Overcoming Youngest Person in the Room Syndrome
Overcoming Youngest Person in the Room Syndrome · Entrepreneur

A recent news report on American Public Radio's Marketplace indicated a surge of interest in entrepreneurship among young people. While this is encouraging, it doesn't make being the youngest person in the room by a decade or more any easier.

As I, a CEO all of 31, walk into a meeting with potential investors, business partners or journalists, I can feel their scrutiny and almost hear the questions they are silently asking: Is this guy even out of school? What does he know about the real world? People can start to age stereotype right away.

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But rather than being on the defensive and overcompensating with some brash imitation of Leonardo DiCaprio in The Wolf of Wall Street, I size up those gathered and try to see how youth can be a strength. I try to ascertain who might be an ally and who might need a bit more “selling.”

Most people in business for any length of time recognize that experience plays a significant role in achieving success and the younger a person is, well, the less time this individual has probably had to learn the tricks of the trade. But the world is changing fast and there’s no age requirement for having good ideas.

The most successful people in business are those who identify good ideas early, adapt fast and work with the best. Here are a few of the key steps to feel out and jump-start high-performing relationships and transcend and leveraging “youngest person in the room” status:

Related: 6 Ways to Learn to Radiate Charisma If You Don't Have It at First

1. Charm and disarm. It's possible to go a long way with a little charm and genuine engagement with the other people in a room. Try starting a conversation by asking questions, making eye contact and smiling at those you’re meeting. I'm a big proponent of starting a meeting with a casual anecdote to break down any tension in the room.

2. Let others speak first. Allowing others to set the tone of a meeting by asking them to “go first” is not only courteous. It’s smart. Getting the other people in the room to talk about their interests can drive what I say next and provides great fodder for follow-up questions.

Related: The Do's and Don'ts of Meeting With Investors

3. Ask smart questions. Nothing calls more attention to inexperience than asking questions you should clearly know the answers to. But nothing makes an entrepreneur look wiser and more interested than true intellectual curiosity. Probing questions that demonstrate having done the homework will endear a startup founder to prospective partners and open the door to conversation breakthroughs.