How do I take my chance to speak: Trying to interrupt others while speaking would only harm your chances.
Instead, you may try to maintain an eye-contact with the speaker. This would
show your listening skills also and would help you gauge from his eye-movement
and pitch of voice that he is about to close his inputs. You can quickly take
it from there. Also, try and link your inputs with what he has spoken whether
you are adding to or opposing his arguments. This would reflect that you are
actually being participative rather than just doing a collective monologue.
- How to I communicate in a GD: Be crisp and to the point. Be fact based and avoid making
individual opinions that do not have a factual base. Make eye contact with
all the members in the group and avoid looking at the panelists while
speaking. The average duration of the group discussion provides an average
of about 2-3 minutes per participant to speak and you should try to speak
about 3-4 times. Hence, you need to be really crisp to reflect the most in
those 30-40 sec. slots.
- How do I convince others and make them agree to my view point: A lot of candidates make it their mission to make the group reach
to a conclusion on the topic. Do not forget that some of the topics have
been eternal debates and there is no way you can get an agreement in 15
mins. on them. The objective is not to make others toe your line but to
provide fact based, convincing arguments which create an impact. Stick to
this approach.
- Do leadership skills include moderating the group discussion: This is a myth and many people do try to impose their order on the
GD, ordering people when to speak and when not to. This only reflects poor
leadership. Leadership in a GD would be reflected by your clarity of
thought, ability to expand the topic in its different dimensions, providing
an opportunity to a silent participant to speak, listening to others and
probing them to provide more information. Hence, work on these areas
rather than be a self-appointed moderator of the group.
- Listening: This is a key quality
assessed during the GD about which many participants forget. Active
listening can fetch you credit points and would also provide you with data
to discuss. Also, if you have an average of 2-3 minutes to speak, the rest
of the 20-25 minutes is required to spent in active listening. For this,
maintain eye contact with the speakers, attend to them (like nodding,
using acknowledging words like -I see ok, fine, great etc.). This would
also make you be the centre of attraction as you would appear
non-threatening to the speakers.
- Behaviour during the GD: Be patient; don’t get upset if anyone says anything you object to.
Stay objective and don’t take the discussion personally. Also, remember
the six C’s of communication – Clarity, Completeness, Conciseness,
Confidence, Correctness and Courtesy. Be appreciative & receptive to
ideas from other people and open-minded but do not let others to change
your own viewpoint. Be active and interested throughout. It is better to
participate less if you have no clue of the topic. You may listen to others
and take clues from there and speak. You would be assessed on a range of
different skills and you may think that leadership is key, you need to be
careful that you don’t dominate the discussion.
- Quality Vs Quantity:
Often, participants think that success in group discussions depends on how
much and how loudly they speak. Interestingly, it’s the opposite. Also,
making your point on the topic, your views are important and the group
needs to know. This will tell you are knowledgeable and that you participate
in groups
- Summarizing: If you have not been
able to initiate the discussion, try to summaries and close it. Good
summarizing would get you good reward points. A conclusion is where the
whole group decides in favour or against the topic and most GDs do not
have a closure. But every GD can be summarized by putting forth what the
group has discussed in a nutshell. Keep the following points in mind while
summarizing a discussion:
- Avoid raising new points.
- Avoid stating only your viewpoint.
- Avoid dwelling only on one aspect of the GD
- Keep it brief and concise.
- It must include all the important points that
came out during the GD
- If you are asked to summarise a GD, it means
the GD has come to an end.
- Do not add anything once the GD has been
summarised.
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