Dump Your Speeches For Leadership Talks!
Most leaders communicate through speeches and presentations. But there is a much more effective means of communication: that's The Leadership Talk. The Leadership Talk not only communicates information as presentations/speeches do, but it does one thing more: It establishes an all-important deep, human, emotional connection with the audience.
By Brent Filson - 2005
The CEO of a worldwide business asked me to help him develop a talk he planned to give to several hundred of his top executives. He said, "I feel as if I’m Daniel going into the lion's den."
Indeed, it was the business equivalent of a lion's den that he
was entering. Hired from a competing firm, he was a stranger to the
company, a company hobbled by declining market share and bad morale
caused by the arbitrary actions of the previous CEO, an isolated
dictator.
"This is the first time most of them will see and hear me," he
said. "I'll give a presentation on the state of the business."
"Hold on," I said. "Don't give a presentation. Give a Leadership Talk instead."
There is a difference, I explained, between a
presentation/speech and a Leadership Talk. A presentation/speech
communicates information, but a Leadership Talk not only communicates
information but makes a deep, emotional, human connection with the
audience.
Most leaders give presentations and speeches most of the time when they should be giving Leadership Talks.
"You're facing an important leadership situation," I said. "The
old saying, 'You never get a second chance to make a first impression'
applies here in spades. You've got a great Leadership Talk
opportunity. But to have people believe in you and follow you, they
must be emotionally committed to you and what you say. So understand
what their emotional needs are."
I went out into the field and talked to a number of his
managers and found out that they were feeling intimidated by the
demands of increasingly sophisticated customers. I found out that they
feared not being supported in the decisions they made in the field. I
learned that they were angry at having to meet what they considered
unnecessary reporting requirements. I learned that they didn't trust
the top executives.
Intimidation, fear, anger, distrust . . . those emotions
described the state of his audience and, in truth, the state of the
business.
The CEO gave a Leadership Talk that spoke to and answered the
needs of those emotions, a talk based on the single idea that he was a
person that they could trust.
That Leadership Talk marked the beginning of a turnaround for that company.
The lesson: Analyze and speak to the emotion of a situation,
and you can become a dramatically more effective leader.
Make that analysis happen this way:
* Know the difference between a presentation/speech and
Leadership Talk then view every speaking situation you encounter as
either a presentation/speech situation or a Leadership Talk situation.
* Know that you rarely give presentation/speeches and that The
Leadership Talk should be your primary leadership communication tool.
* Analyze the emotions of your audience by asking what they
feel at the time you speak, what they fear, what angers them, what
inspires them.
* Structure your talk around emotional-talking points. For
instance, list three things that angers your audience. Make those
things the main headings of your talk.
* Speak to them about their emotions. Tell them, for instance,
that you realize they are angry and what they are angry about. Tell
them what you realize they are feeling.
Speak thus, and you are revealed in powerful motivational ways. Furthermore, they are revealed to themselves.
These revelations can create strong bonds between speakers and audiences.
Understand the speaking situation in terms of its emotional
content, and you understand that situation in new ways. Understand it
in new ways and you speak in new ways. And when you speak in new ways,
your audience acts in new ways.
2005© The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
The author of 23 books, Brent Filson's recent books are, THE LEADERSHIP TALK: THE GREATEST LEADERSHIP TOOL and 101 WAYS TO GIVE GREAT LEADERSHIP TALKS. He is founder and president of The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. – Celebrating 25 years of helping leaders of top companies worldwide achieve outstanding results every day. Sign up for his free leadership e-zine and get his FREE report "7 Steps To Leadership Mastery"
