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  • Welcome to today's video.

  • Merry Christmas if you celebrate it; Happy Holidays if you celebrate something else.

  • Today, we're gonna talk about four ways that you can make small talk with anyone

  • and make it effortless and fun so the person almost instantly likes you.

  • Before we jump in, there's two quick thingsone, we are doing a kind of online raffle that we've never done before

  • to give a free hour of coaching which is normally worth $500 to three people.

  • So there's more details about that at the end of the video.

  • It's going to run for the next three weeks so you don't have to rush there now but at the end of the video, there's more details on that.

  • And second, this video assumes you are already in conversation

  • so if you want to know how to get into conversation,

  • I'll put a video in one of these corners that Charlie made about three easy ways to

  • start a conversation with anyone and I will also link to that at the end of this video

  • so you can watch that if that is something that interests you.

  • So small talk. What is the point of small talk? Why do we do it?

  • I think that's the first important thing to cover before we talk about how to do it

  • and the answer is complicated but in my opinion it kind of boils down to three things

  • which is youwant to learn about someone new or learn something new about someone that you know,

  • you want to see if you connect, you want to see if there's a relationship worth pursuing there

  • if you guys get along and you want a friendship or to be dating or a mentorship... whatever it might be,

  • and three, you want to have fun and you want it to be fun for them

  • and you want to be an enjoyable experience.

  • So with that said, here are four ways that you can make small talk

  • so that it's not a boring interview-esque vibe or a bunch of awkward silences and forced conversation.

  • The first thing is a compliment plus cold-read.

  • And I actually didn't invent this; someone, I think, unnaturaly just did this to me when I was at an event one time and it really made an impression on me.

  • So I was in a group of maybe four or five people, we're all getting to know each

  • other for the first time and I made a couple jokes and I had people laughing,

  • and this woman asked me if I was a comedian.

  • She said, "Oh my god, you're so funny. Are you a comedian?" so that's compliment

  • and then a cold read which is just a guess at something about them

  • where they're from, what they do, a hobby... whatever it was.

  • But I will tell you, I instantly really liked that woman; she made me feel so good

  • about myself and I did start talking about what I actually do

  • but the impact it had on me versus if she had just said, "Oh, by the way, what's your job?" was so much stronger.

  • So this can be anything from, "Wow, you're really extroverted; I bet you're great at sales," or "wow, you have incredible fashion; I bet you're a stylist."

  • And if you're right, greatbonus pointsthey'll laugh and wonder how you knew it; but if you're wrong,

  • there's no knock. There's no talent involved; you don't have to get this right.

  • You're just giving a compliment, giving a guess, and then they will tell you

  • whatever it iswhat they do or where they're from.

  • It sets a fun vibe, it gets rid of that interview vibe,

  • and they will really appreciate the compliment which will make them

  • much more likely to engage in the conversation fully.

  • The second thing sticking with the cold theme is something I consider

  • creating an avalanche of words and specifically,

  • creating an avalanche of words with a good question.

  • So the goal here is instead of getting those one-word answers where someone really doesn't engage you in conversation,

  • the goal is to ask them something that gets them talking and talking and talking

  • almost word-vomiting because they're so excited about what you ask them.

  • There's two ways you can do this and if you combine them it's even more powerful.

  • First is try to avoid questions that have one-word answers.

  • For instance, "How long have you lived in Los Angeles?" is a pretty boring small talk question that I get asked a lot because I live here now.

  • And, yes, there's a charismatic way to answer it with your whole back story but most people, if they're not great conversationalist, are just gonna say,

  • "Oh, six months," or "five years," — whatever the answer is.

  • Instead, if you ask them a question that gets them talking more like,

  • "Why did you move to LA?" or "what do you do for fun?" you'll get them to engage

  • in a longer answer, get them talking, they'll give you more to respond to, and

  • you'll have a much more natural conversation full of different threads you can take.

  • The second thing is ask them something that they're gonna want to answer because they like talking about what you've asked.

  • So a lot of people ask about work; they'll say, "Hey, how's work going?"

  • It's a terrible question in my opinion because one, you can just say good, bad, whatever; two, they might not like their job.

  • But instead if you can ask, "What's exciting at work these days?" or even better,

  • "what's exciting in life these days or what do you do for fun?"

  • Now the person is more likely to engage and talk because they like talking about what they like

  • they're thinking about what they like associating it with you creating that positive vibe between you guys

  • and now you have an opportunity to connect on something they care about.

  • The third thing you can do is make a guessing game of it.

  • I really like to do this; don't do this all the time for every question but

  • if you find yourself asking a question that seems kind of boring and you catch it,

  • you say, "Where are you from?" then immediately turn it into a guessing game,

  • "Wait, give me two hints; let me see if I can guess."

  • And the person will probably appreciate that you're making this conversation more funthey'll give you hints they'll have to think about what to say,

  • you'll try to guess, you'll be laughing and smiling...

  • When you eventually do find out where they're from, it's a much more fun process to get there.

  • Now you would want to do this in any situation; you wouldn't want to do this if you're small talking your boss, let's say,

  • but it's really useful in social situations, bars, and things like that.

  • And honestly, anytime it feels appropriate, it is fun

  • it is much more fun than just asking a series of where-are-you-from,

  • what-do-you-do, and how-old-are-you that most small talk devolves into

  • until you're talking about traffic or the weather

  • because you just don't know what else to say, right?

  • So I like to mix and match with those three things a lot

  • with the guessing game and questions that get them talking

  • and the compliments and the cold reads.

  • The fourth thing I like because you're not gonna talk about them necessarily

  • but you're going to elicit their advice or their opinion and show that you value what they think.

  • And it's a very simple questionit's just, "Hey, I have a quick question for you..."

  • and then anything that you genuinely think is interesting.

  • Unlike the Avalanche which is about what they think is interesting,

  • this is really what-do-you-like and what-do-you-think-is-interesting-to-talk-about.

  • And you're trying to engage with them on this instead of just the regular

  • list of topics that everybody asks about when they're making small talk so

  • this can be anything from super light to kind of deep.

  • When Charlie and his brother, Henry, and I went out to a restaurant the other day,

  • they were wearing ugly Christmas sweaters and so we just started asking people

  • sitting around us and the waitresses and the hostesses which sweater they liked

  • more and and they could guess and then we could tease or they could pretend,

  • "Oh, it's just because you like Charlie more than Henry; it's not the sweater."

  • It made a fun vibe for everyone around us much more so than if we just said,

  • "Hi, what's your name? Here's my orders; I want this sandwich..." whatever it is.

  • The other thing you can do is go a lot deeper and especially with people that you know a little bit or you've met before.

  • This is a really easy way to create a more interesting conversation than just

  • how things have been going so anytime I am with extended family and I'm with

  • somebody who was married for a long time or had a marriage that didn't work,

  • I like to just ask them, "Hey, I've never been married. I'm in a relationship.

  • I would love to know your thoughts on what makes a long-term relationship work

  • or what doesn't," and what's nice about this question is if they're happily married,

  • there they're gonna be happy to tell you what has worked for them.

  • Interestingly enough, if they aren't happily married or they're struggling or

  • they're divorced, they're still really actually pretty excited to talk to you because

  • I've seen an instinct where people want to help you to avoid the mistakes

  • that they've made or the suffering that they've had so

  • a question like that if you find it interesting like I do because you like relationships and psychology

  • can start a really interesting conversation much more so than

  • how-are-the-kids, how's-the-job, and the questions that everybody asks so

  • those are the four things that can help you to make a small talk conversation

  • interesting and fun and feel effortless and natural and that is

  • a compliment and cold read, a question that creates an avalanche of words,

  • having them play a guessing game of any kind or

  • telling them that you want to know their opinion on a question or something that

  • you find interesting that you want to bring into the conversation via a question.

  • That's it for today's video I hope that that's helpful.

  • Now if you are interested in the coaching there is a link in the description;

  • it's the first time I've set this up so fingers crossed that I did it correctly but

  • basically there's a couple ways that you can earn raffle tickets

  • you can like our Facebook page, like our Instagram, put your email in

  • to get some free newsletters and when you do your name gets put into a database

  • that will then pick three people from to get a free one-on-one hour of coaching

  • with me about anything you wantthis can be how be more charismatic,

  • dating, getting a promotion, networking, interviews, it can be business, YouTube...

  • Truly, I just want to help you that we used to have coaching was a big part

  • of our business and then we got away from it to do YouTube and online courses

  • but I miss that one-on-one interaction and seeing the transformation in you

  • and the change and the success story happened — I missed that.

  • And I think it would be fun to do so given it's a holiday season;

  • I thought it would be a fun free giveaway.

  • Also, if you want that video on how to start conversations that Charlie made,

  • you can click here and if you want a video Charlie made on how to make an

  • amazing first impression and specifically the four emotions that guarantee

  • a great first impression, you can click here.

  • So thank you so much for watching. I hope that you enjoyed it and I will see you in the next video.

Welcome to today's video.

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