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Posts Tagged With: "leadership"

Obama, Teleprompters and Authenticity

Posted by Bert Decker   |   July 28th, 2009   |   12 Comments   |  Tweet This

Obama Teleprompter still President Obama is no longer the premier communicator – which is remarkable as he was elected largely because of his speaking ability. I even named him as #1 in my Top Ten Communicators of 2006. It's not about the words – he does have very good speech writers – it's about the authenticity.

He has slipped for several reasons.
First of all he is over exposed – speaking somewhere almost daily:

  • 9 health care speeches in 9 days
  • 4 Press Conferences in his first 6 months, more than President Bush did in 8 years
  • more interviews than any recent President in recent times

In this over exposure in the media it is also now apparent that he is too scripted and aloof in formal situations, and halting in the informal situations. Not the great communicator.
See it now
Let me show you what I mean. First, there's the teleprompter. It astonishes me that most people don't consciously know when a person is reading from the teleprompter – but I think they DO know it unconsciously. And authenticity suffers. When someone is using the teleprompter, someone is READING A SPEECH – not coming from the heart (or at least appearing to do so.) I do not understand why Obama does not have good teleprompter coaching so that he properly uses focal points to at least APPEAR to be talking to an audience.

Teleprompter 1
Here is Obama in his teleprompter mode at his Egypt speech. He appears to be observing a ping-pong game – 4 seconds to one side (left teleprompter paddle) and 4 seconds to the other side (right teleprompter paddle.) Throughout the campaign and up until last week he had this rigid habit – 4 seconds left, 4 seconds right – and here recently in a Health Care speech.

Teleprompter 2
It's very interesting that last week, in his press conference on health care (that turned into his ObamaGates speech that spawned the Beer Summit), he used the teleprompter (finally) like a newscaster – looking straight at the camera as he reads his speech on a transparent mirror. You'll see he's better – but still cadenced, stiff and academic.

Teleprompter 3
Now here's a funny but revealing take from the TODAY Show on Obama's reliance on the teleprompter. It's written and talked about, and has become so apparent that there is actually a teleprompter on Twitter that is very funny reading: @BOTeleprompter. (As BO says, no POTUS without TOTUS.) So Obama's use of the teleprompter is unprecedented. No President, nor perhaps any public figure in history, has relied on continuous scripting of what he says as has this President.

Extemporaneously speaking…
The sad fact is President Obama got elected because he was a supposed 'great speaker.' Actually he was, and is, a great orator – but I think the teleprompter is now getting in his way. He has to go to another level. Martin Luther King, JFK, Roosevelt, Clinton and Reagan rarely read from teleprompters – except on formal and State occasions. And their greatest moments were not when they were reading – it was when they were speaking. From the heart. Authentically.

Every leader has to be able to speak well extemporaneously – they are always in the limelight and have to communicate well in all situations. You can't take your speech writers and teleprompters everywhere. Sometimes President Obama is OK in extemporaneous mode, but more often he is halting and pedantic – his speech laced with ums and ahs, as in this press conference with Prime Minister Brown, and here in an informal press response that I posted on earlier.

Why it's important
President Obama is our President. No matter what your political bent you want the country to succeed. It is leadership that makes that happen. And we have a President who is now over exposed and, purely from a communications standpoint, going in the wrong direction .

Reading speeches is not leading – where inspiring is critical. I posted about President Bush losing the Bully Pulpit a while back, and most would agree on that. I don't think most will agree with me that President Obama is about to lose the Bully Pulpit as well, but it's happening.

And that would be a tragedy for a country that is already on a slippery slope.


Categories: Leadership and Communications, Newsworthy, Political Communications, Public Speaking
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Eloquence In His Brevity

Posted by Bert Decker   |   January 25th, 2009   |   7 Comments   |  Tweet This

Sully
Sully Sullenberger spoke publicly for the first time after his “Miracle on the Hudson.” He spoke for exactly 21 seconds – three sentences. There was eloquence in his brevity.

We of course wanted more – we were yearning to have him tell us how he did it, of the heroic efforts, and the drama. But Capt. Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger would have none of it at this celebration of the hometown hero in Danville, CA (my former hometown BTW.) All indications in the press to date show him to be a humble, highly competent man of integrity. And his ‘speech’ reflected nothing less.

Now I hope we hear more. We need heroes to emulate and to learn from. He is certainly a hero, and I hope he allows us to get to know him in book and person. I think he has a lot to teach us. About preparation and leadership, and teamwork.

This was like that first potato chip – tasted great, but leaves us thirsty, yearning for another, and another.

There was eloquence in his brevity, and now I want more. How about you?


Categories: Leadership and Communications, Newsworthy, Short Bits
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Great Communicating Thoughts

Posted by Bert Decker   |   August 27th, 2007   |   2 Comments   |  Tweet This

Qubein
Great communicating thoughts from Nido Qubein - one of the best communicators out there. This list is in his recent "Executive Briefings," and I thought I would cut it down to just the best – but they ALL have value and give food for thought – so here in it’s entirety:

  • Competence leads to confidence.
  • Don’t interrupt, but be interruptible.
  • Leave every person feeling better for having talked to you — they’ll be happy to see you next time.
  • Say what you mean, precisely what you mean, and only what you mean.
  • When you’re thinking ahead, you can’t hear what’s being said.
  • Forget your ability to think faster than another person talks — everybody has it, but only the foolish use it.
  • Listen at least twice as much as you talk — others will hear twice as much of what you say.
  • It’s our enemies from whom we learn the most.
  • Talking when nobody is listening is as futile as trying to cut paper with half a pair of scissors
  • If you create tension, you get resistance. If you create trust, you get response.
  • Objections are what symptoms are to the medical doctor. They point to a problem that must be dealt with.
  • Personal communication is hindered by hasty assumptions.
  • Self-centered people tend to monopolize the talking. Secure people tend to monopolize the listening.
  • You’re wasting your time when you try to answer questions people are not asking.
  • A "monologue in duet" happens when I think up what I’m going to say while you’re saying what you thought up while I was talking.
  • With life-long education, learning becomes a renewable resource.
  • Make it a habit to say nice things about yourself, to yourself. You’ll find that you like yourself better.
  • The key to your success is to be sensitive enough to understand what other people want, and generous enough to help them get it.
  • Pay attention to others and they will pay attention to you.
  • Be interesting by being interested.
  • The genius who can’t communicate is intellectually impotent.
  • The leader who can’t communicate can’t create the conditions that motivate.
  • The organization that can’t communicate can’t change, and the corporation that can’t change is dead.

Categories: Communication Skills, Leadership and Communications
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