Your Room Has Room for Improvement: Feng Shui Your Meeting Room for Optimal Success!

How the ancient science of Feng Shui
helps clubs optimize meeting rooms for success

Whether your club meets in a high rise or a basement, a barn or a barracks, you have the ability to alter key variables to make the experience more inviting, nurturing, welcoming and simultaneously reinforce the goals of your club. Did you know your meeting room has room for improvement?

Many variables contribute to an effective speech: the quality of your material, the amount you practice, the volume of your voice, whether you dress for success, and other variables. Yet little attention is paid to the environment in which you give your speeches.

“Before a speaker utters a word, the room is already making a statement!” declares Katie Weber, an Austin Texas publisher of The Red Lotus Letter Feng Shui E-zine for wealth. Weber, Living Space columnist for Tribune Media Services, continues, “What statement is the room making? Is it saying it’s old or tired? Only when the meeting room is optimized, is your message optimized!” Here, the ancient discipline of Feng Shui offers insights.

Sway your Audiences with positive Feng Shui

“Every aspect of the built environment has an impact on us: Light, sound, smells, and visual stimuli can influence our energy level and responses” states professional speaker Linda Lenore, ASID, Feng Shui Master and founder, Green Chi Designs (www.GreenChiDesigns.com) in the San Francisco Bay Area. Lenore, a Certified Green Building Professional, continues: “The Modern sciences of environmental behavioral research and eco-psychology, along with ancient wisdoms of Feng Shui, each recognize the impact our environment has upon our happiness, productivity and feelings of well–being.”

Feng Shui (pronounced fung-shway), is the ancient Chinese art and science of placement. Its name, in Chinese, refers to the two types energies, wind (feng) and water (shui), that shape our world. Feng Shui focuses on energy and its flow, and how to achieve harmony and balance in one’s environment.

Emperors, architects, interior designers and others, including Donald Trump, have been guided by the wisdom of Feng Shui for centuries; Toastmasters too can heed the wisdom of Feng Shui to optimize meeting spaces for safety and comfort, learning and inspiration.

On Arrival: The Entrance Way

Think about places you visit: a doctor’s office, government office or restaurant. How do you feel as you approach each? Are you drawn to them? What do you see, smell, hear and experience upon entering? Do you feel comfortable, safe and at ease? Or anxious, constricted or disoriented?

The same applies to Toastmaster clubs. Do guests and members find your club easily? Is it welcoming? Is the banner visible from a distance? Is the entryway unobstructed by furniture or other impediments?

Avoid congestion. An effective entrance way should offer ease and flow of people (energy). Is there a person to greet and welcome all whom enter? Often it’s the club’s Sergeant-at-Arms. As you enter the threshold is it clear where to go next? What is the first thing you see upon entering, often diagonally across from the entrance (regarded as a source of energy and referred to as “the lucky corner”)? Is it inspiring or an eye sore? Make it shine.

“Thresholds are important!” says Alice Inoue, author of Feng Shui Your Life, and former member of First Hawaiian Center Toastmasters in Honolulu. “An entrance should be inviting, attractive, comfortable and unobstructed. It marks the transition from the public to that which is private.”

Inoue, a life guide (www.AliceInspired.com) and Feng Shui expert, elaborates, “Making the entrance comfortable for guests eases the subtle yet very real discomfort of transition on a subconscious level. Ease the transition of your entrance with symbols that say who your club is and what it stands for, to allay their fears and quell anxieties.”

Ruminations on Rooms

Is your meeting room well lit? Is the temperature comfortable? How does the room smell? Does air circulate? Is the room layed out for comfort? Do participants have ease of access in navigating the hallways of the edifice, the walkways and aisles in the room? Are the sight lines good so all can see the lectern and also view each other from the speaker’s perch?

Conduct A “Background Check” for Speakers

After the entryway, the second most important part of your room is the place from where your speakers present. Are speakers supported by a solid wall behind them? They need to be, or at the very least, have a solid-colored dark curtain as a backdrop (never a pattern). And never place the speaker in front of a door or window!

It’s disruptive to the audience and speaker if someone enters or exits a door behind the speaker. Symbolically, energy is lost when a speaker stands in front of a doorway or window. Keep them safe. Weber suggests additional tips to enhance the speaker’s stature and message. “Consider creating a sentry effect with flags on poles (symbols of power), or plants (representations of nature) flanking both sides of the lectern, to frame it and signify its importance.” A podium or elevated platform also raises the speaker’s stature, literally and figuratively.  By the same token, don’t have stuffed animals, especially animal heads, glaring down since the speaker could feel attacked.

Clutter Clouds and Confuses

When optimizing a room for Toastmasters success, don’t underestimate the importance of the placement of handouts on the table in front of attendees. Syndi Seid, founder of Advanced Etiquette in San Francisco, explains, “You have a choice how you place materials on tables or chairs. Care enough to place them down neatly and uniformly at each station. It will be noticed…one way or the other!”

Don’t arbitrarily scatter agendas, speech evaluation forms, voting slips, rosters, schedules and more in a messy pile. This is not only unsightly, but confusing to members and guests, and dissipates energy. Stacking the materials neatly, in the order of use, like table settings, makes for a more inviting experience and crisper feel to the meeting. In this case, form informs function.

Clutter can also extend to other items. Are chairs neatly organized in a uniform pattern that is pleasing to our eyes, which like clarity and order? Whether in rows or pushed in under tables, Chairs should be equidistant from each other.

Take pains to cover any wires, cables and cords that may be visible. Beware of extraneous items left over from previous meetings or other groups sharing the room. Wipe the chalkboard or whiteboard clean of its previous content. And turn over used flip chart sheets so its writings will not distract from the current meeting’s speakers and subject matter under discussion.

Similarly, strive for clear thoroughfares for people walking in and out of the room, and to and from the speaking area. As the people flow, so does the energy of their thoughts and ideas being expressed.

Sights and Smells, Colors and Chi

Accredited Speaker Sheryl Roush, a Past District Governor who speaks and trains professionally, often uses olfactory and visual stimulation in her training rooms to generate attention, pleasure and positive energy. The Peppermint aromatherapy she rubs on the edges of tables around the room “brightens spirits, raises energy, stifles negativity and boosts mental clarity.” When using an overhead projector she leaves the open bottle next to the projector’s exhaust fan. (This also helps stimulate salvation to keep the speaker’s throat from becoming dry while presenting.)

Roush, creator of the popular Boot Camp course Sparkle When You Speak™, continues: “Lavender calms. Yellow items such as live Chrysanthemums, brighten dull rooms and stimulate mental creativity. Red is good for boosting Chi (the Chinese word for energy). If you’re speaking and need to boost your own energy, wear your power red. If speaking on emotionally charged or difficult topics where conflict is present, wearing pastel colors (such as blue, pink, green, lilac) helps calm listeners.” Yet whether its aromatherapy, flowers or plants, always be sensitive to possible allergies of members and guests.

Lakeview Toastmasters in Oakland California met for years in a square room with white walls in a hospital. When management decided to paint the wall yellow, club members were amazed at the positive difference it made in how all its speakers were received. Feng Shui adherents are quick to point out that yellow is the color of happiness and good cheer!

Go Green: Harness Plant Power

The inclusion of plants enhances any meeting room. Not only do plants beautify often-sterile rooms, softening right angles and adding color, they represent growth, life and vitality. They also oxygenate the room. According to the National Aeronautic Space Administration (NASA), plants will absorb toxic chemicals from flooring and other interior furnishings making the environment healthier. Flowers similarly beautify rooms and their color uplifts attendees’ spirits. Plants and flowers can help harmonize a room and warm up its bland look and feel.

The Highs and Lows of Meeting Spaces

If your club has a choice of meeting rooms consider variables such as natural light and sound proofing (good), excessive foot traffic or outside distractions (bad). If your club focuses on comedy you will want a tight room with a low ceiling. High ceilings or cavernous halls dissipate energy. If your focus is on storytelling, you might add rugs and pillows and comfortable sofa chairs to give your room a homier feeling.

Be aware that whenever there is a wall within six feet in front of us, the subconscious mind decides we are being blocked. So lay out your room and the placement of its lectern accordingly. Leverage your room’s resources to optimize light and beauty, increase comfort and security.

Walls of Fame and Acclaim

Many clubs adorn the walls of their meeting rooms with powerful statements. Some post the mission of the club or the district, or a member achievement wall chart, to underscore the purpose of the club and celebrate its members’ educational achievements. Make your room a shrine to success.

Advanced practitioners of Feng Shui often guide the layout of their environments based on the Ba-Gua, an eight-sided chart that informs on the optimal layouts for wealth, fame, career, knowledge, vitality and four other areas of one’s life.

Become A Chi-Master

The power is yours! You have the ability to rearrange, reorganize, de-clutter, shift or otherwise alter your room’s layout. By doing so you can improve sightlines and acoustics, introduce color and contribute natural beauty and harmony to your surroundings. When you do you’ll find more visitors will join, you’ll boost your speakers’ confidence and attendees will be more receptive to each other. So let the energy flow!

  Be sure to follow proper flag protocol for the country where your club meets. In the United States, the flag should be to the speaker’s right when facing the audience.
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One Response to Your Room Has Room for Improvement: Feng Shui Your Meeting Room for Optimal Success!

  1. In research for our book on creating “identity safety” in schools, Dorothy Steele, my co-author and I found that creating a welcoming physical and emotional environment makes a big difference for students. They are two of sixteen key elements that allow students to be successful in school. The book, that will be out in 2013 will share research on creating classroom environments that lead to success for diverse student populations. “Identity safety” refers to creating environments that lead to safety, acceptance, and inclusion- where each student’s identity and background are validated and viewed as an asset to learning. A welcoming physical environment — is one like in the article — one that contributes to emotional harmony and is conducive to learning.

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