13. Foundation 5 - Strategic Silence


FOUNDATION 5: PAUSE (Strategic Silence)

What It Is

Pause is the intentional use of silence—the spaces between your words. It's one of the most powerful but most underused tools in communication.

What It Communicates

  • Strategic pause: "This matters. You have time to absorb it. I'm in control."
  • No pause (constant talking): "I'm nervous. I need to fill the silence."
  • Filler words (um, uh, like): "I'm stalling because I'm uncertain."
  • Comfortable silence: "I'm grounded. I'm not afraid of quiet."

The Four Types of Pauses

1. The Landing Pause After you say something important, pause for 1-2 seconds.

  • Gives people time to absorb
  • Lets the idea land
  • Shows you believe what you just said
  • Effect: People actually hear you

Example: "The feedback I'm giving you is important. [pause] I believe you can improve, and I'm committed to helping you."

2. The Thinking Pause When you need to gather your thoughts, pause instead of saying "um"

  • Shows you're thoughtful, not nervous
  • Gives you time to choose words
  • Sounds more confident
  • Effect: People wait for you respectfully

Example: "That's a great question. [pause] Here's what I think..."

3. The Transition Pause Between major points, pause to signal you're moving to something new

  • Helps people follow your structure
  • Shows organization
  • Prevents rambling
  • Effect: People stay engaged

Example: "First, here's the situation. [pause] Second, here's what we're going to do about it."

4. The Emphasis Pause Before or after a key statement, pause to draw attention

  • Highlights what's important
  • Builds anticipation
  • Shows confidence
  • Effect: People pay attention

Example: "I want to be clear about something. [pause] Your contribution matters."

The Cost of No Pause

  • You rush (people think you're panicked)
  • You fill silence with filler words (people think you're uncertain)
  • Your message gets lost (no time to absorb)
  • You can't read the room (too busy talking)
  • People interrupt (they think you're not done)

The Power of Strategic Pause

  • People actually listen
  • Your message lands
  • You sound confident
  • You can read the room
  • You command attention
  • You seem thoughtful, not nervous

 

Additional Reference: 

Look at this Ted Talk by Nancy Scannell, "The Power of the Pause". Scannell explains how intentional pauses create clarity, presence, and emotional grounding. She uses pauses throughout the talk, making it an excellent demonstration of strategic silence.

 

Let's watch this scene from The Lion King, -------- when he hits Simba with that stick and says, 'It doesn't matter. It's in the past.' Then he pauses. That silence lets the truth land. 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_MJAEBOERk

 

How to Practice Pause

Exercise 1: Filler Word Elimination

  1. Record yourself speaking for 1 minute (natural)
  2. Count how many times you say: "um," "uh," "like," "you know," "basically"
  3. Re-record the same content, replacing all filler words with pauses
  4. Listen to both
  5. Which sounds more credible?

Exercise 2: The Landing Pause

  1. Take your core message
  2. Say it, then pause for 2 full seconds
  3. Count: "one-one-thousand, two-one-thousand"
  4. That pause should feel like eternity, but it's only 2 seconds
  5. This is where you let your idea land

Exercise 3: Pause Between Sentences

  1. Write out a short paragraph
  2. Put a slash (/) after each sentence
  3. Read it, pausing at each slash for 1-2 seconds
  4. Record it
  5. This is a naturally paced message

Exercise 4: Listen to Masters

  1. Watch interviews or speeches
  2. Notice where speakers pause
  3. Notice how they DON'T fill silence with filler words
  4. Notice how it makes their message stronger
  5. Practice the same pausing