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One of the most charismatic and persuasive personal qualities that you can possess is certainty. Having an unshakable belief in yourself and in what you do is an extremely attractive quality mainly because there is so little certainty in the world. Things are constantly changing and the world seems more chaotic every day. This scares us. A person who possesses certainty will attract a following because it has a calming effect on others. Being certain takes some experience and some risk, but there are things you can do to become more certain.
One of the first steps to certainty is to identify and acknowledge personal qualities that you are very skilled at (or have the potential to become very skilled at. Frankly, this involves a lot of trial and error and some self reflection. These questions may help direct your thoughts.
Take some risks and start experimenting with things that you think you have some potential in or that you’ve already received favorable feedback on. Here’s a hint: you probably really enjoy doing them already or have a desire to try them. These experiments will build self confidence and confidence tends to build upon itself once you get rolling. Also, certainty is transferable to many different situations. Building confidence in one area can impact a completely different area of your life. However, always keep your strengths in mind as you have new experiences.
The way to develop self-confidence is to do the thing you fear and get a record of successful experiences behind you. - William Jennings Bryan
The more that I go through life the more I believe that body language is the only true form of communication. You can manipulate what comes out of your mouth much easier than what is being communicated through your body. Here’s the cool thing about certainty - if you really have it, it’s communicated practically automatically through your body language. But, for those of us who still have to fake it sometimes here’s a rundown of body language that communicates certainty.
What do you think? Did I miss any? These four body language tips have helped me in my professional life when I have given presentations or had meetings with people who are higher up the ladder than myself (which is almost everyone!). I needed to be able to communicate, rather quickly, that I am a capable, self confident person. Since this is written from my own perspective, I understand that this body language advice is from an American/Western perspective and that appropriate body language is not the same the world over.
When I am at work, I often hear the phrase “Lead from where you sit,” which basically means that you can be a leader without formal authority. It also means that there is something at which we can all be leaders. Something that we love to do and something that we do well, something that is unique to us.
Certainty or self belief is what you have when you don’t have anything else. Find that thing that you have unshakable belief in and your certainty will persuade others to follow you.
As soon as you trust yourself, you will know how to live. - Johann von Goethe

Great, insightful article Amanda.
One comment about your body language tips. Totally agree with them, but I don't think reading about them and trying to emulate them is "faking it". Like any language, people need to be taught it and don't always pickup on all the details on their own. Someone with natural, existing confidence can sometimes on know one of these and it sabotages the signals they are sending to other people. Perhaps after reading your article they can learn not to do that anymore. :-)
Also, not sure if you've been reading the forums lately, but all this talk of unyielding confidence and certainty reminds me of the latest Ayn Rand book I finished: Atlas Shrugged.

Alex - that's a great point about teaching body language. Now that I think about it though, I have definitely adjusted my body language based on things I've learned - and it's helped me when I haven't been that confident (faking ;)) and when I have been.
I have not visited the forums yet (still new here), and I've never read Atlas Shrugged. I have read Anthem though - I'll have to add Atlas Shrugged to my reading list.