When you can deliberately use stillness in your body, incredible power as a communicator when you can move with intention and also not move with intention. Another thing that tha person said is to make extended eye contact with people. That's something i didn't bring up and in the bonding thing we're talking about earlier. And what you find is that, boy, that person as being looked at, they're paying attention to what you're sayingd interestingly, the other people in the room don't feel neglected by that. As an audience member, that's a totally fine thing to watch. But as the person being looked at it makes that very strong connection.
“The less time you can spend dwelling on your mistakes, the more mental energy you can devote to doing what you need to do in that moment.” On this episode of Think Fast, Talk Smart, Christian Wheeler, the StrataComm Professor of Management and Professor of Marketing at Stanford Graduate School Business, sits down with podcast host and lecturer Matt Abrahams to talk about embracing failure and managing your team in-the-moment.
“When we’re confronted with personal failure, it feels bad to us. And we work hard to try to avoid that failure, and that can often be counterproductive,” Wheeler says. “But failing is something that’s on the pathway to success.”
Connect: