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Entries categorized as ‘speech’

How To Connect With Your Audience

May 2, 2007 · 1 Comment

public speakingConnecting with people is critical for selling, persuading or getting the point across. And one of the ways we connect with people is to tell them stories about ourselves.

I was at a business workshop recently, and the stories that were most effective (by acclamation of the attendees) were ones where the person let down his/her guard, and revealed something personal. This is one of the reasons storytelling is more effective than reciting a list of benefits to a prospect. In addition to being interesting and easy to understand, it also helps create a personal bond with the prospect. It means that you may want, in your business storytelling, to reveal anxieties, fears and feelings.In other words, to give the prospect your confidence.

Categories: Public Relations · business anecdotes · communication · leadership · persuasion · speech · word-of-mouth

Lessons From Conversational Experts

May 1, 2007 · Leave a Comment

According to Simon Jenkins from the Guardian, experts advise:

  • Never to converse with too many because in much company, few listen
  • Be brief to avert tedium and interruption
  • Avoid anecdote; refer to others but not oneself
  • Be eager to listen and ready to change one’s mind
  • This discipline, the subjugation of anger to social ritual, is key to the exhilarating, serendipitous, controlled anarchy that is good conversation.

Categories: Public Relations · WOM · blog · communication · persuasion · speech

How Green is Green

April 26, 2007 · Leave a Comment

in_environment.jpgAccording to a FC  article titled “Is California Sacrificing Green for Green?” California is fast-tracking several big alternative-energy projects in the southernmost quarter of the state. The proposal to build power lines, substations, and transmission towers has provoked the ire of environmental groups given that the infrastructure such as substations and transmission towers need to be built through national forest and wildlife preserves.

According to authorities given the location of resources and that existing corridors are too  narrow to accommodate the new lines, people are going to have to weigh up the advantages and disadvantages of going green.

What is interesting is that Green has taken on a whole new meaning in the last year. It used to convey values of preservation, naturalism–less is more. Today it essentially means ecologically responsible consumption (without clearly defining responsible or limiting consumption). California has an opportunity to merge these two value systems into one true green.

Arnold’s message on the whole issue is as follows:

“People say, ‘You can’t get everything done,” Arnold told Fast Company. “But the only way to know if you can lift 500 pounds is if you put 500 pounds on the bar.”

Maybe it’s time to pump it up to 1,000 pounds, Arnold.

The last three or four reps is what makes the muscle grow. This area of pain divides the champion from someone else who is not a champion. That’s what most people lack, having the guts to go on and just say they’ll go through the pain no matter what happens.

It’ll be interesting who wins out in this attempt to kill out the use of coal and inspire the growth of renewable energy for Californians (ergo, Americans) who have products that are necessary for everyday life – from lighting, to air conditioning, to pool pumps.

Stay tuned for further developments on the Green for Green issue.

Categories: communication · leadership · marketing · speech

How To Make A Point Effectively

April 25, 2007 · Leave a Comment

John F Kennedy We often grapple with the question of why and how leaders should go about making a point through their messages. In otherwords get people to understand the message when they hear it, they remember it, and they change their behavior because of it.

Messages that make a point or “sticky” messages have certain disctinctives – unexpected, concrete, credible, and emotional.

For example conisder John F. Kennedy’s message of a vision of “putting a man on the moon within the decade”? People immediately understood what he meant. (The words “man,” “moon,” and “decade” are all very simple and concrete.) They also remembered it for a long while afterward. And thousands of people changed their behavior because of it.

The key to making a point is to remember that your audience often doesn’t have your expertise and therefore the need to use language that’s meaningful to them. If Kennedy had described his vision for the United States as “being the international leader in the space industry,” he would have had far less impact.

Another characteristic of making an effective point through a message is that it helps people understand what they’re supposed to do in a particular situation and what tradeoffs they have to make, so they don’t have to keep checking back with you for direction.

A really good example, I came across of a person making a point is that of Jeff Hawkins, the guy who led the original Palm Pilot team. Hawkins walked around holding a block of wood which was the exact size of the Palm Pilot he had in mind. The wood served as a constant visible and tangible reminder of his goal for the product: “elegant simplicity.” Engineers who were tempted to sneak in more and more features just because they could, would be discouraged from committing “feature creep” when they saw the block of wood.

The Palm Pilot embodied elegant simplicity: It did only four things (including managing your contacts and to-do lists), but it did them very well. And it was easy to use. Contrast that product with pretty much any remote control device currently out in the market, and you’ll see the difference.

Other great examples are the high-concept pitches made to Hollywood movie producers. A particularly sticky pitch was “Jaws on a spaceship,” for the movie Aliens.

This simple description of the movie’s concept was packed with information that helped everyone involved make the right decisions. Potential investors could see that the project was promising, since Jaws had been so successful. And the people in charge of marketing the film, creating the score, and designing the sets could all figure out how to do their jobs based on the notion of “Jaws on a spaceship.” The director still had to provide some guidance, but he didn’t have to constantly spoon feed them information.

So how do you make a point effectively? Do you have examples if so please share it.

Categories: business anecdotes · communication · leadership · management · speech · word-of-mouth

How speeches can make an impact

April 15, 2007 · 1 Comment

Mark Sanborn author of “You Don’t Need a Title to Be a Leader” makes the point of drawing from personal experience and adding stories to make a point.

In his latest book he points out that the Gettysburg Address is one of the greatest speeches in American history and yet it only contains 10 sentences. In those few words Abraham Lincoln was “able to convey great truths in a powerful and unforgettable way”.

Mark adds that great leaders are not evaluated on the length at which they speak, but on the impact of their message.

Categories: business anecdotes · business books · communication · leadership · speech