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Body Language Kevin Hogan
. Body Language:Strategic Movement
Your Covert Advantage
Let Your Body Do the Talking In Group Presentations
You have read about how your body communicates messages to
others in the article Can You Hear Your Body Talking?. In this
installment, we will talk about strategic movement, the deliberate but
covert method of using your body to get messages across to your
audience.
Everything you have read up until this point applies to group
presentations. Presentations before larger numbers of people simply
offer a few more challenges and a few greater rewards.
If you are presenting to a group, you already know that you have
something important enough to say to get the attention of the group.
No one in the group showed up by accident.
There are a few keys to speaking before groups:
Know what you are going to say in advance.
You don't have to write out your presentation. In fact, unless you
are the President of the United States, no one will listen if you do.
Be aware and in charge of seating selection. If you are the key
speaker and will be speaking from the one and only table you want to
sit on an end or in the middle of one of the two sides.
If you have any known detractors of your idea, product or service, you
should have them sit to your immediate left or immediate right. These
are the least powerful positions on the table. Notice that in
presidential press conferences where members of both parties are
present at a seated table, President Clinton always has the house
Republican leaders seated immediately next to him. These positions
have no focal attention and people sitting here rarely speak with any
credibility.
Utilize Strategic Movement. If you have to speak before a group and
you have a podium you have an opportunity to make or break a sale
by a strategy that I discovered by watching television evangelists.
This strategy takes some time to master but is remarkably effective.
The most powerful nonverbal process you can use with an audience
that must determine as a group to "buy" or "not buy" your ideas,
products or services is that of strategic movement. Other sales
trainers call similar strategies spatial anchoring. Both are
applicable and here is what strategic movement is all about.
Do you remember Johnny Carson? He was the host of the Tonight
Show for almost 30 years before Jay Len took over in the 1990's.
Each night that Johnny came out he stood on a small star which
marked exactly where he was supposed to stand. It was the best spot
on the entire stage for camera angles, connecting with the audience
and because of the curtain back drop, we knew without seeing
Johnny's face that he was there and not a guest host, who would stand
on a different star.
The only thing Johnny ever did from this specific location was make
people laugh. He didn't wander around the stage and tell his jokes. He
stood right there and made people laugh. There were many nights when
Johnny literally could just stand on his star and people would laugh.
That is spatial anchoring. Audience laughter was anchored (conditioned
to) Johnny's standing on his star.
When I first visited NBC in 1984, I thought it was fascinating that
only Johnny stood on that star. At the time I thought it was an ego
trip or some bit of arrogance on the part of Carson. How wrong I was.
I knew nothing at that time of spatial anchoring and strategic
movement.
When you are called on to make your sales presentation (or any kind
of a proposal) in front of a group, you are on stage. You are the
star.
You will want to select three specific points on the stage, or in the
meeting room from which to speak. Each of these points is a specific
location and not an approximate area. Point "A" is your podium.
Podiums and lecterns are used by teachers and preachers. Normally
these unconscious links are not positive reminders of younger days.
Therefore, the podium (point "A") will always be used only to relay
factual information to your audience.
You will choose a point to your left about four feet from your podium
that you will deliver all of the bad news discussed in your
presentation.
You can't make many sales without painting a vivid picture about how
bad things will get if the corporation doesn't hire you.) The bad news
point, is point "B" and you will only talk about problems and anything
that is going to be perceived as "bad" by your audience.
Point "B" will be approximately four feet to the left of the podium.
Point "C" will be approximately two and one half feet to the right of
the podium and you will always paint uplifting, positive, exciting,
motivating pictures from this location. Everything we want the
audience to agree with will be discussed from this point after we
establish this as the "good news point."
Imagine that you are giving your presentation for this group and you
need to be very persuasive. My favorite example here is that of fund
raising for a charity. Your job? Get a big check for your favorite
charity.
You place your folder or notes on the podium and immediately walk to
"B" point. You tell a story about a hurting child or a suffering
individual.
You then explain how this one incidence is far from isolated. You move
to the podium. You expound the facts and figures about the devastation
of the problem that you are asking the group to help solve by making a
big donation.
Now you move to point "C," where you will become excited about how
the charitable organization is currently solving the problems and
helping the suffering you talked about at "B." Everything that is good
and wonderful you will "anchor" into point "C."
As you conclude your speech you will have a path that you have laid.
You have moved from A to B to C to B to A, several times. You conclude
on point "C" because it is the good news and offers each
person to participate in healing the wounds you opened at "B."
The truly unique tactic in strategic movement is the ability to subtly
answer questions at the unconscious level without saying anything
significant on the conscious level. Imagine that the audience is given
the opportunity for questions and answers with you. An individual in
the audience asks you about the groups considerations of donating to a
competing charitable organization.
"Well, of course, you know that charity is a good charity and there
would be nothing wrong with that...of course...(walking to point "C")
by taking advantage of the plan that we have, we can accomplish all of
the goals that you want to have accomplished in the community. I'm
sure you realize it is up to you to make it happen. We can only help
those who need it if you make a decision tonight."
Discussing the other charity in a neutral or slightly positive manner
from point "B", allows you to unconsciously associate all of the
negative feelings to your "competitor" and you solve the problem as
you move to the "C" point. If you find this manipulative then you are
working for the wrong charity. If anyone else is more qualified to
help a group, sells a better product or offers a better service, you
should be working for them!
There is no more powerful manner of utilizing space than that of
spatial anchoring then using strategic movement. The next time you
watch a great speaker, notice how he or she utilizes strategic
movement. If they stay at the podium, notice how all the good news
is given while gesturing with hand "A" and all the bad news is
discussed when gesturing with the other hand, which is another great
strategy. The greatest speakers are masters of spatial anchoring and
strategic movement.
As you develop skill in spatial anchoring and strategic movement you
can literally push buttons in people for various states of mind
including anger, love, happiness and peace of mind simply by moving
from point to point.
If you found this information helpful, look for more SECRETS of
communication in the audio tape program Mind Access: Beyond
the Psychology of Persuasion and the book Talk Your Way to the Top
.
For more information about hypnotherapy sessions, or classes to obtain your certification, email Ron Stubbs. Join Free! My e-zine newsletter will keep you up-to-date on upcoming events, and special product offerings. Click Here to Join now!
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