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Archive for September, 2008

The First Debate – Winner is…

Bert DeckerPosted by Bert Decker   |   September 26th, 2008   |   1 Comment   |  Tweet This

Debate_3
A debate is a contest where we make judgments – most at the emotional, trust level – most at the communication style level. In tonight’s first Presidential debate – there was not a lot to choose from.

  • McCain looked tight and his voice was a bit shaky at the start. Obama came out strong, (except for starting by looking at the camera and appearing to ‘pitch’ to the audience,) and he had several answers with focused points.
  • Later McCain got stronger, firm voice and experienced voice, and Obama began backing and filling a bit.

Debates usually swing about 4% for one or another. I think this one was a toss up. And with that McCain probably gets the edge because his campaign has been sliding rapidly lately, and after tonight he recovered by holding up his foreign affairs experience.There are two more Presidential debates to come – I expect more differences to show in the other formats.

And stay tuned for next week – the Biden/Palin debate on October 2 may be decisive. The Ross Perot/Admiral James Stockdale ticket of 1992 dropped 19% after the unfortunate VP debate debacle of Admiral Stockdale.

Some other thoughts:

  • It just wasn’t a vital, engaging debate. The debate a few weeks ago at Saddleback was more revealing. I viewed this with a young neutral mother of seven, and she had a telling comment about half way through – "This is just political blah, blah, blah."
  • Amazingly neither talked much, nor with any focus and clarity, on the overwhelming economic crisis. (OK, I know the debate was on foreign policy, but politicians can easily bridge if they are skilled.)
  • And surprisingly, Jim Lehrer, the moderator had to ask the candidates to answer to each other, to confront each other, and both shied away from it with a couple of exceptions. Obama confronted McCain a few times, and unfortunately for McCain he didn’t look at Obama at all – either listening or confronting. He should have.
  • McCain’s best line, "I look in Putin’s eyes and see three letters – KGB."
  • Obama’s best line, "You want to use a hatchet when you need a scalpel."

Categories: Leadership and Communications, Political Communications

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Slide:ology – 20 Years Beyond PowerPoint

Bert DeckerPosted by Bert Decker   |   September 24th, 2008   |   1 Comment   |  Tweet This

Slideology
In Nancy Duarte’s first and great book "slide:ology" she shows a vivid timeline of the history of Visual Aids – with PowerPoint dominating since 1987. If she had written this book 20 years ago, perhaps we wouldn’t have the PowerPoint Abuse we have today. Nancy leads us now – and shows us how to create engaging and compelling visual support for our messages. Get her interview here.

I repeat what I said in the forward to her book, "It’s more than slides and design – it’s about communications and inspiration. And this book will help anyone – beginner or top professional – to get to the top of their game."

Read these good reviews – I couldn’t detail it as well – and then click on Amazon and get the book:

If you scan all these reviews, and don’t get the book, you’re not on the right blog!

And Nancy has a great new blog too.
    


Categories: Great Books, PowerPoint Abuse - Avoid It, Public Speaking
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A Short Aside

Bert DeckerPosted by Bert Decker   |   September 24th, 2008   |   Leave a Comment   |  Tweet This

7questionslrg_2
Scott Schwertly has a great blog at Ethos 3. They are also very good at PowerPoint design, and have won some prizes at Slideshare. And I appreciate them interviewing me here, but I am biased. So I’ll be short!


Categories: Musings
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Video and Speaking

Bert DeckerPosted by Bert Decker   |   September 18th, 2008   |   1 Comment   |  Tweet This

Chris_2
Because I’m on vacation using a slow internet connection from a cruise ship in the Sea of Newfoundland – I’ll be brief. I couldn’t help drawing some
attention to the following comments on a blog – unsolicited – from Chris
Spagnuolo.
And he is one who knows about communications.

“…something happened this week that I would have to say is probably one of those rare life-changing events.

“…If you’ve never seen yourself deliver a talk on video, try it.  It’s an eye opening experience.

“…Good speakers will become great, and great speakers will become phenomenal.”

The nice comments are good, but most important here is the power of video feedback. I’m still amazed at the great majority of people in business who still don’t know how their most important tool works – themselves. Delivering ideas, information, motivation.

Observed behavior changes. See yourself as others see you – it’s transformational.


Categories: Communication Skills, Musings, Short Bits

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The Encore Effect

Bert DeckerPosted by Bert Decker   |   September 15th, 2008   |   Leave a Comment   |  Tweet This

Wow, what timing to come out this week with the book, "The Encore Effect." And it already has reached #5 on Amazon’s Business Best Sellers.

A few weeks ago we had Michael Phelps in the Olympics winning race after race, and of course the encores for Barack Obama have launched his campaign for the Presidency, and now the phenomenon of Sarah Palin building one communication experience on another. TV and the internet is filled with remarkable performances. And now we can learn some of the principles to create our own encores.

Encoreeffect225_2
The author of this great book is my friend and colleague, Mark Sanborn. I’ve known Mark for over 20 years, and this is his best – and he is a very successful thinker, speaker and expert who knows what he is writing (and speaking) about in leadership and performance.

One of a few key elements and a recurring theme:

Passion is the fuel for remarkable performance!

Simple enough, but how do you sustain and repeat that passion?!? Learn it here – it is quick, easy, and will convince you that everyone can achieve an
ENCORE performance in their personal and professional lives.

 

It’s just out – and you can get it at Amazon or visit Mark’s website. Special bonus Mark is offering – if you submit your receipt to encore@marksanborn.com you will receive a coupon worth $9.97 for your choice of any of the valuable e-books in Mark’s online store. You’ll also get full Access to The Encore Effect Assessment  (a $29.97 value) that will be available through the book’s support site at www.theencoreeffect.com.


Categories: Great Books
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Sarah Palin – Compelling

Bert DeckerPosted by Bert Decker   |   September 10th, 2008   |   4 Comments   |  Tweet This

Marion_2Conan_3
She looks like Marion the Librarian, but she jabs like Conan the Barbarian.

A phenomenon has sprung forth, and her name is Sarah Palin, and she is riding the wave of communication.

Sarah Palin has galvanized the country and changed this election – for or against – because on September 5th she gave her first nationwide speech, then topped that with an amazing convention acceptance speech last week, and she continued on with a powerful speech tonight as she arrived in Fairbanks. She is compelling because of her communicating – why?

   

1. Confidence

  • On September 10th there couldn’t have been more pressure in her convention speech – after four days of attacks and questions. Over 40 million people watched as Palin strode out and owned the stage. She spoke with confidence and competence. She is an extraordinary speaker, for several reasons.
  • She smiled, she joked, she was enthusiastic – she enjoyed herself. That certainty under pressure is the stuff of leaders, and people could feel it – if not hear it in her voice. (Her one weakness is in her voice, but she overcomes that with energy of face, movement and gesture.) She was not defensive – rather, she went on the attack. With a smile.
  • She uses the major components of great speaking with great skill – Rule of Three, Set ‘em up and knock ‘em down, contrast, dramatic pauses – and all with an authenticity and naturalness that is very rare, and missing from the other candidates.

   

2. Context

  • Palin is attractive, a mother of five, sending one of her sons to Iraq, had her last baby only four months ago – while she was Governor, has a husband who is an attractive "first dude," she is a hunter and past basketball coach, is devoted to her union member, championship snow machine racing husband, holds her Downs Syndrome baby tenderly, and appears in interviews and speeches alike as a real person, not an icon.
  • As if that’s not enough appeal, she does all that while she is a very active Governor and now a national candidate, and seems to be handling it all with aplomb.
  • She smiles. It can’t be stressed enough in communicating how important the smile is. Open and inviting. McCain could take a lesson there. Sarah Palin seems to thrive under the pressure and we can see it in her face – we’ll see if it continues.

3. Content

  • Reformer with a record. Iron fist in a velvet glove.
  • She’s also good at interviews, although we’ll see more under the light of the Network interviews this week. In my close observations (in the last two weeks…) I don’t think I heard one halting phrase or non-word (um, ah, er, etc.) We hear them a lot from the other candidates.
  • And she knows her material well enough to use teleprompters well. Amazingly, she is the only one to do it – Obama and McCain are not good at it, and with Palin (and yes, she does have a speechwriter) you don’t know she is reading, and that the words are not hers. She is remarkably good at it – probably because she knows her material. And she’s enjoying the process.

Although there’s a long way to go in this now fascinating election, in the three major communicating experiences thus far Sarah Palin has shown to America that she is up to it. That’s the sign of leadership. I hunch she’ll continue, although there IS a long way to go. We’ll be following the communication end of it.

The Debates:

September 26 – Obama vs. McCain
October 2 – Biden vs. Palin
October 7 – Obama vs. McCain
October 15 – Obama vs. McCain


Categories: Leadership and Communications, Political Communications, Public Speaking, Speakers
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A Picture Tells the Story

Bert DeckerPosted by Bert Decker   |   September 8th, 2008   |   Leave a Comment   |  Tweet This

Eye_trackingEven a small picture or graphic can go take you further than a mountain of words.

At the far left you see a graphic from 2005 of some ‘eye tracking’ on a Google search page. Immediately we see a lot of energy going down the page as the eye searches down the page.

Next to that we see similar ‘eye tracking’ but from 2008 on another Google search page. There is high energy only as the eye searches for #1, 2 or 3 – but goes no further.

In three years dramatic change in how we view Google search. And how behavior changes.

My friend Bryan Eisenberg on his GrokDotCom website has the details on this great story about SEO (search engine optimization) – it’s more critical than ever to be #1 because people no longer have the patience to search even down the page – much less to the next page.

We can see it in their eyes. (See ThinkEyeTracking.)

And the visual continues to dominate in ANY communication experience.


Categories: Short Bits
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