Monday, May 18, 2020
Look Em in the Eye or Anywhere Else About the Head - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Look âEm in the Eye or Anywhere Else About the Head - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Eyes are powerful in communicating; no other body parts communicate quite the same. The quickest way to look uninterested, distracted, inattentive, or dishonest is to not meet the other personâs eyes or even face. Though most of us are taught to look people in the eye when speaking with them, few do it. People will liberally notice and comment on other peopleâs character with observations like, âHe canât look you in the eye. âShe can look you in the eye.â âHeâs shifty eyed.â âShe gives you the evil eye.â âHeâs wild-eyed . . . dull eyed . . . has lies in his eyes.â Their impressions cause them to jump to conclusions about other people, even if they are grossly inaccurate. If you think CEOs with all their important work donât bother with minutiae like eye contact, consider these comments I heard in my interviews: âOnly if you are Justin Beiber can you afford to divert your eyes, keep moving, never smile, never engage when you meet me in the hallway.â âI fire eye rollers.â âSometimes I purposefully look like Iâm asleep in a video conference to see if people might say things they wouldnât say in front of me if I were awake.â âEyes speak volumes to me. Itâs what I trust.â âDonât look down. You have to face the people youâre torturing.â âIf you are always looking around, up, and down, then you better look out in more ways than one.â âWhen Iâm dealing with difficult people, I look them in the eye and wiggle my eyebrows.â As Ive written many times, small things make a big difference. They know you are competent what they are looking for it fit and you ability to look em in the eye is part of that. _____ Benton and Wright, co-authors of The Leadership Mind Switch (McGraw-Hill, 2017)
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