November 28, 2007

Using Hypnosis to Get That Job!

Filed under: — Admin @ 12:00 am

What if there where a way to hypnotize HR people into hiring you?

Although it sounds like the stuff of movies, you really can influence the job interviewer s subconscious mind to hire you, or at least move your resume to the top of the stack.

How do you do this?

There are three steps. You begin by creating instant rapport with the HR person. Then you learn what is important to them on a deep emotional level.

Finally, you use this information to help them decide who the best candidate is.

That s you, of course.

So let s begin.

RAPPORT

With rapport, everything is possible. Without it, nothing is possible.

So what is rapport? It is a feeling of being in sync with another person.

Usually people try to create rapport by throwing spaghetti on the wall to see what sticks. They talk about sports, a hit TV show or the weather, hoping to find something in common. This is hit or miss.

Although we all seek some form of kinship, many HR people feel they should not have rapport with the people they interview. That doesn t matter. You will create rapport without them knowing it.

You can reliably create rapport by physically acting like the HR person. If she leans to the left side of her chair and crosses her arms, you lean to the right side of your chair and cross you arms. This is called mirroring.

You can also lean to the left side of your chair and cross your arms. This called matching.

Either way, mirroring and matching are quick ways to create rapport, because on a subconscious level, she s thinking: he s just like me. And people respond positively to others who are like them.

You can also create rapport by matching someone s way of speaking. If he machine guns words like a fast-talking New Yorker, you do the same. If he speaks more slowly and softly, slow down and soften your voice.

A word of warning: when someone shifts their body position or changes they way they speak, wait four to five seconds and then gradually change.

If you mirror and match too quickly, you will appear to be mocking the other person, which could be offensive.

VALUES

Despite what we like to tell ourselves, we do things for emotional reasons, not logical ones. Our values move us through the world.

In a work context, one HR person may value the sense of doing a good job while another simply wants to get the boss off his back. Uncovering and reflecting back someone s deepest values (in a work context) will make them want to hire you. For them to do otherwise would be to go against the very fiber of their being.

INFO QUEST

Once the formal part of the interview is concluded, the HR person will usually ask you if you have any questions. This is the point at which you mine for information.

Will she make the decision herself or pass on a recommendation? Does she have to interview a specific number of applicants or can she stop when she feel s she has found the right person? This information is critical because you are going to feed it back to her later on.

The next step will only work if you have established rapport. You can test rapport by purposely breaking it. Shift your body to another position, if she does the same, you ve established rapport. If she doesn t shift to match you, go back to the former position and try to mirror and match her more exactly.

You can refine the process by matching such things as accents or the rhythm of someone s speech, the highs and lows.

One of the most powerful ways to create rapport is to breath at the same rate as the other person. Once you have tweaked your techniques, test rapport again.

Remember, make these changes gradually. Once you know you have rapport, you can take the conversation to a higher, and more intimate level. You want to learn the HR person s values.

You might say something to the effect of: I m curious. I m sure you have interviewed a lot of very qualified people and had times when you knew this person was right for the job. You may have been sitting in this very chair. When you find this person and think this person, not that person, what is important to you about that?

It is critical to ask what is important, not why is that important. If you ask someone why they can get defensive and then decide to come up with lots of reasons why. You don t want that.

So back to your question.

A very typical response will probably have to do with the company line. He may say they want the most experienced candidate or the one who fits their culture. Whatever he says, your job is to listen very attentively and agree with him.

You might say, I absolutely agree that (company line) is important and what I m wondering is, when you are able to pick this person who is right for the job, what does that give you?

You have started to take the HR person away from the company line and are moving toward communication on a more personal level. At this point, the interviewer might say something such as, finding the right person gives me a sense of satisfaction. Or, it gets the boss of my back.

Regardless of what he says, you agree with him and acknowledge it and in some way try to repeat and reemphasize what he just said.

You might say, I understand how important it is to have a sense of satisfaction (or boss off your back, etc.) What would that give you that s even more important? You are now probably going to a much higher value of the HR person. He might respond that he will have a feeling of personal satisfaction or a sense of relief.

Once again, feed back the response, and ask at least one or two more such questions, learning what each (deeper value) will give the HR person. Somewhere between the third and fifth level of values, you will see a physical change in their demeanor.

He may sit back and smile. His face may light up. You have discovered his highest value in hiring someone.

You have just struck gold. It s time to demonstrate how you, and you alone, will fulfill that value.

CLOSING THE DEAL

Lets say that an HR exec has revealed that her highest value is a sense of contributing to the organization. This would be a great time to hand her your resume as you say something such as, What I d like you to think about is contributing to the organization and how much I can contribute to it also.

Another step you can take to seal the deal is to inoculate the exec from thinking that anyone else could possibly qualify for the position.

You might say: I was taking to a friend of mine who hires people for jobs that are similar to the openings you have and he was telling me that when you find someone that really does demonstrate an ability to contribute, he really does stick in your mind and everyone else s. Other applicants may seem to say the right things. They may try in vain to impress you, but I know that you are not going to be impressed by that. You know who the right person for the job is.

You can also add your understanding of the process and reaffirm it. I realize that you have to interview 25 applicants before you make your decision. But I think you already know that it is now just a formality that you must go through.

Or, I realize that you are required to choose five candidates to pass on to your boss. I think we both know who s resume will go on top. Don t we? It s someone who will contribute in a meaningful way.

It will be almost impossible for the HR exec to seriously recommend anyone else.

These techniques are not a substitute for being genuinely qualified for the job. And you must polish your other interview skills. Those you can find in any good job search book.

But if you add in rapport, learning someone s values and then feeding those values back to them, you can have a powerful impact on the HR exec.

Finally, you must practice these skills before attempting to use them during an interview. Try them out on people you know. Try them out on people you don t know.

Once you feel that you have mastered these techniques, you can walk into the interview knowing who s really in charge.

You can get that job, or have your resume magically move to the top.

Copyright 2005 Danek Kaus

About The Author

David R. Barron and Danek S. Kaus are the authors of the new book, Power Persuasion: Using Hypnotic Influence to Win in Life, Love and Business. For information, visit http://www.power-persuasion.com/book.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

November 25, 2007

Stopping Fear from Ruining Your Life

Filed under: — Admin @ 12:00 am

Stopping Fear from Ruining Your Life

The use of hypnotic states can be extremely helpful in combating the stress associated with fears and phobias. It is a natural and effective means of achieving a profound state of mental and physical relaxations. It eliminates stress and anxiety and allows the body and mind to heal themselves.
Being hypnotized is very similar in feeling to what you experience just prior to sleep our while daydreaming. You are in perfect control of yourself and can wake up, or snap out of it at any time.
Hypnosis is beneficial because it reduces stress hormones that are one of the main causes of stress and tension not only in the muscles, but in the blood vessels of the brain itself. Thoughts are modified at a subconscious level allowing the conscious mind to be bypassed. This relaxation can reduce stress before a plane flight, vacation, or travel, and may even extend your life. Lack of stress can even increase feelings of happiness.

Simply thinking about changing can keep you stuck.

Your unconscious mind controls your body with no help from your conscious mind. Control of heart rate, respiration and breathing are all automatic.. If you touch something that is hot, your hand automatically pulls away without even thinking about it, that is your unconscious mind in action. Hypnosis bypasses the conscious mind to provide you with an amazing way to change your behaviors, fears and phobias.

The best way to change is to reprogram your subconscious mind to behave differently. The relaxed state of hypnosis allows you to feed your mind new information. The rational or conscious mind is put to the side and you are given the ability to absorb new information without the filters of the conscious mind.

A phobia is an automatic response to something that is happening inside or outside yourself. Phobias and fears are really nothing more than learned behaviors. A baby has no fears other than a fear of loud noises and the fear of falling, everything is learned.

The use of hypnosis will provide a method for you to train your mind to behave differently to past fears and anxieties. Soon you will begin to see how your little behavior was and begin to really live your life.
You can find some of the best MP3 recordings to help eliminate your fears be going to http://www.fear-phobia.com/self-hypnosis-mp3/ and browsing the selection.
Regular use of the audio recordings will help you to eliminate almost any fear, phobia or anxieties you may have. I have overcome my fear of shyness with the help of these tapes, it took me about 3 weeks of daily use, but I have very few problems talking to people like I once had. There are so many problems that can be reduced or eliminated with hypnotic tools, methods, and audio recordings that it is well worth your time to try them out

About the Author

The author is a health writer with interests in hypnosis. Discover the
power of self hypnosis mp3

To overcome fear of death
visit us at http://www.fear-phobia.com/fear-of-death/

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

November 22, 2007

Hypnotic Mental Development

Filed under: — Admin @ 12:00 am

Hypnotic Mental Development
by Alan Tutt
http://www.KeysToPower.com

I have seen a huge interest in hypnosis over the last few weeks. I have also seen that there is limited interest in developing intelligence and creativity. Memory is still a topic with many followers, especially those trying to find a surefire method of remembering everything without effort.

The human mind has incredible powers. Our mind is capable of processing huge amounts of information at once, and is able to sort out a form of order from sensory chaos. As infants, we are placed in a world where nothing is familiar, yet we learn physics (balance, motion, cause & effect, gravity, momentum, etc.), language, some degree of psychology, and millions of details which are now processed at an unconscious level such as identifying objects from the mass of visual information fed into our brain (something our highly developed computers still struggle with).

Not only this, but our minds have powers which are still being discovered. Only in the last century has psychic perception been accepted as a scientific fact. Prayer itself has been scientifically tested and found to be a statistically valid exercise. While science has not found out why these abilities exist and what makes them work, it is agreed that the process is, at least in part, a mental one.

There is still much research being done. How does one develop these abilities to a point of being reliable? Which techniques are the best to use? What are the factors that influence a person’s ability to use these mental skills? Are genetic factors involved? Are environmental factors important? How powerful can one mind become?

These are questions I struggled with during my research. While I do not claim to have concrete answers, I have been able to develop my own abilities and the abilities of many people I’ve worked with. There are some good systems readily available, although I find some degree of fault with almost all of them. The Silva Method is excellent. Max Freedom Long’s book “The Secret Science Behind Miracles” gives some very fascinating insights to these higher abilities of the mind. Many books on shamanism give reasonably good instruction on developing your skills in this area. Any book by Joseph Murphy or Catherine Ponder will give many good examples of one form of mental power at work.

In every system of working with the higher functions of the mind, it is stressed that the power lies within the unconscious regions, that part of the mind generally labeled the subconscious. In every workable system, there is a whole training process where the subconscious mind is ‘programmed’ with symbols for communication with the conscious mind, or with symbols for what it is being requested to do.

And this is where hypnosis fits perfectly! Hypnosis is a phenomenon where the conscious mind is quieted to a state of nonresistance. During this state, the subconscious mind is easier to work with, to get information from and to create new programming. Using hypnosis, a patient can generate his/her own painkillers for painless surgery or dentistry. Using hypnosis, millions have been able to break their addiction to tobacco, alcohol, overeating, laziness, phobias, and a host of other maladies.

And hypnosis was the techniques which gave Edgar Cayce his ability to diagnose and prescribe treatments for thousands of suffers (and every one accurately!).

The evidence which points to the possibility of using hypnosis for developing and training the mind for any and all of the mind’s natural abilities is overwhelming! And I’m definitely not the only person to notice this. Books can be found everywhere showing how to use hypnosis for all of these purposes.

But is hypnosis enough? Does hypnosis have all the power necessary to develop the mind to it’s highest potential? I don’t think so. If hypnosis could be used to accomplish everything we needed to accomplish, then why would we have a conscious mind at all? The process of hypnosis specifically eliminates the conscious mind from the equation, working with the subconscious mind exclusively.

We have two (or more) phases of mind for a reason. Any system that does not address the two modes of mind in it’s development process can not be a complete system. Use this criteria to judge any system of development you consider pursuing.

About the Author

Alan Tutt is the creator of the phenomenally popular Keys To Power Mastery System available from http://www.KeysToPower.com. Become the Arnold Schwarzenegger of Mind Power using the Keys To Power Mastery System, and get everything you want in life.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Next Page »