If you meet with other members of the team during the interview process, take note of how upbeat they appear; from
how open their body language is, to what they say when you ask them what their favourite aspect of working for the company is.
Not exact matches
O.T > After watching Allegri's Juventus last night, i really think he is the right man to replace Arsene and i think if the board hasn't contacted that man yet, then they must be really stupid or something and have no ambitions, I mean the guy ticks all the boxes... he selects his team based on his opponents and he surely knows
how to get his tactics right and he even decided to drop Cuadrado who is one of there best players this season and played Barzagli at right back to move Dani Alves forward, he knew they can't be too
open given the fact that kheidera was suspended even after the match he called Pjanic out and told him he wasn't impressed with his
body language after missing a pass and that he should calm down.
Without access to the human voice and
body language, this can all get a bit cagey in my experience, and it can certainly
open you eyes to
how much science — like any other profession — is all about personalities.
In what sense do
bodies produce
language,
how are they themselves grasped and defined by it, and what spaces for action are
opened up by this understanding?
It doesn't seem so, and in some ways the entire week felt like a gigantic exercise in expectation management: Crossed Arms, Legitimate Constraints & Fidgeting Phone Use The exercise began at the
opening ceremony, where
body language seemed to reveal the subtext of the speeches: From Tony Blair's nonchalance and statements on
how establishing a path was more important that specific targets, to Todd Stern's crossed arms and not - so - thinly veiled reference to «legitimate constraints» in US politics, to India's environment minister seemingly frustrated by it all, at times resting his head on his hands or fiddling with his Blackberry, all with an air of «nothing important is going to happen here», what wasn't verbalized was as important as what was.