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How to Hack a First Impression Head high, eyes forward, and please, please keep your hands out of your pockets.

By Vanessa Van Edwards

This story appears in the May 2017 issue of Entrepreneur. Subscribe »

Guy Shield

In a study published in 1992, researchers Nalini Ambady and Robert Rosenthal at Harvard University tested the power of first impressions by examining students' perceptions of their professors. For the experiment, Ambady and Rosenthal showed muted, 10-second video clips of professors teaching to participating undergrads, who rated the teachers on 15 dimensions of effectiveness, including warmth, optimism and professionalism, all based entirely on nonverbal cues.

Related: How to Master the Art of the First Impression

Ambady and Rosenthal looked at the results and wondered if they could change the ratings by shortening the clips. So they cut them from 10 seconds to five seconds. The ratings didn't change. They cut them to two seconds. Nothing changed. They concluded that we make a snap judgment in the first two seconds of meeting someone, and we rarely adjust it -- even when we get more information. We decide if we like and trust someone before we have even heard him or her speak.

But here's the most interesting part: Ambady and Rosenthal took the ratings from each of these clips and compared them with the actual student evaluations of these same teachers after an entire semester of classes. Again, they were surprisingly similar. Teachers who got poor rankings from the two-second clips also got low ratings from students who took their classes.

Related: 8 Handshakes That Make Unforgettably Bad First Impressions

Those teachers agonized over their curriculum and teaching methods, and even spent time bonding with students. But in the end, it didn't matter. The students decided how effective teachers were within seconds.

Behold the power of a first impression.

Intimidated? Don't be. My research suggests entrepreneurs can easily hack those first few seconds and make a great and lasting impression. It just comes down to four skills.

CAPTIVATE: The Science of Succeeding with People
Adapted from CAPTIVATE: The Science of Succeeding with People (Portfolio), by Entrepreneur columnist Vanessa Van Edwards, out now.
For more first impression tips, check out:
The 4 Skills Needed to Make a Great Impression
The Secret to Pitching
How to Master the Interview
Vanessa Van Edwards is a national best selling author and lead investigator at her human behavior research lab, ScienceofPeople.com. Her book, Captivate: Use Science to Succeed with People, was chosen by Apple as one of the most anticipated books of 2017, and she leads soft skills trainings for Fortune 500 companies including Google, Dove, Facebook, Intel, MillerCoors and American Express.

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