe that.
You have to notice that, right, in order to act on it.
Yeah.
How about when we're negotiating?
I know that's a big thing also for entrepreneurs.
When we're negotiating or trying to convince
even our partner of something, how should we communicate?
Oh, this is a big topic.
Think Fast Talk Smart is all about communication tips
and we've spent a lot of time talking about negotiations.
So I've talked to lots of experts, as I know you have.
Let me summarize a couple of things
that I've taken away from all of my interviews.
First and foremost, we have to know what we want.
What is it that we want and what is it
that we're willing to give up and our non-negotiables?
Many of us enter into negotiations without a clear up and are non-negotiables. Many of us enter into
negotiations without a clear what's our non-negotiable and where can we negotiate? That's number one.
Number two, we have to take the time to think about the other person's position. How much do
they prioritize what it is we're negotiating over? We have this assumption that we make that everybody that we're dealing with
holds whatever they hold at the same level we do, right?
And let me give an example.
My wife and I over the years have developed this technique
so we don't fight and our negotiations go better.
When we have something that we might disagree on
and have to negotiate about, before we ever start,
we declare how important that is to us.
So let me give a really
mundane simple example. Let's say we want to go out to dinner and my wife really wants to go to
Italian food and I really want to do Mexican food. That could be a negotiation. That could be a
fight. But before we do it, we simply say declare our priorities. She might say going to Italian
food, that's an eight on a scale of one to 10. And For me, Mexican food's a four. There's no negotiation.
There's no conflict.
What happens is I might assume, well, her desire is the same as my desire, and I'm going
to really push, and now all of a sudden, because I'm pushing, her desire rises because, hey,
nobody likes to be threatened.
Figure out priorities as best you can because you might not even need to negotiate.
The third bit of advice is to think about the approach and
metaphor that you're bringing to the situation.
Michelle Gelfand, who's a colleague of mine at Stanford's
Business School, studies negotiation.
And she says, mind your metaphors.
A lot of us, when we approach negotiations, see it as a battle,
see it as a fight.
And when you see it that way, that changes your whole demeanor, how you approach it, the words you use.
But if you see it as a dance or as a conversation,
that changes it as well, or a problem to be solved.
So think about how are you approaching it?
And then the last thing, and I'm sure this isn't surprising,
you have to approach from a place of listening.
Many of us go and say,
here are all the reasons we should do it my way.
Start by listening, start by asking questions.
That also connects you,
but you get an idea of what's important.
So if you follow those four steps,
really know what your non-negotiables are,
think about the person's prioritization.
How are you approaching it in terms of your mindset,
your metaphor, and then ultimately listening,
you're gonna negotiate better.
One of my last questions for you is about networking.
A lot of us have to go to these networking events.
How can we best prepare?
Like you mentioned, even though it's spontaneous,
there's still preparation involved,
and then how do we excel at small talk?
When you're networking, just like when you're interviewing,
first and foremost, you should be thinking about
who are the people that are in the space or in the room or on the Zoom that you're networking, just like when you're interviewing, first and foremost, you should be thinking about who are the people that are in the space
or in the room or on the Zoom that you're connecting with.
So do some research, reconnaissance and reflection
about who the people are that you might be speaking to,
because that will help you focus your content.
Second, come up with themes that you wanna get across.
So in a networking environment,
what are some key ideas I want to get across and share?
And you can plan those in advance, whatever those are. You may want to share your opinions, or you have strong opinions on AI or something going on in the news. That's your theme.
And then stockpile some specific support for those themes. Maybe it's a story you have,
maybe it's some data you heard about, maybe it's a conversation you had with somebody else.
So you stockpile those.
Think of it this way.
If you ever see a restaurant's kitchen and everybody's cooking fast and
furious during a high peak time at the restaurant, they have everything
prepared in advance, everything's pre-chopped, pre-sauteed, so they're just assembling.
You can do the same thing.
Think about these themes and then think about
these different types of support for those themes.
So when I'm in the networking situation
and somebody brings up a point,
I could say I can connect that point to
this theme I wanted to get across,
and I can pull in this example.
So you've taken the pressure off of
yourself to originate in the moment,
and instead you're just connecting and building,
and that can actually help you feel better and it allows you to be more agile and
spontaneous. Think about this, an athlete does drills for certain aspects of the
game, you know, professional basketball players do a lot of free throws, right, or
they do a lot of positional work. So if I'm in this position and the ball comes
to me in this way, I shoot it in that way. That's what you're doing. So when it
happens, you're free to respond,
but you've done that pre-work.
So have a clear theme, have some supporting material
that you can pull into that theme.
And then when it comes to small talk directly,
start with questions or observations.
Ask somebody a question or observe something
that's happening in the environment, just comment on it.
I made a great, good friend simply by standing in line at a conference. I didn't know anybody.
I looked around and I noticed lots of people were dressed in blue. It wasn't a uniform. It just
happened to be coincidence. I turned to the guy. I said, I didn't get the memo on wearing blue. He
looked around and said, you're right. Everybody's wearing blue. Started a great conversation. We've
now become friends. When I traveled to where he lives, I visit him all the time.
It started simply with an observation.
The last thing I'll say is,
the thing that challenges many people in small talk is getting out of it.
How do you end it?
Rachel Greenwald, who I mentioned earlier,
taught me this technique.
She calls it the white flag,
not for surrender,
but in auto racing,
the white flag is what you wave right before you end the race.
So when you wanna end small talk,
most of us just rely on biology.
I'm hungry, I'm thirsty, I have to go to the bathroom.
It's awkward.
Instead, you wave the white flag,
you signal you're going to leave in a little bit.
So if you and I were talking, I might say,
I've really enjoyed this conversation.
In a few minutes, I'm gonna go over there
and talk to people, but before I leave,
I wanna ask you one more question
about something you did on a recent podcast.
Do you see what I've done there?
I've signaled that I'm going to leave soon,
so you can prepare yourself.
It's not a surprise, but I
dive in for just a little bit more information.
Before you start, you do your stockpiling in your themes,
and you now know a way to end.
It makes networking and small talk so much easier.
Oh my gosh, that was such good advice.
I don't do this on purpose.
I never did it on purpose,
but because I go speak at so many podcast conferences,
what happens is I'm preparing these awesome presentations,
and I'm pulling all this data,
and then the whole time I'm just touting what I
learned in my presentation to
everybody when I'm doing small talk, and that's my theme and I never realized time I'm just touting what I learned in my presentation to everybody when I'm doing small talk
and that's my theme and I never realized
that I'm actually doing that,
but didn't realize that I was doing that.
So that's just such a cool tip,
especially for people who might not be doing a presentation
to treat it like you would.
So I love that.
So in your book, you talk about an NPR journalist
who has a killer last question that she likes to ask
her interviewees.
Can you tell us about this killer last question and why it works?
This is Deborah Schifrin you're talking about.
Deborah is also a colleague at Stanford.
And before I tell you the question, her goal is to give people an opportunity to say more.
So a lot of us in our dialogue,
we ask a question, they respond, we ask a question.
But if you actually pause for a moment
and you ask people and you just give them
an opportunity to say more.
So not only does she say,
is there anything else you'd like to say?
Her magic question is,
is there anything more you'd like to add?
She also builds in a pause. So when somebody's
done answering a question, if you pause just a little bit before you ask the next question or
comment on it, you give people space. We are so busy and our attention is so pulled in different
directions. Space to say more is a gift.
And so if you allow people more space,
you actually show that you care,
that you want to learn more and that you want to connect.
So I encourage all of you,
when you are having deep, meaningful conversations
or want to have deep, meaningful relationships,
pause a little bit, give people space,
and really listen to what they say,
and it will transform those relationships.
So we're going to get meta again.
Is there anything important that I neglected to ask?
Oh, well, thank you for that opportunity.
I think one of the things we did not talk about
that is important for us to think about
is not just what you say, but how you say it.
We need to be thinking about our body and our voices
when we communicate.
So it's not just feeling comfortable
and confident speaking in the moment,
it is appearing comfortable and confident.
So let me share just a couple bits of advice
about what we can do with our body and our voices.
First and foremost, you want to be big.
Many of us, when we get nervous or are feeling
threatened, we make ourselves small. So the best thing you can do is take your shoulder blades and
just pull them down. Make yourself broad. I'm not pushing my elbows back. I'm not puffing my chest
out. I just pull my shoulder blades down and I make myself look bigger. You look more confident.
You want to hold your head straight and not tilted. I'm not saying be stiff and rigid. Just make yourself big. When you speak, vary your voice.
If I were to have spoken like this for this entire interview, people would have left a
long time ago. Our brains are wild for novelty, things that change. So add emotive words.
If you are somebody who doesn't have
a lot of variation, add adjectives and adverbs. So I would never say, I'm really excited to
be here. No, I'd say I'm really excited. So emphasize those words. So the one thing we
didn't talk about is how you say what you say. And we need to remember that. And the
single easiest way to work on this is to record yourself, either through voice memo or through video.
Really easy to do that these days and watch. It's painful to watch yourself.
But when you do, you'll see these things that work for you and things that you might want to change.
All of my MBA students I teach, whenever they do a presentation, I make them watch themselves without listening to it.
And then I make them listen to themselves without watching it,
and then do both together.
While they hate it, they love it because they
learn so much and they actually are able to change.
Can you say that again? What do you make them do?
You make them-
They record themselves and then they view it in three ways.
Video only, audio only, and then both together.
Got it. Yeah, that'd be really painful.
For instance, when I listen back to my interviews,
I'm like, I hate this.
I can't listen to it, but you have to do it.
You have to do it to improve.
It's the burden of being a podcaster.
You have to listen and watch.
But my hunch is, Holly,
you've probably changed some of
your communication based on what you've seen.
Of course. So Matt,
this has been such an incredible discussion.
Like I mentioned,
I'm so excited to just like go back to your book and study it tooth and nail. It's called Think
Faster, Talk Smarter. I always end my show with two questions that I ask all of my guests. So the
first one is what is one actionable thing my young and profitors can do today to become more
profitable tomorrow? Focus on your communication.
At the end of every day, take 30 seconds to think about
what is something that went well in my communication today
and what is something I'd like to improve.
By simply taking time to catalog what works for you
and really lean into that and take the things
that challenge you and start fixing that, working on it,
can help. Every day I do this, and on the weekends, that challenge you and start fixing that, working on it can help every day I do this.
And on the weekends, I go back and look at everything.
And then I set a plan for myself.
So I am constantly working and honing on my communication and it
will help you be more profitable.
It'll help you connect better with people and ultimately help you feel
better about the relationships you have.
And what is your secret to profiting in life?
And this can go beyond financial and business.
Being open to opportunity.
I rarely say no.
I say yes to many opportunities.
And my life has unfolded really pleasantly and in great ways,
simply because many people's natural response
is to say no, to be protective.
And I like to approach things with curiosity and openness.
So I encourage everybody to do that. It has been my superpower where I've looked for opportunity
and really driven towards it. And where can everybody learn more about you? Tell us about
your podcast and everything like that. Oh, thank you for the opportunity. This has been fantastic.
So the podcast is called Think Fast Talk Smart. It is 20 minute episodes about communication,
all aspects of it.
We've been around for almost five years, lots of episodes.
Check us out at fastestsmarter.io,
where everywhere you get your podcasts, including YouTube.
Check out the book, Think Faster, Talk Smarter.
You can get it wherever you get your books.
Really trying to help people hone
and develop their communication and improve their careers.
Amazing.
Matt, I had such a fun time in this conversation.
I personally learned so much.
I feel like you're gonna impact me
for many years to come just with this conversation.
So thank you for your time today.
Hala, thank you.
This was a true delight.
You are a master at what you do.
While young and profitors, there you have it.
Learning to communicate effectively with others is such an important part of getting ahead
in life and business.
And learning to speak better spontaneously is a skill that we could all get better at,
even if it's just so that we can be a little bit more interesting at that next networking event or social gathering.
Matt Abrahams has so many great tips for exactly how to do this and I just want to highlight
a few of my favorite things here in closing.
First, small talk. This can be super awkward sometimes. But there's just one thing that
you need to remember to raise your game. And that's be curious.
Focus on being interested more than being interesting.
People love to talk about themselves, so give them a chance to shine.
Try using supporting conversational tactics that focus the conversation on the other person
more than you use switching tactics to bring it back to yourself.
Part of this also involves being a better listener.
And a great way to improve your listening ability
is to focus on the bottom line of what the person is saying,
not just the top line.
Next, maximize your mediocrity.
We put so much pressure on ourselves to say the perfect thing
that we leave ourselves little actual bandwidth
to focus on the conversation at hand.
If you give your permission to just be basic and acceptable, then you'll release this pressure and give
yourself a better chance of being engaging. Yap, I've thought about this
hack so many times. It has helped me so much personally in interviews and
talking with really impressive people. I just tell myself, Hala, just listen and be
basic. It will make them like you more. It's worked like a charm.
And another great hack, if you're still feeling nervous before you have to speak,
then try to cool yourself down by holding something cold in your hands for a few minutes.
Work off some nervous energy and get fully present in the moment by walking around, listening
to some music, or even just saying a tongue twister over and over to yourself.
Alright guys, I'm going to raise the white flag on this particular episode, but before
I leave the party, I wanted to leave you with one more question to ask yourselves as you
think about this episode.
What was your key takeaway?
What insight was most important to you and how are you going to use it?
Alright, I'm out Young and Profiters.
That's all the time we have today.
Thanks for listening to this episode and if you listened, young and profiteers. That's all the time we have today. Thanks for listening to this episode.
If you listened, learned, and profited from this incredible conversation with Matt Abrahams,
please share this episode with somebody who might love it.
If you did learn something new, if you enjoyed the show, then take a couple minutes, drop
us a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify.
Nothing helps us reach more people than a great review from you.
And guys, I read these reviews every single day I check for new reviews.
They make my day.
I love getting feedback about the show.
It motivates me.
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So do your part and write us a review on Apple Podcasts.
And if you prefer to watch your podcast as videos, I've been doing so many in-person videos.
I just interviewed Mel Robbins in person.
I interviewed Gary Vee in person.
I interviewed Sahil Bloom the other day in person.
If you want to watch those videos, head to our YouTube channel.
Just look up Young and Profiting.
You'll find all of our videos on there.
You can also find me on Instagram at Yap with Hala.
I've got a lot of fun stories you guys can follow along. Or LinkedIn. Search my name. It's Hala Taha. You can't miss me on Instagram at Yap with Hala. I've got a lot of fun stories you guys can follow along or LinkedIn, search my name, it's Halataha.
You can't miss me on there.
Before we wrap, I did want to give a big shout out
to my incredible Yap Media production team.
That's my production agency.
And it really takes a village to put on this show.
So shout out to Christina, shout out to Sean,
shout out to Paul, Raven, Hisham for Khan, Joshua, Max.
Shout out to everybody for working so hard on the show.
This is your host, Hala Taha, aka The Podcast Princess, signing off.