Increase Your Likeability Factor

By: w2wlink (View Profile)

To be heard you have to make people like you. You need to create chemistry with your staff as a manager, with your team as a project leader, with your boss, with your customer, with your strategic partners. People believe people they like. That’s not a news bulletin. Great communicators develop the “likeability factor”—your personality and the “chemistry” you create between yourself and others.

Just as many roads lead to success in the workplace, many different personalities attract followers. But the following traits seem universally to attract people and open their minds and hearts.

Be Vulnerable, Show Your Humanity
In speaker training 101, people learn to tell failure stories before success stories. Generally, audiences have more in common with those who struggle than those who succeed in life. If you worry about whether your teen will graduate from high school without getting involved with the wrong group, say so. If your father-in-law drove you nuts during the holiday weekend, it’s okay to mention to your colleagues on Monday morning that you might not have been the storybook spouse. If you lose a customer, regret it rather than excuse it. If you miss a deadline, repair the damage and catch up.

People respond to humans much more favorably than machines. When you communicate with colleagues, never fear to let them see your humanity.

Be Courteous—Remember to Kick the Copier
Day in and day out, it’s the small things that kill our spirit: The sales rep who empties his cold coffee and leaves the splatters all over the sink. The manager who uses the last drop of lotion and doesn’t refill the container. The analyst who walks away from the printer, leaving the red light flashing “paper jam.” The boss who walks into the reserved conference room in the middle of a meeting and bumps everybody out for an “urgent” strategic planning meeting. The person who cuts in line at the cafeteria cash register. The guy who answers his cell phone and tries to carry on a conversation out loud in the middle of a meeting.

As a result, even the smallest courtesies kindle a fire that ignites chemistry and builds kinship. The courtesy of saying “hello” when you come into the office after being away. The courtesy of letting people know when you’re going to be away for an extended period. The courtesy of honoring policies about reserving rooms, spaces, and equipment for activities. The courtesy of a simple “please”, “thank you”, and “you’re welcome” for small favors.

Share a Sense of Humor
No matter whether people agree or disagree with George W. Bush’s political positions they typically admire his self-deprecating humor. At one of the Washington correspondent’s dinners, that ability to poke fun at himself seemed to be the primary thing the media responded to favorably. Bush said at the lectern, “I always enjoy these events. But why couldn’t I have dinner with the 36 percent of the people who like me?” At one such event, Bush even brought along his “double” comedian Steve Bridges, to make fun of his frequent mispronunciations. The double modeled for him one of his most difficult words to pronounce correctly, “Nu—cle—ar proliferation … nu—cle—ar proliferation. Nu—cle—ar proliferation.” Then Bush tried it, “Nu-cle—ar pro-boblieration.” The crowd went wild.

Self-deprecating humor can open hearts and minds to make people receptive to ideas in ways words alone cannot.

Show Humility
Power can be seductive. Praise pushes people’s buttons, elevating peer pressure to feel important. And just as suddenly as lightning strikes, an act of arrogance can destroy an otherwise credible communicator. For example: Refusing to acknowledge people when they speak to you. Failure to respond to people’s suggestions. Haughty body language. Time spent only with those of your “rank and ilk” at a social gathering. An amused smirk in response to an idea expressed in a meeting. An upward roll of the eyes meant to discredit someone’s comment in the hallway. A talk jam-packed with jargon meant to confuse rather than clarify. Insistence that things must be said one way and one way only.

Credible communicators show humility in innumerable ways:

  • They let others “showcase” by delivering key messages instead of always having to be “on stage” themselves
  • They let others feel important by “interpreting,” “passing on,” and “applying” their goals and initiatives.
  • They get input from others—and consider that input worthy of a response. (They don’t ask for input “just for drill” if they don’t plan to consider it.)
  • They excite others by asking for their help, cooperation and buy-in
  • They share the limelight by telling stories about star performers
  • They share leadership roles by telling success stories of other leaders
  • They communicate awareness and appreciation of the efforts and results of other people

Certainly, credibility involves a balancing act between establishing a noteworthy track record and fading away into the furniture. People do want to know that you know what you’re talking about. But arrogance antagonizes them. Expertise tinged with a touch of humility goes down far better.

Your look, language, and likeable personality will have a huge impact on whether people accept what you say. If your message isn’t sinking in … if you’re not getting the action you want … maybe you should take it, well … personally.

Written originally for w2wlink by Dianna Booher

First published December 2008

What Bit My Fruit

August 12, 2008

So I previously had a post titled “What’s Biting Your Fruit?” whereby I took a scripture, Galations 5 (I think) and attempted to reflect upon certain direct and vicarious issues that I have faced in order to encourage those who may encounter the same issues. When I first thought of this essay/journal entry/ treaty/ whatever it may be called, I created an extended outline to help guide my thoughts. However, once I began to translate my outline into a parenthetical format, I found myself struggling to fully articulate my feelings and thoughts.

For weeks, I pondered why I’d reached such an unfortunate and untimely writing block, and I could not conjur a concrete answer. But today, it hit me. I had been “bitten by Adam” as I tried to plant my seeds, and therefore, God sent a haze in my mind so that I would not bestow unfruitful seeds to whoever may actually read what I wrote. He blocked my thoughts so that I would not deliver a vain, self-glorifying, hypocritical, misguided message. He let me know that although I am equipped to write of His glory, I still am not ready.

I appreciate this epiphany greatly, for it allows me to understand how things sometimes work in my life. The “Adams” (or “Eve”) that bit my fruit were my pride, my arrogance, my lack of sincere focus upon God, my vanity, and my dependence upon others for my joy. All summer, I have been struggling with these things as I have fought with myself and cried about how broken my closest friendship have become. I wallowed in pain and misery when my best friend died, and dwelled in depression when my friends pulled away from me in my brokenness. But yesterday, after I had a long talk with my closest college friend, we broke the emotional ties that we had upon each other and became just “buddies.” And although such a demotion in our friendship sucks, I already feel relieved and free. My headaches are gone; my eyes are no longer most with tears; my head hangs high as I look towards He who really supplies my joy.

As I realize the error in my ways, I still have faith that God will soon use me to do His will and aid a lot of broken hearts. And although I still am not totally ready to finish what my mom has deemed my “first sermon,” I recognize that I should not and cannot rush what God has for me. Therefore, I will keep my “What’s Biting Your Fruit?” post as it is, but whenever I feel that God is ready for me to do it, I will definitely pick up the pen and begin again.

Sometimes I get down. With the loss of my closest, most beloved best friend and the instability of my college friendships, I feel that I have no one (beyond my mother) in whom I can confide, no one whom I can totally be myself around, and no one whom I can faithfully and fully give my love. And when I realize this void, I recognize that I am not happy. I am not happy in my friendships. I am not happy in my associations. I am not happy depending on people for happiness.

But whenever I find myself dwindling into this mode of- well- depression, I recall the many sermons that I have heard about joy.  Unlike happiness, joy does not come from the external relationships and codependence upon people. Instead, joy is internal, and it is one of those precious gifts that God has shared with his beloved. When I think about the goodness of Jesus and the grace and mercy of God, my stomach gets knots and butterflies, and my heart settles into my bosom like a leaf upon a pond, and I then recognize the joy within me. I remember that all that I need in this life is God’s love, and I should be content with that.

To God, my Best Friend

July 17, 2008

Dear God,

   I am learning more and more each day that you truly are the keeper of my joy. Lord, I love you sooo much- more than I can actually articulate. I love you because you are amazing, so amazing, and your presence in my life totally astounds me. I can’t get enough of you. I yearn to always grow in you and have you with me as I grow. I never want to lose you in my life, and I never want to stop loving you as I do. I get speechless when I think of your glory and your many wonders and your everlasting love and presence in my life. I need you. I need only you as I strive earnestly to live out the life you have planned for me, and I pray that you can instill in me perseverance, faith, and love, for I know that in you, these things will take me to your promise. I would like thank you in advance for EVERYTHING- good and bad- that may come my way as I follow you. I have signed up for your annointing in my heart, and Lord, I pray that if it is your will that nothing will cross me off your list.

Lord, I can’t imagine my life without you. From birth, you have been there for me, and I will die with you in my heart. I love you that much, and I pray that you can just keep me with you. As a child, you were my father when I was fatherless, so Father, I aim to make you proud.

Lord I love you for today, I love you for the yesterdays that have passed, and I love you for the tomorrows that shall come. I pray that you can know my heart and keep it gentle with your love.

Let your will be done in my life.

Your daughter and best friend,

djn

By far this passage of the Bible is my absolute favorite. As a young woman of God, it is crucial to use this depiction of a woman as the ideal example of what we strive to be. This woman is strong. She is hardworking, and she is supportive of her husband and her family, which is very different form the typical type of women that we see in today’s society. With television showing us a plethora of negative woman images and young girls revealing the lack of positive guidance and influence  that are being provided to them, it is easy to question “where is the Virtuous Woman of today’s society hiding? Who can find her?”

Well, that is precisely the question of the first verse (Prov 31:10) of this Biblical passage. It asks “who can find her” because in Biblical times, such women would be so hidden in the Lord and so about her business and responsibilities that you would have to seek Him in order to find her. Although this remains true for many of God’s Virtuous Women today, there are also other things that are keeping society from seeing them. For one, they are so hidden by the cacauphony of videos, images, and other accounts of scandalous women that it would be hard to believe that such a woman still exists. As well, many women who inhabit the virtuosity that is discussed in this passage are not on the front page of media in society. However, they do exist.

Such women are the lawyers, doctors, and politicians who push through the steel doors of opportunity that are set before them in order to aid those in need around them. They are the educators, mentors, non-profit owners, and other women who engage themselves in their immediate communities and strive for the upliftment of our youth. They are the actresses, media representatives, and performers who expose positive images of women to society. They are the artists, writers, and speakers who strive earnestly to creatively express the issues that we currently face as people. Most importantly, they are the mothers, sisters, aunts, daughters, and wives- women who lead their families, friends, and peers to the higher purposes in life.

They are the women who (actively) care.

De

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