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Small Talk: How to Talk to People, Improve Your Charisma, Social Skills, Conversation Starters & Lessen Social Anxiety (Better Conversation)

Product ID : 22363015


Galleon Product ID 22363015
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About Small Talk: How To Talk To People, Improve Your

Product Description Never feel awkward in a small talk conversation again!If you’ve ever felt awkward when you meet new people, worrying about social anxiety, how to talk to people, and how to be interesting, this quick-read small talk guide will make you someone who people love to talk to. *New 2nd Edition: Updated & Expanded! Includes new chapter: Small Talk for Dating and expanded chapter on Reading Body Language As seen on Buzzfeed.Recommended in “31 Ways To Help Cancel Any Fear You Have About Your First Job” and “23 Ways To Be A Better Adult In April.” If you’ve ever felt nervous before a work party, blind date, or friend’s dinner, worry no more after reading this book and getting awesome tips on improving your social skills and charisma. If you buy Small Talk today, you will: Learn simple but effective techniques for starting and keeping conversations going Get dozens of new conversation starters you can use on anyone Master your listening ability with three simple tricks Discover why you are already a great socializer, and you just need to practice Revolutionize how you think about your own social skills Enhance the signals you are sending and receiving with body language Understand the ways people are communicating with you in a conversation Build confidence in your social skills Get ready to use questions and answers in conversation with charisma Develop new ways to understand communication See why small talk is actually very important to your success in work, social settings and your love life And much, more more! Download the ultimate small talk guide today to have better conversations Download our book to learn how to start conversations, how to improve your social skills and what kind of questions to ask people you’ve just met, when you learn how to be a better listener, how to start and end conversations, how to move on from social skill “mistakes,” and how to calm your nerves. Also learn what not to talk about and see a list of awesome questions to ask new acquaintances to get the conversation flowing and keep it interesting. The book is simple, short, has proven strategies, and you’ll be better right away at conversation and small talk. Download our Small Talk book and practice your new social skills tonightInstantly click and download to get all the strategies you need to become a better conversationalist tonight. Review "Attention introverts! This is a must read." -- Amazon Customer "A nice little confidence booster for those whom have no one to talk to and are feeling left out of the crowd." --Stephen Morris "Self proclaimed small talk hater here. Gave this book a shot and it had some great tips that really got to the point. No long theory but practical tips. Great short read." --Amazon Customer "Short but thoughtful book that anyone could benefit from" --Haley Mendoza "Awesome book, bunch of helpful tips, highly recommend" --Henry Jr. Garza "Five stars" --Preston N. "Made me comfortable already for the holiday party! It works!" --William Anzueto "Provided a lot of "Ah-Ha!" moments from me and made me realize some mistakes I was making during conversation." --Allen I. From the Inside Flap Excerpt from Small Talk: Signaling the End of a Conversation First, let's look at how to notice if your conversation partner is using coded social cues to exit a conversation. They may try to let you know in a subtle way, as most people do when engaged in small talk.  Before we look at that, though, don't feel bad when someone is finished having a conversation with you. You are not going to be the new best friend and Most Interesting Person everyone has ever met, and that's true for everyone at all times. Having a fabulous connection with someone the first time you meet them is rare, and you should appreciate it when it happens. But in a lot of cases, friendships or even acquaintances are built up over time through repeated meeting, shared exper