Things That Make You go Um...
Who can remember THAT song from circa 1990 by the C+C Music Factory? I do! Anyway, to the topic on hand - Recently in a meeting with a mentee, I was talking to him about effective communication and the part disfluency can play to derail dialogue. I went on to explain, then thought this might make a useful little blog. So here it is.
I have interjection issues when I talk. What are they? Interjections serves as a pause in the middle of a sentence as one gathers their thoughts but wants to maintain the listener’s attention. Interjections like “you know” and “okay” and “so” and “erm” and “literally” and “basically” and “right” and “yeah, no” (which is it?!) and a horde of others filler words are an often unwitting characteristic of our own oration. However, such fillers - or “word parasites” as Russians call them - have marginal grammatical or lexical value. But they have increasingly become a normal part of the modern conversation and are very common.
A few years back I read an article on disfluency, discourse markers and discourse particles. After this read, I made a concerted effort to avoid the fillers I tended to use. I listened to myself through recordings and became more conscious to the words I deployed verbally. I also asked a few colleagues to conduct ‘filler counts’ on me. I learned that I was unconscious to these fillers until I heard myself talk. I’m a classic “erm” and “sooo” kind of guy.
Fillers are normal, but can be overused, making the speaker sound nervous or unprepared or too conversational. Someone who overachieves with fillers can create an incoherence and lose credibility with the audience. They can distract. That’s when it’s a bad thing. For example, a few years back I came across the filler word “super” from a former leader that I worked with. This double superlative repetition took my focus away as I would instead tally (bean count) how many times this person said the word. ‘Super cool’ or ‘super fun’ or ‘super successful’ or ‘ super excited’ or ‘super efficient’ . The average person speaks at 150-200 words a minute and this person averaged 7 “super” interjections a minute.
Armed with this knowledge, I realized that the best way to avoid using filler words was to pause instead. Breathe, maybe. If you are not speaking, but thinking - don’t “erm”. I said to myself. Being aware and adopting a pause was so tricky at first. I felt like my new found silence pauses were sinister and creepy. They weren’t, just new to me. Over-focusing on nullifying those pesky fillers took my focus away from my actual content. That was not good. Slowing down my speedy dialogue helped me to think more about my words and at first this was also tough but helpful to find more natural (silent) pauses to think. That silence which is often so easy at other parts of the day was so hard to find as I fended off my propensity to fill it with noise (fillers). I have got better. Practice helps and being aware is the first step. I’m not perfect and it bugs me when I still overuse fillers. But it’s okay.
Remember you are in command of the message you want to deliver. In order to make a positive impact, know your audience and focus on the key points of your speech, be confident, you’ve got this. For those that just rather do .. something else – here’s the song by C+C Music Factory.
The postings on this site are my own and don’t represent SC Johnson & Son, Inc.’s positions, strategies or opinions
Developing Teams that Shape the Future
3 年Great article. I wonder if this is even more important thinking for the extrovert versus introvert? Introverts can sit in silence comfortably for a while. And thanks for making me hit "play" on the video "Things that make you go Hmmmmm", great way to start the day!
Great read Mark Edward Smith ... certainly something to reflect on. Having recently been working on a similar approach myself; being aware is absolutely the right focus. It's hard to adapt at times...I note myself adding "for me..." a lot.
Group HR Director
3 年An interesting read Mark, and I think even more prevalent in recent times with more people working from home. Telephone calls and even teams calls don’t always portray other communication cues in our body language so the words we use are even more important...Id be interested to record myself as your article suggests...
Technology Leader and Enterprise Architect
3 年Good reminder for all of us - I find myself frequently finishing sentences with a "right?". I think this is partly a filler, but started as a way to get a response from others on a conference call to see if they are listening (since non-verbal cues are lost on a call). Does anyone have suggestions for other strategies to engage on a call?
What a nice reminder to slow down and speak with intent! I asked a friend to do a filler count for me and I am a traditional "um" and "really" person. Just having the awareness has already helped me with the past few conversations I've had. A special thank you goes out for introducing me to that song. I won't tell you how old I was when it came out, but I was 31 when I discovered it! :)