The Science of Eye Contact
Eye contact with the audience is an essential part of any presentation. Without
it the audience will feel remote from the presenter and are unlikely to relate
to them or their message in a meaningful way. Not many presenters realize how
important eye contact is, or how sensitive people are to it. Eye contact should
be a positive form of body language communication, but if it is not used
correctly it can easily become a negative form of nonverbal communications.
The face in the diagram has a shaded area which indicates the correct target
zone for positive eye contact. That is looking anywhere within this shaded zone
represents positive eye contact. Think about where
else you might be tempted to look at someone’s face during a presentation; which
area of the face do you think would cause the most discomfort to the person
being looked at?
Looking at someone’s face anywhere outside of the triangular target zone is
likely to cause some degree of embarrassment. However, the no-go zones shown are
both associated with strong adverse reactions. Zone A
represents the intimate zone and by moving just a fraction below the base of the
target triangle you will enter it. When this happens people typically react by
feeling that the other person is staring at them, or that the observer looks
shifty. Zone B represents a dominant zone and by
looking at the forehead of another person you are likely to invoke a reaction
that you appear to be arrogant, that you are staring straight through them or
more commonly that you are talking down at them.
As well as understanding nonverbal communications to make positive eye contact
with an individual it is also important to ensure that your gaze encompasses
your whole audience - including those at the back and the sides. Try to avoid
holding eye contact only with audience members who appear enthusiastic and
interested. Whilst you may find it more difficult to engage members of the
audience who appear neutral, it is important to try to involve them.
Reading Your Audience’s Body Language
When you are making a presentation the best way of staying in control and
keeping your audience with you is to keep them interested in what you are
saying. The best strategy is to prepare and then deliver a presentation that
your audience find spellbinding. Unfortunately, many business presentations will
be based on subject matter that is just not that interesting.
Another complication is that audiences are made up of individuals, who
will not share the same interests, attention span or boredom threshold. People
vary in the way they express disagreement, boredom and frustration and you
should be able to read nonverbal communications as signs of this from the body language demonstrated by your
audience. Members of an audience don’t usually think of themselves as being
observed, and consequently their guards tend to be down - making their body
language relatively easy to read.
There are a variety of body language signals that you might observe among
members of an audience: Members of an audience can
show signs of disapproval or hostility in a variety of ways. You may observe
people pointedly discussing things with a neighbor, looking at the ceiling, out
of a window or frowning whilst looking at you. A negative posture, with an
impassive or slightly hostile expression, arms folded as if to form a barrier
and legs crossed with the person leaning back - suggests resistance to the
presenter. However, you should be careful to avoid making judgments based on
observing one piece of body language in isolation. For example crossed legs or
crossed arms on their own should not be automatically read as a negative
reaction.
A neutral and open attitude is often accompanied by a neutral or slightly
friendly facial expression and an upright or slightly forward leaning seating
position. As these people have not yet decided whether or not they agree with
your main message you may observe a mixture of gentle nods and shakes of their
head as you make your key points. Neutrals should be viewed as a positive
resource - it is after all the job of your presentation to win them over.
Someone interested in what you are saying may be smiling and nodding in
agreement or frowning in thought, possibly leaning forward attentively. Hands
clasped together may also indicate that a person is carefully considering what
you are saying, as may leaning on their chin. In this illustration the position
of the legs also indicates a positive and alert listener.
If boredom is affecting any members of your audience this may manifest
itself in reversion to common habits - such as fidgeting with personal
belongings like glasses, watches, pens and earrings. Whilst looking at a watch
or clicking a pen may demonstrate boredom don’t confuse these signs with such
things as the chewing of the end of a pen, which may indicate thoughtfulness.
Members of the audience who become bored may also whisper among themselves,
rustle papers, scribble aimlessly on notepads, throw back their head between
their cupped hands and even make audible sighs.
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