Profitable Impact:
How to Make Powerful, Positive Impressions
By Scott Halford
Memory is the ability to gather roses in the winter.
- Carol Burnett quoting someone smart
Have you ever eaten
at a restaurant and had the “absolute best” meal ever, only to take
friends there later and have just an “OK” meal? The food is fine,
but something is missing; it doesn’t feel the same. The operative
word is feel and it is intricately linked with how the brain
builds memory. Memory is most heavily imprinted in your brain by
feelings you have during an experience, and you can use that neuro-knowledge
to your advantage when building any kind of relationship – business
or personal. Exceptional performers intuitively know this stuff, but
now it’s time to get the word out so everyone can take advantage of
profitable impressions.
So what’s this
feeling business all about?
Think about your
client or colleague relationships. What distinguishes the good from
the bad? Much of what you uncover will probably lead back to mutual
feelings you had during your initial meetings. Science shows our
brains take “Polaroid snapshots” within milliseconds of a first
meeting and then store these snapshots as memories. The feelings
related to those pictures predict the path of the relationship; the
stronger the initial emotion, the thicker the memory paths in the
brain. In other words, we tend to remember more of what we feel.
Importantly, we protect ourselves from bad memories (we shun them)
and are drawn to good ones.
You may think all
of this talk about feelings is not about business, but you would be
way off the mark. Exceptional performers use their instinctual
knowledge about memory and feelings with artistry. It is part of
what makes them magnetic. They are the people we go back to again
and again because we feel good in their presence and they deliver
the goods we came for on top of that. They fit the definition of the
most powerful people in the world - Shortcuts – the people (or
organizations) we go to that get things done more efficiently, more
expertly and with more grace than we could. They make life easier
and more pleasurable. They make us like ourselves. They are office
managers, sales people, supervisors, even CEOs. They hone their
mastery, but more than that, they are equally as brilliant in
dealing with people during difficult times and making positive first
impressions.
Create Positive
Hooks:
As you strive to create successful first impressions, it’s useful to
know there are more negative receptors in the brain than positive
ones; therefore, an unpleasant hook is set more quickly when your
first meeting doesn’t get off on the right foot. The lesson is
clear. First impressions are worth thinking about before you make
them. Here are some tips to anchor positive memories in your
business relationships:
1) If someone
expresses fear of any kind, make him or her feel safe as quickly
as you possibly can. You might not always have good news, but
get creative and think about at least one safe and reasonable upside
to this person’s issue. For example, in the financial world – since
it is so battered and bruised right now – a broker’s conversation
with a client could go something like this: “You’re right, the
economy is bad, and there are things we can do to protect your
principal until it becomes sane again. Let’s be proactive about that
now.” Safety is simple, but you have to be on the lookout for signs
of fear or you’ll miss the opportunity to create the safe haven.
Staying the course and sitting tight when someone is afraid won’t
provide a good feeling or memory. You need to remove the danger, or
at least minimize it. Telling someone to “deal with it” instead of
empathizing with his or her fear is sure to lead to a bad snapshot.
2)
Over-communicate at first. Part of those initial memories will
be from the first meeting; the rest will be the immediate follow-up
contact you have in the relationship. Find non-annoying ways to keep
in contact within the first few days of meeting new people. They
want to feel important and wanted. They want to feel
like you were paying attention to the conversation. That’s what they
remember about you when describing you to friends. Send off a quick
e-mail, something like: “I really enjoyed meeting you this
afternoon. I look forward to the next time. By the way, in light of
our discussion about your daughter, here’s an article I found about
teens and authority. Enjoy.”
3) Lighten up.
There are fewer, more powerful paths to the heart than laughter
and lightness. Not all humor is appropriate for all situations, but
laughter and lightness are always right. Listen for openings that
sound like tangents to the business at hand but are really stress
busters. Hobbies, family, vacations all bring up lightness and
sometimes laughter. Use them. When you laugh with someone you
remember them fondly.
4) The brain
craves fairness. There is a place in the brain that is
positively tickled by fairness. It’s the same place that initiates
the good feelings people get from sex and chocolate. That’s not a
typo. When fairness in a relationship is present, it feels like a
reward – it actually feels pleasurable. Neuroscientists have
isolated the brain process and indeed fairness brings on those warm
feelings. On the flip side, when a relationship or deal feels
unfair, the brain yearns so much for that positive feeling from
fairness that it can cause individuals to act in vengeful ways to
“even up the score.” If you want to establish positive feelings in
a relationship, always check your conversations and contracts for
fairness. Win/win is a cliché because it’s true.
Be a Shortcut –
A Rose in Winter:
There is a
stunning array of hormones and electrical currents in the brain that
make up the chemistry of camaraderie as well as that of animosity.
As a Shortcut, you want to be as positively, profitably memorable as
a perfect rose in the winter. When people are in your presence, they
feel better about themselves, and when they’re not with you, they
remember how good they felt when they were. It’s a powerful elixir
and your success depends on it.
Read other articles and learn more about
Scott Halford.
[This article is available at no-cost, on a non-exclusive basis.
Contact PR/PR at 407-299-6128 for details.]
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