The hidden power of bloopers
Anneli Blundell CSP (She/Her)
Helping people get heard at work | Speaker | Author | Communication Dynamics Expert
If hours of youtube bloopers and blunders videos are to be believed, it appears that humans love to take great delight in others’ misfortune. We love a good laugh at someone else’s expense; usually secretly glad it’s not us. Most people try to avoid mistakes and looking silly, particularly in a professional setting, as they fear it will detract from their reputation and, on a deeper level, cause shame and embarrassment. However, contrary to what our primitive brains tell us, the very thing we fear (looking foolish or vulnerable) could be the very thing that makes us more relatable, more human and more likeable. It can actually work FOR us, not against us. (Caveat: If you are genuinely crap at your job and you are constantly making mistakes, then sure… you should be worried, and it is working against you! Get a different job, or get better!)
When we slip up we allow ourselves to be seen as human; we come out from behind our professional selves - the Director, or the Expert, or the Head of Department X. This humanity and fallibility automatically shifts the power dynamics and creates a more human landscape. We let people in. We become more real.
Let’s face it, everyone makes mistakes. It doesn't matter how smart you are, how hard you try or how much you know – everyone gets caught out at some point. You could be wearing odd socks while giving a presentation, or say the wrong thing at a meeting, or have your kids come sauntering into your home office while you’re ‘live’ broadcasting to a whole nation like our friend from the BBC interview (simply google ‘BBC interview kids walk in’ to watch the clip). The good news is that the more we see you as human, the more we like you. The more we like you, the more we value you. This is why small bloopers, bungles and embarrassing mishaps can be good for business (but if they are big bungles, that’s another story - that’s bad for business… but you already know that!)
This is a psychological phenomenon I teach my clients about all the time; the Pratfall Effect. (A pratfall is an embarrassing failure or mistake). The Pratfall effect teaches us that people who are considered highly competent are more likeable when they make normal human blunders than when they are constantly flawless. It seems that we want to relate to real people, not perfect people, as it makes us feel more normal when high performing people stuff up occasionally. Oh, and by the way, it doesn’t work if you are ordinary or mediocre at your job. Then any blunders just reinforce our perception that you are, in fact, ordinary! Eeek!
It’s a powerful strategy you can use to purposefully put others at ease, and reduce the power differential between you; especially if you think that people hold you in high regard. For example, a new boss can trip over their words in their opening team meeting speech, and make light of their gaff. People laugh, people relax, the power differential reduces and the team leans in. Good strategy.
So next time you’re making a speech and forget your lines or greet your team with ‘Happy Wednesday’ on a Tuesday, (which I do a lot) or have a leaf stuck in your hair without knowing it, don’t worry about it. Laugh, move on and enjoy the deepening of your connection with those who witnessed your natural, normal, delightful human-ness.
So next time you’re making a speech and forget your lines or greet your team with ‘Happy Wednesday’ on a Tuesday, (which I do a lot) or have a leaf stuck in your hair without knowing it, don’t worry about it. Laugh, move on and enjoy the deepening of your connection with those who witnessed your natural, normal, delightful human-ness.
PS: If you want to see some likeable human-ness in action, watch Marty Wilson’s video blogs. He’s a keynote speaker on resilience and change (and a former Australian Comedian of the year incidentally) and usually treats us to some behind the scenes bloopers at the end of each recording. It’s a delight to witness and I’ve included one of my favourites below. It’s complete with blowing raspberries at the camera, roaring like a tiger (yes, you read that right!) and double takes – so likeable! ;)
PPS: Jacky Chan, the martial arts phenomenon, follows a similar formula with his movies (only it looks much more painful!). At the end of each of his movies we are usually treated to a series of bloopers when his stunts go wrong. Ouch!!
LINK FOR LINKED IN POST: https://www.dhirubhai.net/pulse/how-instantly-connect-anyone-marty-wilson/
'Til next time.
Anneli
Anneli is an author, speaker and communication expert who helps her clients improve their communication, influence and engagement.
She has been providing executive coaching, keynote speaking and leadership training, as well as facilitating team workshops and team off-sites, for over a decade.
As a Professional People Whisperer, she is obsessed with decoding people dynamics for improved performance and specialises in interpersonal intelligence - the ability to understand and navigate the people dynamics in a given situation.
Contact Anneli's office to find out how to work with Anneli today!
T: @AnneliBlundell
M: 0423 023 032
Heart-Centred Leadership Coach, Intuition Training, Creative Development Training
5 年Love this post! My teenager daughter is struggling with how she is perceived at school. I coach her when she wants which works really well. But when it comes to sports/swim carnivals she dorsn’t want to tske part because of fear of coming last! I read out the relevant bits of your post to her. Let’s see what happens!
?????? Multi-Award Winning Change & Resilience Motivational Speaker ? former Australian Comic of the Year
5 年Thanks very much for the shout out Anneli, fantastic that you love my bloopers. One of the biggest things that stand up comedy taught me is that when you’re on your feet in front of a group of people perfection isn’t anywhere near as endearing - even charismatic - as how you handle totally stuffing up.
Presentation, communication, persuasion, influence
5 年Ha ha ha! I drew a man climbing a mountain with an ice pick on my flip chart. I’ve drawn it thousands of times as the backdrop to teaching icebreakers. A few weeks ago I gave him a third leg! Omg! I died, we laughed until some of us cried, then I redrew it in the break!!!!
Leadership Development, Speaking & Executive Coaching | I'll Help You Navigate Change and Take Action | Author and Media Commentator | Work with me in 2025
5 年Excellent piece and great advice for us all. Sounds like it is part of bringing your whole self to work. When we can be vulnerable or our whole selves and show vulnerability, it says to everyone else that it is okay to be vulnerable too. I have experienced so many bloopers at work and beyond - communication breakdown for the date I was giving the financial results presentation to the C-Suite of a conservative publishing organisation I worked for in London, on the first ever casual Friday! I had to lift my game on the content delivery and energy levels as my personal presentation was less than stellar. I still laugh/wince when I think about it.
Purpose Driven Business & Leadership | Speaker | Author | Strategist | Master Facilitator
5 年Agree, it’s the whopper mistakes that you remember most and learn from, and it’s really sticky learning, if that’s a thing!