Speaking Cards to Use When Your Mind Goes Blank During a Meeting
When working as a middle manager, you will inevitably face unexpected questions in important meetings. If your brain freezes and you break into a cold sweat every time this happens, it is not a matter of intelligence, but rather a case of an amygdala hijack. It is a state where your instinctual fear response temporarily shuts down the functions of the prefrontal cortex, which is responsible for logical thinking. Instead of trying to hide their panic, top 1% professionals utilize a strategic pause to give their brain time to reboot.
Holding on for 3 Seconds After Receiving a Question
Do not rush to answer as soon as you receive a question. Impulsive, forced answers will collapse your logic. Create a space for your brain to breathe using these 3 steps:
- Acknowledge the value of the question: If the other party has made a sharp point, say this: "What you just mentioned is a key variable that determines the success of our project. That is a very important perspective." This lowers the other person's guard and gives you time to think.
- Narrow the scope: If it is difficult to answer immediately, reconfirm the intent of the question. "Is your concern about execution speed regarding the current resource allocation, or are you referring to the overall schedule delay?"
- Preview the structure: Declare, "I will summarize this matter in three aspects." This buys you 5 seconds for your brain to construct a logical framework.
Reframing Opposition into Data
If you take someone's opposition as an attack, you will become defensive. Logic disappears, and it turns into an emotional battle. In these moments, do not try to persuade them, but treat their opinion as data.
Use the LAER model to refocus the discussion.
- Listen and Acknowledge: If the other party is complaining about budget execution, listen until they finish without interrupting. "I fully understand your concerns regarding budget efficiency." This single sentence reduces their hostility.
- Mirroring: Return the last word of the other person's sentence as a question. "You are saying that execution efficiency is dropping?" This makes them re-examine their own logic.
- Remind them of the goal: Now, reframe the cost issue from the perspective of the company's long-term profitability. "Along with the cost-cutting issue you mentioned, shall we also review the sales growth figures that this investment will bring a year from now?"
1-Minute Warm-up Routine Before a Meeting
If your breathing becomes shallow right before a meeting, your voice will tremble, and your pronunciation will stumble. Invest just 1 minute in a restroom or a quiet place.
- 4-7-8 Breathing (30 seconds): Inhale through your nose for 4 seconds, hold for 7 seconds, and exhale slowly through your mouth for 8 seconds. This activates the parasympathetic nervous system and lowers your heart rate.
- Jaw and neck relaxation (15 seconds): Open your mouth and widen the space inside your throat as if you are yawning. Massaging tense jaw muscles will make your voice sound much more stable.
- Lip trill (15 seconds): Vibrate your lips to make a 'brrr' sound. This relaxes the oral muscles and enhances vocal resonance.
Answer Structure That Leads with the Conclusion
Do not list information. Listeners only remember the core points. When reporting, use the following formulas:
- PREP Model: State the conclusion (Point) first, add the reason (Reason), present relevant examples and data (Example), and finally, emphasize the conclusion (Point) again.
- Performance-driven STAR Model: Summarize the situation (Situation) and task (Task) in one sentence, list the actions you took (Action), and state the quantitative results (Result) with figures.
Structured answers make you a reliable professional. Impromptu answers create anxiety, but prepared structures provide confidence. Simply adding evidence to your words shifts the initiative of the conversation to you.