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Actual for You - Create a Magic Connection with Clients, Leads, and Business Associates -- Part II
Get A Card Merchant Account grasp, tap into, hard, concrete, catch on. These people think in terms of feeling and touch.A card merchant account can put your business on the road to financial success. If your company is not yet accepting credit card payments, you are missing out on the powerful potential of this income stream. Many business owners who started taking credit card payments claim that their income has doubled while overhead costs have diminished. When you become eligible to receive credit card payments, you are likely to experience an increase in sales volume and chase fewer dud checks. To facilitate credit card payment, however, you will need to apply for a merchant account.Start by finding a lender you can trust. This may be a bank you already work with, one that perhaps got your business started or helped it to grow to where it is today. If so, there is a good chance that the lender will continue working with you in this key operative. But if you do not have such a lender or if the one you do have does not seem eager or suitable for underwriting your merchant account, you will have to find another reputable bank, credit union, or other financial institution to faci AUDIO DIGITAL: Audio digital people use words like understand, perceive, think, sense, experience, insensitive. These people do a lot of inner self-talk. They are very linguistically cognitive What this discovery will help you do is communicate more clearly towards someone preferred way of thinking. As you begin to see how this works, it is easy to come to an understanding of how people connect and how they misunderstand each other. If someone is audio, you might say, “I hear what you mean.” If this product rings true for you, then . . .” With someone who is visual, you might say, “I can picture that.” If you can picture yourself with this product, then . . .” What you are looking for is their way of processing information, and you are using their preferred mode of communicating to communicate clearly with a client, lead, or associate. Shortly after I learned this concept, I was teaching and a student asked me to explain something. He ended his sentence with, “I don’t have a clear picture of the concept.” When I heard the visual language, I repeated what I said, using see, picture, show. It was the same explanation using different verbs. The students smiled and said, “I see. It’s much clearer now.” At that point, I became a believer. I’d suggest that practicing one area at a time. Start with matching and mirroring someone’s posture, or expressions, or blinking. Take it slow. It’s like learning anything else. Practice creates ease. Then move on to voice and words. Always use these strategies with integrity. Can you use magic to make connections with others. Yes. Techniques for Workplace Stress Relief Part I of this article explored how Neuro-linguistic Programming (NLP) pinpoints ways to gain instant rapport with clients, leads, and business associates, and more specifically, how we can use physiology, matching and mirroring to create instant magic communication.Most people experience stress some time in their life. It can come when the environment is providing stressful conditions or it can simply be brought on by the body's own mechanism. Undoubtedly one of the leading stress related conditions is that of the workplace. Indeed there is a very significant number of people taking time off work because they are stressed, leading to massive loss to businesses, not only because of sick days employees take but also because it leads to a lack of concentration, poor or reduced performance, tension and irritability leading to workplace conflict. Work stress relief is thus a beneficial program to be provided by an employer. If employees are not funded then it may do them good to provide it for themselves.There is nothing to be ashamed of for a person who suffers stress. Stress is generally a normal condition of the human body. If stress persists however is not normal and can lead to mental and physical problems. If workplace stress is not dealt with effectively it can create an explosive type of work environment. Workplace s Part II examines how NLP uses tonality and words to establish rapport. TONALITY While physiology accounts for 55% of communication among humans, tonality accounts for 38%. Most people have had the experience of someone saying, “I’m fine. Nothing’s wrong.” While the words on the page seem to indicate that this person doesn’t have a problem, the tone used speaks louder than the words. Without tone the words suggest that the speaker doesn’t have a problem. Consider irony and sarcasm; both are communicated through tonality. If a person says, “I’m fine. Nothings wrong,” in a pleasant voice, she creates a different meaning than if she says the same words though clinched teeth and a low angry tone, or with a flippant tone. Someone yelling “I’m not mad,” isn’t convincing. If this happens in a sitcom, we laugh. In real life, we dismiss the words and read the meaning from the tone of voice. Often tonality is more subtle than these examples, but still a powerful communicator. Boredom, excitement, anger, melancholy, disbelief, questions, enthusiasm, honesty are more often communicated through tone, rather than words. When talking on the phone, it is crucial to be aware of tonality. In a phone conversation, both people are communicating via their tonality, often unconsciously. The business person that wants to create magic and rapport doesn’t leave tonality to chance. Tonality includes: How does tonality work in practice? If you are talking to someone who has a high pitched voice, raise your pitch a little. Like matching and mirroring, you don’t want to imitate. Be subtle. If you are a man, raise your voice a little. Match the last few words someone says. Just that little matching will help to create rapport. Speed is very important. People who talk fast are often impatient with people who speak slower. People who talk at a slow speed are often turned off by people who speech rapidly. For someone who naturally speaks fast, slower speaking people seems to take forever to say something. For someone who naturally speaks slow, the fast talker seems hyper, insincere. “City slicker, fast talking” suggest that the fast talker is trying to out wit or is trying to hide something. I tend to be laid back, slower of speech. After all, I’m from California. We are easy going. I was in New York giving a presentation; the person who presented before me took more than her alotted time. My presentation was cut short by about 15 minutes. I stood up began speaking at what I considered high speed and told everyone that I was talking fast because I wanted to get through my entire presentation. Several audience members laughed and said, “We are New Yorkers. No matter how fast you talk, it won’t be too fast.” I couldn’t patch their speed. In contrast to New Yorkers, I visited a friend in Georgia. The southern drawl in Georgia was slow, hypnotic, and relaxed. It made me feel at home, but I felt like a fast talking city slicker. Match the speed of the person with whom you are speaking. If someone’s speed is slower than your speed, slow down. Don’t be obvious. If someone’s speaks faster, speed up. This simple act can go a long way toward creating rapport. Again with timbre and volume, match. Volume of voice can be very effective with someone who is angry. I learned this the hard way. A few years ago, I unwittingly angered another professor. As he became more angry, his voice grew louder. I was afraid he might become violent; so, I conscious kept my voice low and soft, believing that would calm him. I watched rather mystified as he grew more angry as I controlled my voice, trying to sound calm and in control. If someone is angry, try matching the volume of his voice without matching the anger. It might feel strange, but matching the volume creates rapport (I was breaking rapport). His anger is likely to dissipate as you establish rapport. Once the rapport is established, you can begin to lower your volume; if you have established rapport, he will follow you. One other aspect to keep in mind for phone rapport. If you are the person calling. You set the pace for the phone call. If you have high energy, excitement, enthusiasm, you will put the person on the other end of the line into a better mood. You can maintain the energy, excitement, and enthusiasm while matching tone, temp, timbre, and volume. This was model for me about a year ago. I wasn’t feeling great and was rather down in the dumps. I phone to take care of some business. The women who answered the phone was energetic and excited. I immediately felt a shift in my mood. When I hung up, I was in a better mood. A few weeks later when I met this woman, I was predisposed to like her. She had immediately established rapport with me. WORDS Words may only account for 7% of our communication, but it is an important 7% and more complex than other ways of establishing rapport. Remember what I said in Part I: I could have a weekend seminar on rapport. When communicating, predicates (verbs), key words, common experiences and associations are vital in establishing rapport. Common experiences and associations are obvious. These areas are often the bases of friendships and business associations. It goes without saying that establishing a common bond with a client, lead, or business associate is good business. Be honest when doing this. Key words sometimes slip by under the radar. Begin to listen for key words or phrases that someone repeats. This is a simple way of establishing rapport. Repeat back key words. Slip them naturally into the conversation. Again use caution. Predicates are a little more complicated. This is going to be the abridged version. Most people have preferred verbs that they repeat. This is more important than key words because the verbs signal a way of thinking. There are people whose primary mode of thinking are visual, auditory, kinesthetic (feelings and touch), and audio digital (they talk to themselves). What this means is that people process information through their preferred mode of thinking. VISUAL: Someone who is visual will use words like see, picture, clear, foggy, vision, appear, look, reveal, view. AUDITORY: Auditory people use hear, clear as a bell, that rings true; harmonize, resonate, tune in, tune out. KINESTHETIC: Kinesthetic people use feel, touch, get a handle on, grasp, tap into, hard, concrete, catch on. These people think in terms of feeling and touch. AUDIO DIGITAL: Audio digital people use words like understand, perceive, think, sense, experience, insensitive. These people do a lot of inner self-talk. They are very linguistically cognitive What this discovery will help you do is communicate more clearly towards someone preferred way of thinking. As you begin to see how this works, it is easy to come to an understanding of how people connect and how they misunderstand each other. If someone is audio, you might say, “I hear what you mean.” If this product rings true for you, then . . .” With someone who is visual, you might say, “I can picture that.” If you can picture yourself with this product, then . . .” What you are looking for is their way of processing information, and you are using their preferred mode of communicating to communicate clearly with a client, lead, or associate. Shortly after I learned this concept, I was teaching and a student asked me to explain something. He ended his sentence with, “I don’t have a clear picture of the concept.” When I heard the visual language, I repeated what I said, using see, picture, show. It was the same explanation using different verbs. The students smiled and said, “I see. It’s much clearer now.” At that point, I became a believer. I’d suggest that practicing one area at a time. Start with matching and mirroring someone’s posture, or expressions, or blinking. Take it slow. It’s like learning anything else. Practice creates ease. Then move on to voice and words. Always use these strategies with integrity. Can you use magic to make connections with others. Yes. Key Concepts of Exhibitions h: high, low);An exhibition may be broadly defined as a trade fair where various companies can showcase and demonstrate their newly launched and existing products in order to highlight their positive features to prospective customers. In an age where how well a product is marketed and campaigned about largely determines its commercial success, exhibitions are some of the major ways manufacturers and dealers can extensively market about their newly launched products. Unlike retail shops where products can be demonstrated only to a limited number of customers and prospective clients, since in an exhibition people from different regions all around a center come to view the products the number of visitors checking a company’s products is significantly higher.In today’s corporate world of cut-throat competition, having a cutting edge over competitors within the same field is one of the most important tasks for a company to achieve. In an exhibition since numerous companies come together in order to market their products, designing and presenting resources and products in a unique, tempo (speed: slow, fast); timbre (quality: clear, raspy); volume (loudness). How does tonality work in practice? If you are talking to someone who has a high pitched voice, raise your pitch a little. Like matching and mirroring, you don’t want to imitate. Be subtle. If you are a man, raise your voice a little. Match the last few words someone says. Just that little matching will help to create rapport. Speed is very important. People who talk fast are often impatient with people who speak slower. People who talk at a slow speed are often turned off by people who speech rapidly. For someone who naturally speaks fast, slower speaking people seems to take forever to say something. For someone who naturally speaks slow, the fast talker seems hyper, insincere. “City slicker, fast talking” suggest that the fast talker is trying to out wit or is trying to hide something. I tend to be laid back, slower of speech. After all, I’m from California. We are easy going. I was in New York giving a presentation; the person who presented before me took more than her alotted time. My presentation was cut short by about 15 minutes. I stood up began speaking at what I considered high speed and told everyone that I was talking fast because I wanted to get through my entire presentation. Several audience members laughed and said, “We are New Yorkers. No matter how fast you talk, it won’t be too fast.” I couldn’t patch their speed. In contrast to New Yorkers, I visited a friend in Georgia. The southern drawl in Georgia was slow, hypnotic, and relaxed. It made me feel at home, but I felt like a fast talking city slicker. Match the speed of the person with whom you are speaking. If someone’s speed is slower than your speed, slow down. Don’t be obvious. If someone’s speaks faster, speed up. This simple act can go a long way toward creating rapport. Again with timbre and volume, match. Volume of voice can be very effective with someone who is angry. I learned this the hard way. A few years ago, I unwittingly angered another professor. As he became more angry, his voice grew louder. I was afraid he might become violent; so, I conscious kept my voice low and soft, believing that would calm him. I watched rather mystified as he grew more angry as I controlled my voice, trying to sound calm and in control. If someone is angry, try matching the volume of his voice without matching the anger. It might feel strange, but matching the volume creates rapport (I was breaking rapport). His anger is likely to dissipate as you establish rapport. Once the rapport is established, you can begin to lower your volume; if you have established rapport, he will follow you. One other aspect to keep in mind for phone rapport. If you are the person calling. You set the pace for the phone call. If you have high energy, excitement, enthusiasm, you will put the person on the other end of the line into a better mood. You can maintain the energy, excitement, and enthusiasm while matching tone, temp, timbre, and volume. This was model for me about a year ago. I wasn’t feeling great and was rather down in the dumps. I phone to take care of some business. The women who answered the phone was energetic and excited. I immediately felt a shift in my mood. When I hung up, I was in a better mood. A few weeks later when I met this woman, I was predisposed to like her. She had immediately established rapport with me. WORDS Words may only account for 7% of our communication, but it is an important 7% and more complex than other ways of establishing rapport. Remember what I said in Part I: I could have a weekend seminar on rapport. When communicating, predicates (verbs), key words, common experiences and associations are vital in establishing rapport. Common experiences and associations are obvious. These areas are often the bases of friendships and business associations. It goes without saying that establishing a common bond with a client, lead, or business associate is good business. Be honest when doing this. Key words sometimes slip by under the radar. Begin to listen for key words or phrases that someone repeats. This is a simple way of establishing rapport. Repeat back key words. Slip them naturally into the conversation. Again use caution. Predicates are a little more complicated. This is going to be the abridged version. Most people have preferred verbs that they repeat. This is more important than key words because the verbs signal a way of thinking. There are people whose primary mode of thinking are visual, auditory, kinesthetic (feelings and touch), and audio digital (they talk to themselves). What this means is that people process information through their preferred mode of thinking. VISUAL: Someone who is visual will use words like see, picture, clear, foggy, vision, appear, look, reveal, view. AUDITORY: Auditory people use hear, clear as a bell, that rings true; harmonize, resonate, tune in, tune out. KINESTHETIC: Kinesthetic people use feel, touch, get a handle on, grasp, tap into, hard, concrete, catch on. These people think in terms of feeling and touch. AUDIO DIGITAL: Audio digital people use words like understand, perceive, think, sense, experience, insensitive. These people do a lot of inner self-talk. They are very linguistically cognitive What this discovery will help you do is communicate more clearly towards someone preferred way of thinking. As you begin to see how this works, it is easy to come to an understanding of how people connect and how they misunderstand each other. If someone is audio, you might say, “I hear what you mean.” If this product rings true for you, then . . .” With someone who is visual, you might say, “I can picture that.” If you can picture yourself with this product, then . . .” What you are looking for is their way of processing information, and you are using their preferred mode of communicating to communicate clearly with a client, lead, or associate. Shortly after I learned this concept, I was teaching and a student asked me to explain something. He ended his sentence with, “I don’t have a clear picture of the concept.” When I heard the visual language, I repeated what I said, using see, picture, show. It was the same explanation using different verbs. The students smiled and said, “I see. It’s much clearer now.” At that point, I became a believer. I’d suggest that practicing one area at a time. Start with matching and mirroring someone’s posture, or expressions, or blinking. Take it slow. It’s like learning anything else. Practice creates ease. Then move on to voice and words. Always use these strategies with integrity. Can you use magic to make connections with others. Yes. Retailing Quality Chess Sets Whilst Dealing With a Third World Country with whom you are speaking.
If someone’s speed is slower than your speed, slow down. Don’t be obvious. If someone’s speaks faster, speed up. This simple act can go a long way toward creating rapport.Increased Competition - need for low costs of goods and time With a surge of online business, much competition is experienced accross all industries. With chess retailing many companies have sprung up to take advantage of what the internet affords us - a relatively easy way to put up a commercial store. The increased competition has had three main effects: 1. Now the goods have to the right goods, be of good quality and be worth their price. 2. The profit margin is reduced through the competition. 3. The cost of being seen by customers through such mediums as web advertising (adwords, etc.) has risen significantly as merchants see the front page as the new High Street/Mall.Therefore more than ever (and clearly set to become more critical) there is a need for suppliers to provide high quality goods for a low price. In the case of chess sets, chess boards and chess pieces, once the goods are imported, tax paid, packaging bought, packers paid, etc. the cost of the goods are such that little profit is seen. Poor quality in terms of scratches, chips and such m Again with timbre and volume, match. Volume of voice can be very effective with someone who is angry. I learned this the hard way. A few years ago, I unwittingly angered another professor. As he became more angry, his voice grew louder. I was afraid he might become violent; so, I conscious kept my voice low and soft, believing that would calm him. I watched rather mystified as he grew more angry as I controlled my voice, trying to sound calm and in control. If someone is angry, try matching the volume of his voice without matching the anger. It might feel strange, but matching the volume creates rapport (I was breaking rapport). His anger is likely to dissipate as you establish rapport. Once the rapport is established, you can begin to lower your volume; if you have established rapport, he will follow you. One other aspect to keep in mind for phone rapport. If you are the person calling. You set the pace for the phone call. If you have high energy, excitement, enthusiasm, you will put the person on the other end of the line into a better mood. You can maintain the energy, excitement, and enthusiasm while matching tone, temp, timbre, and volume. This was model for me about a year ago. I wasn’t feeling great and was rather down in the dumps. I phone to take care of some business. The women who answered the phone was energetic and excited. I immediately felt a shift in my mood. When I hung up, I was in a better mood. A few weeks later when I met this woman, I was predisposed to like her. She had immediately established rapport with me. WORDS Words may only account for 7% of our communication, but it is an important 7% and more complex than other ways of establishing rapport. Remember what I said in Part I: I could have a weekend seminar on rapport. When communicating, predicates (verbs), key words, common experiences and associations are vital in establishing rapport. Common experiences and associations are obvious. These areas are often the bases of friendships and business associations. It goes without saying that establishing a common bond with a client, lead, or business associate is good business. Be honest when doing this. Key words sometimes slip by under the radar. Begin to listen for key words or phrases that someone repeats. This is a simple way of establishing rapport. Repeat back key words. Slip them naturally into the conversation. Again use caution. Predicates are a little more complicated. This is going to be the abridged version. Most people have preferred verbs that they repeat. This is more important than key words because the verbs signal a way of thinking. There are people whose primary mode of thinking are visual, auditory, kinesthetic (feelings and touch), and audio digital (they talk to themselves). What this means is that people process information through their preferred mode of thinking. VISUAL: Someone who is visual will use words like see, picture, clear, foggy, vision, appear, look, reveal, view. AUDITORY: Auditory people use hear, clear as a bell, that rings true; harmonize, resonate, tune in, tune out. KINESTHETIC: Kinesthetic people use feel, touch, get a handle on, grasp, tap into, hard, concrete, catch on. These people think in terms of feeling and touch. AUDIO DIGITAL: Audio digital people use words like understand, perceive, think, sense, experience, insensitive. These people do a lot of inner self-talk. They are very linguistically cognitive What this discovery will help you do is communicate more clearly towards someone preferred way of thinking. As you begin to see how this works, it is easy to come to an understanding of how people connect and how they misunderstand each other. If someone is audio, you might say, “I hear what you mean.” If this product rings true for you, then . . .” With someone who is visual, you might say, “I can picture that.” If you can picture yourself with this product, then . . .” What you are looking for is their way of processing information, and you are using their preferred mode of communicating to communicate clearly with a client, lead, or associate. Shortly after I learned this concept, I was teaching and a student asked me to explain something. He ended his sentence with, “I don’t have a clear picture of the concept.” When I heard the visual language, I repeated what I said, using see, picture, show. It was the same explanation using different verbs. The students smiled and said, “I see. It’s much clearer now.” At that point, I became a believer. I’d suggest that practicing one area at a time. Start with matching and mirroring someone’s posture, or expressions, or blinking. Take it slow. It’s like learning anything else. Practice creates ease. Then move on to voice and words. Always use these strategies with integrity. Can you use magic to make connections with others. Yes. Six Sigma Employee Assessment to like her. She had immediately established rapport with me.A typical business environment would like all processes to be assessed for improvement possibilities. The competitive business world demands that all business processes be at their peak performance levels at all times to meet challenges. These challenges, as defined by the ‘Voice of Customer’ and the projections of ROI, are not fixed but moving targets.For business success, organizations have to realize the contribution of employee assessment. Employee assessment results in measurable metrics called ‘Employee Ratings’. Business organizations embarking upon an employee rating exercise, use internal and cross organizational surveys which assess ‘as is’ conditions with regard to perceptions of employees about their work environment.The survey may be divided into two parts; one preliminary and the other comprehensive. A representative sample of employees may be taken into confidence for conducting what can be called a preliminary interview. The interview has to be invariably conducted in a formal environment for the feedback to be as real as possible. The pur WORDS Words may only account for 7% of our communication, but it is an important 7% and more complex than other ways of establishing rapport. Remember what I said in Part I: I could have a weekend seminar on rapport. When communicating, predicates (verbs), key words, common experiences and associations are vital in establishing rapport. Common experiences and associations are obvious. These areas are often the bases of friendships and business associations. It goes without saying that establishing a common bond with a client, lead, or business associate is good business. Be honest when doing this. Key words sometimes slip by under the radar. Begin to listen for key words or phrases that someone repeats. This is a simple way of establishing rapport. Repeat back key words. Slip them naturally into the conversation. Again use caution. Predicates are a little more complicated. This is going to be the abridged version. Most people have preferred verbs that they repeat. This is more important than key words because the verbs signal a way of thinking. There are people whose primary mode of thinking are visual, auditory, kinesthetic (feelings and touch), and audio digital (they talk to themselves). What this means is that people process information through their preferred mode of thinking. VISUAL: Someone who is visual will use words like see, picture, clear, foggy, vision, appear, look, reveal, view. AUDITORY: Auditory people use hear, clear as a bell, that rings true; harmonize, resonate, tune in, tune out. KINESTHETIC: Kinesthetic people use feel, touch, get a handle on, grasp, tap into, hard, concrete, catch on. These people think in terms of feeling and touch. AUDIO DIGITAL: Audio digital people use words like understand, perceive, think, sense, experience, insensitive. These people do a lot of inner self-talk. They are very linguistically cognitive What this discovery will help you do is communicate more clearly towards someone preferred way of thinking. As you begin to see how this works, it is easy to come to an understanding of how people connect and how they misunderstand each other. If someone is audio, you might say, “I hear what you mean.” If this product rings true for you, then . . .” With someone who is visual, you might say, “I can picture that.” If you can picture yourself with this product, then . . .” What you are looking for is their way of processing information, and you are using their preferred mode of communicating to communicate clearly with a client, lead, or associate. Shortly after I learned this concept, I was teaching and a student asked me to explain something. He ended his sentence with, “I don’t have a clear picture of the concept.” When I heard the visual language, I repeated what I said, using see, picture, show. It was the same explanation using different verbs. The students smiled and said, “I see. It’s much clearer now.” At that point, I became a believer. I’d suggest that practicing one area at a time. Start with matching and mirroring someone’s posture, or expressions, or blinking. Take it slow. It’s like learning anything else. Practice creates ease. Then move on to voice and words. Always use these strategies with integrity. Can you use magic to make connections with others. Yes. Cost Efficient Skip Tracing grasp, tap into, hard, concrete, catch on. These people think in terms of feeling and touch.I was having a conversation with a friend of mine. One of the best collection managers around, Todd from FDS in Wilmington NC. We were discussing what a collection manager needs to know about skip tracing that will benefit collectors. His response” skip tracing is important because you can’t collect if you can’t find them. However, collectors need to concentrate their time on collections not skip tracing”.Now that’s a dilemma. So I started thinking, “How to streamline your skip trace process so that your collections process is not interrupted?”After some serious head scratching and a couple of Dr. Peppers, the answer came. Below is a step by step process to quickly and efficiently work a skip trace account.First, determine a set time to skip trace. I recommend non peak collection hours. Now, get out of collector mode. Mental attitudes of collectors and skip tracers are different. To skip trace is to play a game of chess, where the pieces are real people.STEP ONE- FILTER THE ACCOUNTCan you work the account in the first place? Determine AUDIO DIGITAL: Audio digital people use words like understand, perceive, think, sense, experience, insensitive. These people do a lot of inner self-talk. They are very linguistically cognitive What this discovery will help you do is communicate more clearly towards someone preferred way of thinking. As you begin to see how this works, it is easy to come to an understanding of how people connect and how they misunderstand each other. If someone is audio, you might say, “I hear what you mean.” If this product rings true for you, then . . .” With someone who is visual, you might say, “I can picture that.” If you can picture yourself with this product, then . . .” What you are looking for is their way of processing information, and you are using their preferred mode of communicating to communicate clearly with a client, lead, or associate. Shortly after I learned this concept, I was teaching and a student asked me to explain something. He ended his sentence with, “I don’t have a clear picture of the concept.” When I heard the visual language, I repeated what I said, using see, picture, show. It was the same explanation using different verbs. The students smiled and said, “I see. It’s much clearer now.” At that point, I became a believer. I’d suggest that practicing one area at a time. Start with matching and mirroring someone’s posture, or expressions, or blinking. Take it slow. It’s like learning anything else. Practice creates ease. Then move on to voice and words. Always use these strategies with integrity. Can you use magic to make connections with others. Yes. Do it consciously and with volition. Make win win situations. If you win and if your client or lead wins, you have created magic.
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