Charisma is defined as having the "IT" factor - an innate quality that makes one particularly charming or compelling. The document discusses seven keys to charisma: silent message, speaking ability, persuasiveness, listening skills, use of space and time, adaptability, and vision/ideas. It presents scenarios to determine one's charismatic strengths, such as being a problem solver, motivator, or peacemaker. The document aims to help readers understand charisma and its origins by discussing these traits and having readers self-assess their own level of charisma.
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Charisma is defined as having the "IT" factor - an innate quality that makes one particularly charming or compelling. The document discusses seven keys to charisma: silent message, speaking ability, persuasiveness, listening skills, use of space and time, adaptability, and vision/ideas. It presents scenarios to determine one's charismatic strengths, such as being a problem solver, motivator, or peacemaker. The document aims to help readers understand charisma and its origins by discussing these traits and having readers self-assess their own level of charisma.
Charisma is defined as having the "IT" factor - an innate quality that makes one particularly charming or compelling. The document discusses seven keys to charisma: silent message, speaking ability, persuasiveness, listening skills, use of space and time, adaptability, and vision/ideas. It presents scenarios to determine one's charismatic strengths, such as being a problem solver, motivator, or peacemaker. The document aims to help readers understand charisma and its origins by discussing these traits and having readers self-assess their own level of charisma.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Charisma is defined as having the "IT" factor - an innate quality that makes one particularly charming or compelling. The document discusses seven keys to charisma: silent message, speaking ability, persuasiveness, listening skills, use of space and time, adaptability, and vision/ideas. It presents scenarios to determine one's charismatic strengths, such as being a problem solver, motivator, or peacemaker. The document aims to help readers understand charisma and its origins by discussing these traits and having readers self-assess their own level of charisma.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Coach Linda Hillman Destined 2 B U Empowerment Coaching Group www.destined2bu.com coachlindahillman@destined2bu.com Skype: coachlindahillman Welcome Please Introduce Yourself What is Charisma? • You Define it? ▫ Do you have the “IT” Factor? AGENDA • What is Charisma? • Why is it important? • Where did it come from? Seven Keys • Your Silent • Your use of space Message and time • Your ability to • Your Ability to speak well adapt to others • Your persuasive • Your vision, your talent ideas • Your Listening Skills Which Are You? • No. 1 – I seem to have the ability to cut through, the details and get to the meat, the things that count, the stuff that’s going to impact the final outcome. I don’t get bogged down. I don’t let things that aren’t related get in the way of making decisions or getting results?
• No. 2 –I can get others to so things, I don’t like the
word inspire. It seems more like my enthusiasm and energy for getting things done makes excited about what I get excited about, and they went to so what needs doing. Which Are You? • No. 3 – I think people are attracted by my ability to size things up and solve a wide variety of problems. I enjoy coming up with solutions that nobody’s ever tried before. I’m one of those people who wakes up in the middle of the night and says, “Hey, I know a better way to do it.”
• No. 4 – I’m a natural listener. I find it easy to gather
information, organize it and them relate to the task and the people involved in the situation. I have a hard time when conflict exists. I like everyone to get along so I’m a peacemaker. I go in and smooth things out so we can get back to things running smooth and easy. Which Are You? • No. 5– I love new information. I definitely turn a conversation or simply start a new one when I can relate something I’ve just read. I don’t know whether other people will find it interesting, but most times they do. I mentioned something recently at a dinner party and another person picked up on it. Everyone joined in and the conversation went on for about twenty minutes. I was a real hit! Where Did Charisma Come From? Test! On A scale 1-10: 1 being poor and 10 being excellent. Rate your level of Charisma.