Ways to distinguish yourself #168 – Take responsibility for what you communicate
By Rajesh Setty on Sat 21 Oct 2006, 7:16 PM – Leave Comment
No, I am not talking about what you say.
I want to focus on what you communicate – sometimes
b) with how you say those words or
c) with your body language or
d) with what you choose not to talk about
Everything counts. Here are a few examples:
Example 1: A pause
Version 1:
The boss said <pause> his employee was furious
Version 2:
The boss <pause> said his employee <pause> was furious
Example 2: Body language
Example 3: Intonation
Note: Bold and Italicized words are the ones that are stressed.
What you said: I didn’t say you stole my red hat.
What is implied: But someone else might have said it.
What was said: I didn’t say you stole my red hat.
What was implied: I deny that I said it.
What was said: I didn’t say you stole my red hat.
What was implied:I may have thought or implied it.
What was said: I didn’t say you stole my red hat.
What was implied: I said someone else stole it.
What was said: I didn’t say you stole my red hat.
What was implied: I said you did something else with it.
What was said: I didn’t say you stole my red hat.
What was implied: I said you stole someone else’s red hat.
What was said: I didn’t say you stole my red hat.
What was implied: I said you stole my green hat.
What was said: I didn’t say you stole my red hat.
What was implied: I said you stole my red scarf.
Think about scenarios in your own lives when something more than words was very important. It will be a different world out there once you start taking responsibility for what you said overall (with and without the use of words)
Have a great week ahead!
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- Thank you for overwhelming support at ChangeThis
- “25 Ways to Distinguish Yourself” released at ChangeThis.com
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