What You’ll Learn
π« The Myth
“During a Group Discussion, you should maintain eye contact with the evaluators. They’re the ones judging you, so you need to impress them directly. Look at the panel when you make your pointsβthey’re your real audience. The other candidates don’t matter; the evaluators are the ones who decide your fate.”
Many aspirants spend the entire GD looking at the panel members instead of their fellow participants. They treat the GD like a presentation to the evaluators, directing their arguments, eye contact, and body language toward the 2-3 people with clipboards rather than the 9 people they’re supposedly discussing with.
π€ Why People Believe It
This myth stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of what GDs evaluate:
1. The “Performance to Judges” Mental Model
Candidates think of GD like a talent showβyou perform, judges score. In singing competitions or debates, you DO face the judges. So naturally, candidates assume: “The panel decides, so I should engage the panel.” This mental model is completely wrong for GDs.
2. Interview Habits Bleeding Over
In Personal Interviews, you DO maintain eye contact with the panelβthey’re directly asking you questions. Candidates who prep for PI first often carry this habit into GDs without realizing the context is completely different.
3. The Authority Bias
We’re conditioned to seek approval from authority figures. The panel represents authority. It feels unnatural to “ignore” the decision-makers and focus on peers who have no power over your selection. But that’s exactly what you should do.
4. Trying to “Read” the Panel
Some candidates watch the panel to gauge reactions: “Are they nodding? Do they look impressed? Did they write something down?” This surveillance distracts from the actual discussion and makes their focus obviously misplaced.
β The Reality
GD evaluators aren’t your audienceβyour fellow participants are:
What Evaluators Actually Observe
- Directing statements to the panel
- Looking at evaluators while speaking
- Seeking panel approval through glances
- Ignoring peers’ reactions
- Treating GD as a presentation
- Engaging with fellow participants
- Making eye contact with the person you’re responding to
- Scanning the group naturally while speaking
- Noticing and acknowledging peers’ reactions
- Treating it as a genuine discussion
Where Your Eyes Should Actually Be
| Situation | Wrong Focus | Right Focus |
|---|---|---|
| When making a new point | Look at the panel to ensure they heard you | Scan the group, making brief eye contact with 3-4 participants |
| When responding to someone | Look at the panel while addressing the point | Look directly at the person whose point you’re responding to |
| When someone else is speaking | Watch the panel to see their reaction to the speaker | Look at the speaker, showing you’re listening actively |
| When disagreeing | Glance at panel for validation of your counter-argument | Maintain respectful eye contact with the person you’re disagreeing with |
| When building on someone’s point | Direct your build-on to the panel | Acknowledge the original speaker with eye contact, then scan the group |
Real Scenarios from GD Rooms
Every time he made a point, he turned toward the two-person panel and delivered it like a presentation: “I believe AI will create more jobs than it destroys…” [looking directly at evaluators]
When a peer named Priya challenged his view, he respondedβbut still looking at the panel: “The argument about automation ignores historical patterns…” [eyes on evaluators, not Priya]
When others spoke, he kept glancing at the panel to check their reactions instead of engaging with the speakers.
The evaluators noticed. They always do. In their notes: “Good content but doesn’t engage with group. Treats GD as a presentation. Concerning for collaborative settings.”
When making a point: She scanned the group, making brief eye contact with 4-5 participants, creating a sense that she was talking WITH them, not AT the panel.
When responding to someone: “Amit raises an interesting point about reskilling…” [looking directly at Amit, then scanning the group]
When listening: She focused on whoever was speaking, occasionally nodding, showing genuine engagementβnever glancing at the panel to check reactions.
The evaluators noticed this too. But this time, the notes were positive: “Natural conversationalist. Engages the group well. Makes others feel heard.”
Here’s how evaluators actually work:
They want to be invisible. They’re observing HOW you interact with peersβnot waiting for you to engage them. Think of them as documentary filmmakers, not talent show judges.
The moment you start directing attention toward them, you’ve broken the illusion of a natural discussion. You’ve revealed that you’re performing, not discussing. And that’s EXACTLY what they mark you down for.
β οΈ The Impact: What Happens When You Focus on Evaluators
| Behavior | What You Think It Shows | What Panel Actually Sees |
|---|---|---|
| Looking at panel while making points | “I’m confident and engaging the decision-makers directly” | “Doesn’t understand GD format. Treating this as a presentation.” |
| Glancing at panel for reactions | “I’m checking if my points are landing well” | “Approval-seeking behavior. Lacks confidence in their own views.” |
| Addressing responses to panel instead of the person | “I want to make sure evaluators hear my counter-argument” | “Disrespectful to peers. Poor interpersonal awareness.” |
| Ignoring peers’ body language to watch panel | “Panel feedback is more important” | “Not engaged with the actual discussion. Self-focused.” |
| Making eye contact with panel after “winning” a point | “Did you see that? I nailed it!” | “Seeking validation. Ego-driven. Not team-oriented.” |
When candidates focus on the panel, they inadvertently shift into “performance mode”:
β’ Voice becomes more theatrical
β’ Points become more rehearsed-sounding
β’ Engagement feels artificial
β’ Natural conversation flow breaks
Evaluators are trained to spot this. The instant you treat them as your audience, they know you don’t understand what GD is testing. And GD is testing your ability to engage in natural, productive group conversationsβNOT your ability to present to authority figures.
π‘ What Actually Works: The Natural Eye Contact Framework
Your eye contact should mirror a natural group conversationβbecause that’s what GD is supposed to be:
The 90/10 Rule
When responding: Look directly at the person whose point you’re addressing.
When listening: Focus on whoever is speaking. Show you’re engaged.
Never deliberate: Don’t SEEK out panel eye contact. If it happens while scanning, fine. But never direct points to them.
Never for validation: Don’t look at them to check reactions.
Situation-by-Situation Eye Contact Guide
During: Scan 3-4 participants naturallyβnot systematically, just conversationally.
End: Land on one person, inviting response.
Avoid: Turning to face the panel while speaking.
Secondary: Brief scans to include others as you develop your response.
Key moment: Make eye contact when you acknowledge their point (“You raise a good point…”).
Avoid: Looking at panel while addressing a peer’s argument.
Body language: Occasional nods, engaged facial expression.
What it signals: “I’m actually listening, not just waiting to speak.”
Avoid: Looking at panel to gauge their reaction to the speaker.
Soften with body language: Open posture, calm tone.
Avoid: Looking at panel for validation after making a counter-argument.
The “Forget They’re There” Technique
When you enter the GD room, position yourself so the panel is NOT directly in your line of sight.
If candidates sit in a circle and the panel is at one end, choose a seat where you’d have to deliberately turn to see them. This makes peer-focused eye contact your default.
If you’re directly facing the panel, you’ll unconsciously keep looking at them. Physical setup shapes behaviorβuse it to your advantage.
π― Self-Check: Where Do Your Eyes Go?
In a GD, your audience is the group, not the panel. Evaluators want to observe how you interact with peersβnot watch you perform for them. The 90/10 rule works: 90% of your eye contact should be with fellow participants, with only incidental (never deliberate) glances toward the panel. The best way to impress evaluators is to forget they’re there and engage naturally with the actual discussion.