"Executives communicate that way, and they want to be communicated to that way (in 1x1s or in a presentation). Why would an executive promote someone who rambles or seems indecisive?"
Archive for January, 2007
Answer First
| Posted by Bert Decker | January 30th, 2007 | 8 Comments | Tweet This |
Tags: Careers, Focus, Public Speaking, success
The Communications of Leadership
| Posted by Bert Decker | January 24th, 2007 | 4 Comments | Tweet This |
Here’s a concept that we could apply to President Bush – comparing his effectiveness as a communicator around Iraq (Normal State) and his effectiveness as a communicator during 9/11 (Fundamental State.)
We know that effective leaders are most usually great communicators – the confidence of leadership often self-evident in confident behavior. There’s an explanation for this from the Harvard Business Review, that is relevant to business and politics…
University
of Michigan
professor Robert E. Quinn introduced the concept of the Fundamental State of Leadership – a heightened perspective, and one that’s inherent in all of us.
“In the normal state people tend to stay within their comfort zones and allow external forces to direct their behaviors and decisions. They lose moral influence and often rely on rational argument and the exercise of authority to bring about change…the result is usually unimaginative and incremental – and largely produces what already exists. To elevate the performance of others, we must elevate ourselves into the fundamental state of leadership.”
We’ve all been there in our personal and professional lives – a time of crisis where we rise to the occasion and overcome the challenge. (ie. President Bush leading us during 9/11.) If we force ourselves into the Fundamental
State
, rather than waiting for crisis to knock at our door, we’ll get better and better. And so too is the case with communications. Quinn says that getting there requires a shift along four dimensions.

So, what does this mean for communicators?
1. Don’t stick with what’s comfortable. Instead of standing in one place behind a lectern during a presentation, move and create energy. Actively pursue speaking engagements that push your comfort zone, where you can practice the behavioral skills of communication.
2. Master the Natural Self – that special combination of your unique personality, mind, opinions and behaviors. Don’t become someone you’re not. Harnessing the Natural Self while communicating will increase your ability to connect with others, because you’re just being you – confident and relaxed.
3. Create listener-focused messages. State early and openly the audience’s WIIFM – What’s In It For Me?, action steps and benefits.
4. Read cues and adjust. Practicing is good, but not if you can’t adapt to external cues. Create an experience that’s specific to your audience – whether it’s one person, or one hundred.
President Bush State of the Union
| Posted by Bert Decker | January 23rd, 2007 | 2 Comments | Tweet This |
I’m not sure President Bush came back from the brink, but he did a great job.
Behavior:
- Conciliatory yet confident in gesture and voice
- Great use of the teleprompter
- No smirks, frowns or shoulder shrugs (and only one nervous wink)
- Totally different in manner (and content) from his January 10 speech on increasing troops in Iraq
Compare to last year’s State of the Union – interesting similarities!
Content:
- Conciliatory and smart at the start – "First President to start with these words, Madame Speaker…" as he turned to Nancy Pelosi. (Then he added another laud about how proud Nancy’s father, a congressman, would be.)
- Tone – talked of domestic issues that would be positive – health care and energy. Although not new, bold and brilliant – gained enough new ground in the Democrats territory to be very effective. Particularly since it was the first 35 minutes of a 50 minute speech.
- The pall over the room was Iraq – he mentioned it late, there was silence, and he left it and went to stories of American heroes
- Stories – almost 10 minutes (with applause) was spent on Dikembe Mutombo, Julie Aigner-Clark fror Baby Einstein (give me a break – I love entrepreneurs and baby’s love Baby Einstein but a minute of mention and another minute of applause for the founder?), Wesley Autry (deserves several minutes of applause) and Sergeant Rieman. Great use of the SHARP principles.<
Some interesting sidelights:
- Nancy Pelosi stood up to applaud a lot – often quicker than VP Cheney. Of course, sometimes she sat on her hands.
- Nancy Pelosi had eye dart – she should be very aware of what the camera (and we) see
- I expected Bush to be defensive. He wasn’t.
- President Bush should always try to use the teleprompter with an audience. He is 100% better when he does not have to extemporize, or look at the teleprompter through the camera (his January 10 speech is a good example.)
- The State of the Union is an interesting ritual. It is really a scripted, written and read document – which the President begins by blatantly giving a copy to the Speaker of the House. But it is treated as a "live" event, with basically choreographed applause.
- President Bush did very well. He was conciliatory, yet confident. He was smart in spending little time on Iraq, and concentrating on domestic health and hope, putting forth apparently new (although not bold) initiatives with force and vigor. He surprised me.
- Behavior and confidence carry so much more weight than content. President Bush did not ACT as if he was at the lowest approval rating poll level in history, and that very few agreed with his policies on Iraq. Yet he came out strong. Although no dramatic new initiatives domestically and no new initiatives on Iraq – it felt as if it was fresh.
Frankly, if he had the demeanor and content and pall of his January 10 speech, we would be in for a very depressing last two years. I’m glad he wasn’t. President Bush has a tough road to navigate with Iraq, but I think he has gained some time. After tonight’s speech, he gained back some relevance. Now, we’ll see how it plays out…
When You’ve Lost Their Ear
| Posted by Bert Decker | January 23rd, 2007 | Leave a Comment | Tweet This |
What Do You Do When They Are No Longer Listening?
Tonight we’ll see. President Bush will give his State of the Union to a skeptical public.
Actually, it’s a tuned out public. The Wall Street Journal, in a rare headline, flatly – and shockingly – stated that Bush has "lost the nation’s ear," with "A Skeptical U.S. Greets Presidential Speech." With approval polls at all time record lows, in the 20′s, The Nation says that "The President appears to be in a freefall."
What do you do when your audience is hostile?
You do not come out weak. You do not offer platitudes. You do not speak on the inconsequential. You are not defensive.
Unfortunately the headline in The Guardian before his speech captured the pre-speech buzz about what he would talk about. It said: "Bush to Seek Cutback in Gas Consumption"
Now that’s not what I call compelling.
It’s a sad state we are in, politically and practically, in Washington and Iraq. It’s not this blog’s purpose to get into the issues and politics of this, but I do want to concentrate on the communications. It is a unique time in this country’s history when a President is so low, and has to use the opportunity to use the bully pulpit to communicate a new vision and yet he is not strong as a communicator. Clinton gave a State of the Union in the middle of the Lewinsky affair, and he more than survived. Ultimately he thrived. But he is an outstanding communicator. Tonight, like most of the country, I don’t have high expectations.
If I were Bush, I would be dramatic, and I would be humble, and I would make concessions, and I would then be bold. It’s a tough order. But when nobody’s listening, you have to communicate something in order to be heard. And not be disregarded as irrelevant. After all, it can’t get much worse.
We’ll see…
Desktop Video Revolution
| Posted by Bert Decker | January 17th, 2007 | 7 Comments | Tweet This |
This year 2007 will be the Year of the Video. (Or so I predict.)

Now maybe you thought it was the year of the iPhone. Nope, as great an implement as the iPhone might be, it’s still hardware – and does not make a paradigm shift.
And the founders of Skype just announced Joost, which someone called the “YouTube Killer” . While that’s not so, it is another video breakthrough in entertainment distribution. But this is still not where the power is.
Maybe you thought that last year was video’s year, with YouTube’s dramatic success in the marketplace and then Google’s $1.65 billion purchase. Nope, that’s just the start.
Compression has made mass distribution and small distribution possible – and it is in the ‘everyman’ (and woman) nature of the creation and distribution of this powerful medium that the power lies. I think it has now reached the critical mass necessary. Think of desktop publishing in its infancy, and you get the picture. Anyone can be a video producer (not necessarily a filmmaker however – see below) and anyone can see, or get seen, on video on demand – anywhere.

Movies have always been the most powerful medium in communicating
emotional impact – but distribution was mostly in theatres, then VHS and DVDs – but it still was primarily theatrical movies. After all, that is the ultimate communication experience. Now there is a distribution revolution for ‘movies,’ and it will be profound. I’ll have several posts over the next few months on how to take advantage of these new distribution possibilities with video to multiply your influence and impact – and as a learning tool.
Video technology has changed so rapidly that few are experts – and there are many varied interests and needs. And that’s just the start – as more distribution avenues become available, people will find new ways to communicate with this great medium that we haven’t even thought of. As a past filmaker, and using video myself in a variety of ways, I’ll try to bring you some of the ways you can take advantage of this revolution no matter your interests.
And from the WSJ last week: "Corporations are just beginning to see [online video] as a real option to help cut costs and communicate," says Colin Dixon, a research analyst for Diffusion Group, a research firm. "Just from last year to this year, there’s been a significant jump." But the real revolution will be how individuals can use it – and quickly edit their own clips.
One of the most massive uses will be (soon) everyone embedding video in their PowerPoints, simply and easily. More on that in a separate post.
And here is just one example of a new approach in using high quality, targeted programming (via internet only) that I found in my inbox a couple of mornings ago:
- Candid Conversations with Great Americans – a very well produced 15 minute video of General Norman Schwarzkopf. Not just talking heads here, but action footage.
- You can subscribe soon (it looks like the site is just up, and there are evidently some bugs, and their questionaire takes forever). You will be inspired by what you see now, and also be able to see it on demand.
- Not only is Stormin’ Norman one of the best communicators in both the big speech and the informal interview – he is one of the most respected. One of my favorite memories is a clip of Schwarzkopf doing a briefing and interview on the Barbara Walters show when he was in his prime, (actually, he’s still in his prime) and he was willing to be open and emotional on camera – very powerful.
- This is a new way to communicate to a specific audience (or with a specific agenda), with this emotionally evocative medium. One used to be able to only target the printed word and short TV commercials to a specific audience. No more – it is easy and inexpensive for anyone to use longer videos with more substance to now reach very diverse audiences, and reach them to move them.
Stay tuned, for
- video on the desktop, (Desktop Video is now where Desktop Publishing was in its infancy – and now anyone can be a ‘movie producer,’)
- movies embedded seamlessly in PowerPoints (further avoiding PowerPoint abuse)
- making your own sales video
- bookmarking your video clips
- using the medium for a new type of business card
- streaming AND downloadable, (YouTube move over)
- video as an immediate feedback tool (very powerful and unfortunately underutilized)
- know the difference between being a filmmaker vs. a videographer
- and more…..
On Oratory and Communication
| Posted by Bert Decker | January 15th, 2007 | Leave a Comment | Tweet This |
It’s appropriate to hear the whole speech today, and now you can do it here on YouTube (and many other sites.) Rev. King was a master of oratory, rhythm, cadence, and a whole lot more. A great article was in last Friday’s WSJ by Mark Oppenheimer on his brilliant use of words with historical reference that strike a resonant cord in any age listener.
And another outstanding reference to MLK, as well as the comparison to some recent communicators (and non-communicators) is at Presentation Zen – worth looking at.
We are no longer in the age of oratory – though we can still learn from it. But good business men and women do not write out speeches and read them. They often speak in a tone that is conversational but not casual, powerful but not stentorian. (Steve Jobs for example.)
Many of you saw (or heard of) the terrible job communicating that the head of Cingular did at MacWorld. (Now what’s his name again.) Actually, you can almost tell how bad he is just from this great photo series from Garr Reynolds (Presentation Zen again)
– Stan of Cingular is on the bottom:
Seth Godin said it best in his comments on this stiff and particularly ‘woeful by comparison’ communication:
"Stan gives his talk from 3 x5 index cards, which he holds awkwardly on stage. And he doesn’t really say anything. One could argue that you can be a great CEO without having a clue how to speak in public. But why not either get better at it or send someone else in your place? If it’s worth doing, it’s worth doing well, and I think the standards for a multimillionaire CEO announcing a major new venture ought to be pretty high."
It’s good we can get inspiration today from Dr. King! See above, and then look at this shorter clip, and you’ll be moved to pehaps use some cadence, and begin to use words better, and without note cards!

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It’s the SOUND of the words, as well as the sound of the voice that makes more impact than you might think. It’s one of the things that separates the great speakers from the rest of the pack. Winston Churchill and Martin Luther King Jr. realized the power that the sound of their words carried. 

