Confidence is always appealing. When we see someone with a warm smile and an open stance, we’re more likely to want a personal or professional relationship with that person. But how do we project confidence to others? Body-language signals like eye contact, smiling, a firm handshake, and good posture all contribute to an image of assurance and positivity that will make you attractive to others.
1. Keep Your Eyes on the Prize
I always feel most comfortable with people who maintain steady eye contact throughout our conversations. That tells me that they’ve got nothing to hide and shows me that they’re comfortable with themselves.
A study published in the October 1993 issue of the Journal of Social Psychology supports this idea about eye contact and self-esteem. Male and female students at King’s College in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, were randomly assigned to one of six groups that each viewed a different sixty-second videotape. In the tapes, a model held either five, thirty, or fifty seconds of eye contact with an interviewer. After viewing their respective tapes, the students used ten scales to rate how they perceived the model’s self-esteem. On all ten, the more eye contact the model made, the higher the self-esteem scores the students gave her.
The models and subjects in this study were all American, and the results may vary across cultures, but in most of the Western world, steady eye contact is a positive attribute for anyone who wants to land a job, get a date, or just make a good impression. It shows people that you think well of yourself and that they should, too.
2. Crack a Smile, Break the Ice
High self-esteem is attractive, but so is the ability to make others feel good about themselves. That’s why smiles are so alluring; a warm grin can instantly put others at ease and boost their confidence for having caused it.
In 2009, a study by Maastricht University in Holland concluded that women with negative self-image felt significantly better about themselves after being greeted by smiling faces. The study, led by psychologist Carolien Martijn, tested fifty-seven women on their levels of body satisfaction and self-esteem, then showed them pictures of themselves among photos of other women. Twenty-six of the women’s photos were always followed by smiling faces, and the others were followed by randomly neutral, smiling, or frowning faces. For the first group, who always saw smiling faces after their pictures, self-image ratings increased. No significant changes were reported in the other group.




