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  • - "Speak English Fluently: How to Answer the Phone."

  • One of the biggest challenges

  • when it comes to speaking English fluently,

  • especially for people who are getting started,

  • you're just learning the English language,

  • I remember one of the things

  • that scared the heck out of me

  • was when I had to pick up the phone and talk to someone.

  • It's bad enough that English is not your first language,

  • especially when you are in school

  • or you are in a business setting,

  • you're dealing with people.

  • You don't have that face to face interaction.

  • It means that you don't have your body language,

  • you don't have your facial expression into play,

  • so now all you have is your voice,

  • then it makes you very, very nervous.

  • So today I'm gonna give you five tips that will help you.

  • When you're answering on the phone,

  • how do you speak with clarity, conviction, and power?

  • So tip number one.

  • Now one of the things that you wanna do is,

  • you wanna smile when you are on the phone.

  • Sometimes, we don't realize this,

  • but we can get too tense and too serious,

  • so what I like to do is actually have a mirror

  • right next to me.

  • So when I pick up the phone, I'm talking to somebody,

  • it always reminds me to smile.

  • If I look at my facial expression and I'm not smiling,

  • chances are my tonality is too serious.

  • So I wanna kind of be nice and be friendly, right?

  • And just remind myself.

  • Tip number two, always have an introduction

  • that you practice.

  • It depends on what you do and depends on where you are.

  • If you are running your own business

  • or you're just a student, either way, doesn't really matter.

  • When you are speaking on the phone, you wanna have

  • a greeting that you kind of memorize and practice.

  • So you might say something like this,

  • as simple as hi, this is, your name.

  • So in my case, hi, this is Dan.

  • Kind of casual, informal.

  • Hi, this is, your first name.

  • Hi, this is Dan.

  • Very simple, or if you're in customer service,

  • in customer support, you're in business

  • and you might use your full name.

  • So your first name, including your last name,

  • and then you might end with a question.

  • So it sounds something like this.

  • Hi, this is Dan Lok.

  • What can I do for you?

  • That also works.

  • Another thing that you could do,

  • which is usually how I answer my phone

  • is actually using my first name, last name,

  • and then speaking.

  • So it sounds something like this.

  • Dan Lok speaking.

  • Then right there, they know they're talking

  • to the right person.

  • Now I'm not talking about your best friend calling

  • and say, "Hey, what's up, brother?

  • "What's up, sister?"

  • That's not what I'm talking about.

  • I'm talking about in certain setting that you are required

  • to speak clearly and professionally.

  • That's what we wanna do.

  • So Dan Lok speaking.

  • Boom, proper greeting, practice it multiple times.

  • Tip number three.

  • How you say it is more important than what you say.

  • Tonality, it's very, very key

  • when you're talking on the phone.

  • Your native language, if English is your second language

  • or third language, your native language

  • might have different tonality.

  • So you need to learn how to communicate,

  • have the proper rhythm.

  • So let me give you a simple, simple example,

  • just what we did right there.

  • Let's say, what can I do for you?

  • Just one line.

  • I'm gonna do it three different ways.

  • Comment below and you tell me

  • what message am I communicating?

  • What I am I saying?

  • What emotions am I using?

  • So first one.

  • What can I do for you?

  • What can I do for you?

  • What can I do for you?

  • Do you hear the difference?

  • It's the same line, but how you say it

  • is very, very important.

  • So when you're talking on the phone,

  • sometimes you wanna pay very close attention.

  • Sometimes you want to not say certain words

  • and certain phrases using your monotone, right?

  • The language that you always use.

  • If you speak Korean, you speak Japanese,

  • you speak Indonesian, it doesn't matter.

  • You can see people who speaks with an accent,

  • which I do, I still speak with an accent, but that's okay.

  • The important thing is people understand

  • what you're talking about.

  • Tip number four, slow down.

  • Speed kills.

  • I know when you get nervous, what do we do?

  • You speak faster instead of slowing it down.

  • You almost subconsciously don't want people

  • to hear what you're saying because you're embarrassed that,

  • oh, maybe I will sound stupid.

  • Maybe they don't understand.

  • So instead of slowing down and being more clear,

  • you do the opposite.

  • Now you're speeding up so to make sure they don't hear you.

  • Don't do that.

  • When you practice and you wanna speak fluently, slow down.

  • You notice when I am doing videos,

  • if you watch my other videos, I slow down,

  • especially on the phone.

  • I listen, I ask questions, and I slow down.

  • And that's how you speak with confidence

  • and conviction and clarity.

  • Don't just speed up and say you get nervous,

  • no, slow down.

  • Take a deep breath, it is okay.

  • And if the other side, they don't understand,

  • you can repeat yourself and just say it again

  • and there's certain words, and I still,

  • there's certain words that I pronounce

  • that may not be 100% accurate.

  • I will slow down and repeat it again

  • and do it again and that's perfectly fine.

  • Tip number five.

  • If there are words that you are struggling with,

  • that you're struggling with, maybe certain words

  • that are a little bit longer in English language, right?

  • In English language, see.

  • Slow it down, practice it multiple times.

  • So you can take a word that you're struggling with

  • and just say it again and again and again.

  • And you can even go to Google,

  • you can type in Google Translate and just click the voice

  • and you can hear, oh, this is how I would pronounce the word

  • and you say it again and again and again.

  • I used to do that, practice it hundreds of times

  • because you wanna get rid of the fear.

  • Instead of not using the word, that,

  • oh, that's the word that I'm saying it wrong.

  • No, use the word, practice, and then use it.

  • And after awhile, you get the confidence

  • and boom, now you have a new vocabulary

  • that you could use in the day to day conversation.

  • In term of speaking English, on average,

  • we use about three to 5,000 words, all of us,

  • again and again and again.

  • So by adding more words to your day to day use,

  • kind of your treasure box, it expands your context.

  • I believe when you're learning English,

  • it's not just learning the language,

  • but you're learning the culture.

  • I've been very fortunate.

  • I immigrated to North America when I was 14 years old,

  • and my first language was actually Chinese Cantonese.

  • I also speak Mandarin 'cause my mom is from Taiwan.

  • So I'm a mix between Hong Kong and Taiwan.

  • So Cantonese is my first language.

  • My second language is Mandarin,

  • and my third language is English,

  • and I'm glad I learned the English language

  • because now by doing business internationally,

  • but just doing business in North America,

  • by understanding a new language,

  • I also pick up a lot of new philosophies,

  • learning about the culture, how business is done

  • in a Western world.

  • So then I have the best part of both worlds.

  • I understand the culture from the East

  • and also combine the management, the thinking styles

  • in the West, and this is how I conduct business,

  • and that's how I run my life because I learned a language,

  • and now I'm able to expand my wisdom

  • and expand my knowledge base.

  • Does that make sense?

  • So those are the five tips.

  • Now if you want to learn more about communication,

  • I teach what I consider a world class,

  • probably the best class in the world,

  • a virtual program on communication,

  • on how to talk to people on the phone,

  • how do you overcome the fears

  • and what do you need to say and how do you need to say it

  • in order to speak and communicate your ideas on the phone?

  • Not just giving you the skill set,

  • but how to turn that skill set into an income stream.

  • If you wanna learn more about it, click the link below

  • and check out my free training.

- "Speak English Fluently: How to Answer the Phone."

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