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Episode: 91

Research From Princeton: 13 Proven Hacks That Boost Your Influence & Make You More Confident

with Vanessa Van Edwards

Learn how to have unstoppable confidence and influence in just minutes.

Vanessa Van Edwards is a behavioral investigator, body language expert, and bestselling author who specializes in science-based people skills that improve confidence in your communication.

You’ll learn from Vanessa how to develop practical skills to build trust, boost confidence, and become more competent and reliable.  

Listen to become a better leader, land your dream job, achieve big goals, and align your life with your vision. 

This is an encore episode with new and exciting insights from Mel at the top of the episode.

Listen on:

Your need to be liked is getting in the way of your need to be respected.

Vanessa Van Edwards

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Key takeaways

  1. You can be smart as hell, but if you don’t signal warmth and competence, people literally won’t believe you’re capable. Your skills mean nothing if you’re not showing them.

     

  2. If your desire to be liked overrides your need to be respected, you will constantly be overlooked, undervalued, and walked all over, especially in professional settings.

     

  3. In the first 10 seconds of a Zoom call do 3 things: 1) show your hands, 2) get at least a foot and a half from the camera, and 3) drop the question inflection. Those three cues make or break your authority.

     

  4. When you use purposeful hand gestures, your message is more memorable, and people are twice as likely to believe what you’re saying.

     

  5. When you accidentally speak with uptalk, you’re not just being unclear. You’re inviting doubt, giving away your power, and making people scrutinize every word you say. 

Guests Appearing in this Episode

Vanessa Van Edwards

Vanessa Van Edwards is a behavioral investigator, founder of the behavior lab The Science of People, author, and speaker who specializes in the science of human connection and communication.

  • Book: Cues

    What makes someone charismatic? Why do some captivate a room, while others have trouble managing a small meeting? What makes some ideas spread, while other good ones fall by the wayside? If you have ever been interrupted in meetings, overlooked for career opportunities or had your ideas ignored, your cues may be the problem – and the solution.

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