Originally appeared on: http://web.archive.org/web/20220527180635/https://www.quickanddirtytips.com/business-career/communication/art-of-reading-minds
Henrik Fexeus, the author of The Art of Reading Minds: How to Understand and Influence Others Without Them Noticing, shares his techniques for developing social skills and using nonverbal communication.
October 15, 2019
Today’s episode is an interview with Henrik Fexeus, the author of The Art of Reading Minds: How to Understand and Influence Others Without Them Noticing. In it, Henrik shares some of the secrets of nonverbal communication and relationship-building.
Henrik is a geek. Having no social skills as a kid, he wondered how to improve his people skills. And he figured it out. Not only did he figure it out how to do it, he’s figured out how to teach it. Click the audio player above to listen to the interview and hear Henrik share what he’s learned. Here are a few quick insights from our chat.
Relationships and social interactions are everything. They say it’s not what you know, it’s who you know. Henrik agrees. When it comes to getting what you want in life, other people play a large part. Making and cultivating good relationships is one of the most important skills there is. If you don’t know how to do it, learn. That should be your top priority.
Making and cultivating good relationships is one of the most important skills there is.
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People like themselves. People also like you, to the extent that you remind them of themselves. That’s why, when we meet someone, we look for how we’re similar—we come from the same place, we have the same interests, and so on. So when you meet someone, get them to like you by finding ways in which you remind them of themselves.
But enough about me. Let’s talk about you. What do you think of me?
Bette Midler, Beaches
One easy way to do that is to adopt similar nonverbal behavior. You can mirror their body posture, use their gestures, and match the tempo of their voice. If you practice doing these things smoothly, they won’t notice it consciously. But unconsciously, you’ll remind them of them. And they like them. So they’ll like you. And with any luck, they’ll leave you the mansion in their will.
Test for rapport. Once you’ve found points of commonality and have a good rapport going, test it. You got into rapport by finding similarities, now introduce a difference. Change your body posture. Adjust your voice. Share a belief or idea that you haven’t been talking about until now.
If they follow you, it means you’ve got rapport. You’ve made a connection. You don’t have to point it out or comment on it. But you’ll know, through body, voice, or ideas, that you’re connecting to the point where you can form a real relationship.
Associate you with positivity. People connect their feelings to the people they interact with. If someone is having a good time around you, they’ll associate those good feelings with you.
So make an effort to get them in a good mood. Ask about fond memories. Emphasize the positive. And when it’s obvious they’re having good “feelz,” put yourself in their field of vision. Use a unique tone of voice. Do something they will associate with the feelings they’re having.
If someone is having a good time around you, they’ll associate those good feelings with you.
For the full interview with Henrik, tune in to the podcast above, where we go into all these topics in greater depth. And you never know—after listening, you just might be reading minds and forging connections like a pro.
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About the Author
Stever Robbins was the host of the Get-it-Done Guy podcast, an iTunes top-10 business podcast, from 2007 to 2020. He is a graduate of W. Edward Deming’s Total Quality Management training program and a Certified Master Trainer Elite of NLP. He holds an MBA from the Harvard Business School and a degree in Computer Science from MIT.
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