Try steepling your fingers by gently touching the tips together without pressing your palms.
This gesture can create a sense of calm and collectedness, similar to a power pose for your hands.
It signals confidence due to open, relaxed hands with visible palms.
However, it's important to try the gesture in different situations and see if it feels authentic.
If it feels silly, avoid using it, as cues should feel natural and comfortable.
Only use cues that enhance your natural communication style.
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Charisma can make everything smoother, easier, and more exciting in life. It's a quality that makes people want to listen to you, to adopt your ideas, to be with you.
While what creates charisma can seem like a mystery, my guest today, communications expert Vanessa Van Edwards, says it comes down to possessing an optimal balance of two qualities: warmth and competence.
The problem is, even if you have warmth and competence, you may not be good at signaling these qualities to others. In Vanessa's work, she's created a research-backed encyclopedia of these influential signals, and she shares how to offer them in her book Cues: Master the Secret Language of Charismatic Communication. Today on the show, Vanessa and I discuss some of the verbal and nonverbal social cues that make you attractive to others, and keep you out of what she calls the "danger zone." She explains what the distance between your earlobes and shoulders has to do with looking competent, how using uptalk and vocal fry sabotages your ability to convey power, how to put more warmth in your voice, how to trigger the right response with a dating profile picture, and more.