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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this comprehensive episode, Stanford lecturer Matt Abrahams reveals the science-backed strategies for becoming a more confident and effective communicator in all settings. From conquering stage fright to eliminating filler words, Abrahams shares practical protocols for public speaking, spontaneous conversations, and high-stakes meetings. (03:21) He explains how our evolutionary wiring makes us fear communication situations that threaten our status, but demonstrates how proper preparation and mindset shifts can transform anxiety into authentic connection.
Matt Abrahams is a lecturer at Stanford Graduate School of Business and a world-renowned expert in communication and public speaking. He has spent years researching and teaching the science of effective communication, helping students and corporate leaders develop confidence and clarity in their speaking. Abrahams hosts the popular podcast "Think Fast, Talk Smart" and has authored multiple books on communication skills, making him one of the foremost authorities on authentic and impactful speaking.
Andrew Huberman is a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine and host of the Huberman Lab Podcast. He specializes in brain development, function, and neuroplasticity, translating complex neuroscience research into practical protocols for everyday life. Huberman is also working on his first book "Protocols: An Operating Manual for the Human Body" based on over thirty years of research and experience.
Instead of opening with your qualifications and resume details, engage your audience immediately with provocative questions, interesting statistics, or relevant stories. (06:52) Abrahams explains that credibility should be demonstrated through the value you provide, not announced through titles. This approach mirrors how action movies start with excitement rather than exposition, creating immediate engagement and connection with your audience.
Our brains struggle to remember random lists of information, but they excel at following logical structures. (31:31) Abrahams recommends frameworks like "What? So what? Now what?" or "Problem, solution, benefit" to organize your thoughts. This isn't just for formal presentations - structuring your ideas helps in everyday conversations, making your points clearer and more memorable for listeners.
The ability to speak spontaneously can be developed through deliberate practice, particularly improv exercises. (09:52) Abrahams uses an exercise where students point at objects and call them something they're not, which breaks down our internal judgment and evaluation systems. This helps develop confidence in responding to unexpected questions or situations by training your brain to be comfortable with uncertainty.
The most effective way to reduce distracting "ums" and "ahs" is to train yourself to completely exhale at the end of each phrase or sentence. (2:14:13) When you're out of breath, you physically cannot speak, which forces a natural pause and eliminates filler words that typically occur in silence. Practice this daily by reading your calendar aloud and "landing" each item with a complete exhale.
Just as athletes warm up before competition, effective communicators should engage in conversation before important speaking situations. (1:40:13) Having any form of dialogue - even casual conversation with a barista - activates your communication systems and gets you into a present, responsive mindset. This practice helps you transition from internal preparation mode to external engagement mode.