Speaking Body Language

Speaking Body Language

If you haven't yet spent much time studying body language, I recommend that you add it to your to-do list for communication development.

It's invaluable not only for speaking and listening but also for negotiating and leading.

Practising a Pitch

I observed an almost surreal event when I was a business student.

At the front of the classroom, an entrepreneur was practising a pitch he would make later to venture capital firms.

Saving Lives

Specifically, he was talking about a technology his firm had developed, a respirator which had the potential to save the lives of many infants.

When he talked about the potentially great financial returns, the audience, made up of business students, sat back passively.

Alert and Focused

But when he talked about getting babies through critical moments with his respirators, every single person in the classroom sat up, alert and fully focused.

As he went back and forth between stories of saving babies and talking about financial results, almost every student in the classroom moved with him.

Carefully Choreographed

And what's more, it seemed the students' unconscious body movements had been carefully choreographed.

We sat up together when the entrepreneur talked about saving babies, and we sat back in unison when he discussed the numbers.

And, by the way, I did it too until I become aware of how we were responding as a group.

People Show What They Are Thinking

Since that event, I've been a firm believer in body language, which is the idea that people unconsciously show what they're feeling or thinking through gestures or body movements.

As you know, the art of interpreting body language is hardly a science.

But, we do know a few basics that can help us read the emotions of others.

A Few Examples

Crossed arms, as almost every salesperson knows, means the person on the other side of the table is defensive or not receptive.

On the other hand, if that person leans forward and keeps his or her eyes on you, then you do have a receptive listener.

Novice Speakers

If you watch novice speakers, you'll probably notice how they keep their arms close to their bodies, indicating a lack of confidence.

As they get more practice speaking in public, you'll see their arms move away from their sides and become active tools for conveying messages.

Arms wide open indicate trust and openness, as do open hands, while arms held high above the head show a sense of victory, and clenched hands indicate anger.

Lying

Curiously, one of the most difficult interpretations of body language involves lying.

Researchers have probably spent more time on this aspect of body language than any other.

And their conclusions?

Micro Brow Wrinkles

The only surefire way to know if another person is lying is to observe very small and fast wrinklings of the brow.

If you haven't yet spent much time studying body language, I recommend that you add it to your to-do list for communication development.

It's invaluable not only for speaking and listening but also for negotiating and leading.

Robert F. Abbott writes and publishes Abbott's Communication Letter.

Body Language

Impact Factory runs

Open Communication Skills Courses

Tailored Communication Skills Training

Five Day Communicate With Impact Workshops

and personalised

One-to-One Communication Coaching

for anyone who is interested in

Communication Skills Issues

Body Language Training in London

Training Course Accreditation

To ensure that the courses you attend are of the highest quality, offering the best professional tuition possible, all our Open Courses are evaluated and accredited.

This accredited course is suitable for corporate and public sector Continuing Professional Development Plans and Portfolios.

Read about Trainer Accreditation