Wednesday 10 October 2012

DO YOU REALLY NEED ALL THOSE NOTES?

British Prime Minister, David Cameron, today gives his speech to the annual Conservative Party conference under more pressure than he was a short time ago.

Foremost amongst the reasons for this increased pressure is a single speech last week by the Opposition Labour Party leader, Ed Milliband.

There was one thing about the Milliband speech which proved to be a political game-changer - at least temporarily and maybe for much longer.

And it had little to do with any bold new Labour policy idea or attacks on the government's style and substance.

The thing about Ed Milliband's speech which has really got notice was that it was delivered without notes.
miliband
Ed Milliband...Look Mum, no notes.
There was universal agreement among commentators that this was Mr Milliband's most confident speech - where spoke without any lectern, autocue or papers while surrounded by audience members on all sides.

Now speaking fluently without notes for nearly an hour and to grip the audience throughout is an impressive thing to do.

David Cameron has been known to do the same to much acclaim - such as one still remembered note-free speech he gave when running to be his party's leader. 
Cameron
David Cameron - Hey I can do it too
What the note-free speech enables both leaders to do is to convey their personality and their message far more powerfully than they would otherwise come across.

In Ed Milliband's case, being freed from notes helped him become seen as a more genuine and impressive figure - who spoke from the heart and connected emotionally with those in the audience and on TV to a far greater extent than ever before.

Here's around four minutes of it.
One Nation. A country for all.

So if you're not seeking high political office, then what does the Milliband experience mean for you?

It shows that when you give a presentation and you do it without notes (or without using slides as a memory prompt) that you can potentially have a far bigger impact and move the audience far more in the direction you want them to go.

HINTS TO HELP YOU DO IT

What people often find when they leave the notes behind is that it's easier and more liberating than they thought.

But you don't have to go completely down the Milliband route, to gain a benefit.

You can make a big difference by just using fewer notes - and often less obvious notes.

Rather than holding large pieces of paper, a tiny card in your hand to remind you of your main points tends to be far more useful to you if you get lost, and allows you to connect much more clearly with your audience.

And if you are wedded to some notes, at least have points where you can depart from them.

One of the best times to do this is when you're telling a personal story.

Because you it happened to you, then it's imprinted on your mind and so much easier to tell without any prompts.

Being freed from the notes will allow you to sound more naturally conversational.

And it will allow you to keep eye contact with your audience which underlines the point that your speech is really for them.


TRY IT YOURSELF

While you can spend a lifetime to taking your speaking skills to a higher level - and become ever less reliant on notes along the way - most people can make a transformational difference to their presentations in a very short space of time.

It's a distinctly learnable skill.

A couple of half-day sessions or a full day dedicated to training for it typically makes a big difference to people's performance and confidence.

It allows you also to know what to leave in and what to leave out - and how to structure your speech for maximum effect.

It can make your pitches for business far more persuasive.

Michael Dodd Communications runs bespoke presentation training sessions inside organisations - in boardrooms, hotels and conference centres.

There's also an open session of "Presenting with Confidence, Impact and Pizzazz" coming up on 5 December.

And if it's the killer questions you might get during and after your talk that put you on edge, there's an open session of "Giving Great Answers To Tough Questions" on 30 November.

The early bird offer on both these Central London sessions at: 


THE NEW AFTER DINNER SPEECH

Why is this strange character being photographed outside a McDonalds?

McDonalds in Budapest 2012
McDonalds in Budapest 2012

And surely, as it's in the magnificent city of Budapest, there are more impressive things to picture than a fast food restaurant!

Well every picture tells a story, and this is to illustrate one of the more bizarre elements of my new after dinner speech called "Tales and Tips From Six Continents".

I made my first visit to Budapest in 1988 - just before the anti-communist revolutions swept across Eastern Europe the following year.

But in Hungary they had embarked on their own economic revolution even before the communists were thrown out.

Taking advantage of the more enlightened approach to governing by the then Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev, some of Hungary's leaders were pushing to see what they could get away in terms of economic liberalization.

And what they managed to do took them far beyond anything that was happening inside Mr Gorbachev's own country at the time.

I remember doing an interview in Budapest with the economic advisor to the prime minister who was vehemently in favour of free market forces - to the extent that would have made the then British prime minister Margaret Thatcher proud.

One of the signs of this was that when I arrived in Budapest the first McDonalds in the communist bloc had just opened amidst much excitement. 
McDonalds
McDonalds in Budapest 1988
It seems crazy now, but people would queue for hours in Hungary get hold of a Big
Mac - and to get a taste of America which for so long they'd been told was such an evil place.

On my recent trip to Budapest it was fascinating to talk to those Hungarians who remembered the amazing moment of their first McDonalds visit back in the days when communism was being challenged.

But the early-starting revolution in Hungary wasn't entirely smooth.

There was still resistance from the secret police whose job it was to do whatever it took to keep the old-style regime in place.

While I was interviewing dissidents in Hungary in 1988 the secret police made their presence felt in one particular interview with a young female environmental activist.

Ecological campaigners were regarded by the old-style communist authorities as being a particularly sinister threat - as they opposed the production-at-all-cost mentality which was causing massive water and air pollution throughout the communist bloc.

I was conducting the interview in a quiet spot in a major western-style hotel in the Budapest city centre when a man emerged beside us heckling the environmentalist, snarling repeatedly in broken English "You are nothing, you are nothing".

At first I thought he was drunk, but as the tirade continued it became clearer that he wasn't.

To her huge credit, the environmentalist refused to be intimidated, and insisted that we continue the interview regardless.

It felt at times as if the harassment might turn physical.

But never did.

My interviewee said the secret police constantly sought to disrupt the environmentalists' efforts - and she was determined not to give in to them.

And she didn't.

Eventually the man gave up and left...though goodness knows what he wrote on her file.

It's these and other stories from my time reporting and speaking on six continents that makes up my new after dinner speech.

But I'm afraid that there are no stories from the seventh continent - Antactica.

At least not yet.

So if you want colourful tales about penguins on ice for your after-dinner entertainment, you'll have to look elsewhere.

Keep smiling,

Michael

Monday 1 October 2012

WHAT TO SAY IF YOU DON'T KNOW THE ANSWER

David Cameron has earned himself a series of unflattering headlines after failing to answer a couple of quiz questions on American TV.

Mr Cameron - perhaps bravely, perhaps unwisely - agreed to become the first serving British Prime Minister to appear on the largely comedy-focused Late Show during a visit to New York.

Now having watched the whole of his appearance, contrary to the headlines, it's fair to say that overall he did pretty well - and certainly avoided the biggest potential trap of taking himself too seriously in front viewers mainly looking for laughs.

And as you might expect, on the occasional serious topics David Cameron was able to give some easy-to-follow answers to explain some of the finer points of the United Kingdom to a less than totally clued-up audience across the Atlantic.

But the news media - being highly selective as they typically are - focused on those moments when he was completely stumped by host David Letterman's quiz questions.

Cameron vs. Letterman  
  
First up, Cameron didn't know who composed Rule Britannia (understandably not being too familiar with the less-than-famous Thomas Arne).

Then he couldn't give the translation of "Magna Carta" - a rather bigger crime for someone who presumably studied Latin at Eton.

To his credit, Mr Cameron did make some self-deprecating remarks while admitting he didn't know the answers - the most drastic being "I've ended my career on your show".

But he allowed himself to be portrayed looking far sillier than he needed to.

There's a useful formula which anyone can use when being asked a question where you don't know the answer.

Mr Cameron got the first bit right: admit you don't know. This is far safer than bluffing.

But he didn't follow the essential next steps.

The second step is to briefly, and without being defensive, explain why you don't know.

"Well of course I'm only the prime minister, not the British historian-in-chief," would have been fine for the Magna Carta question.

The third step is then to gently move the conversation onwards so that you say something on the same topic that you do know.

The full Cameron-Letterman interview is here on Youtube:

David Cameron On Letterman Full Interview (The Late Show 26-9-12).

If you watch it you'll see that the prime minister had earlier in the interview demonstrated he knew quite a bit about the historic document, including the fact that it was signed in 1215.

So all Mr Cameron needed to do was to move on and explain a little more about the significance of the Magna Carta for Britain, and the world.

This would have made a far more impressive conclusion to his response and would have enabled him to avoid being hit by such Letterman barbs as "it would be good if you knew this" which were fired off during the embarrassing prime ministerial silences.

The trick is that once you've dealt with a pesky question by saying you can't answer and explaining why, then you're perfectly within your conversational rights to add something you do know on the subject.

If you get this right you'll look far more authoritative and in control than David Cameron managed.

AND YOU CAN DO IT YOURSELF

Training to utilise this and other techniques is what we work on during my
"Giving Great Answers To Tough Questions" sessions.

These sessions can be run as keynotes at conferences or as workshops inside your organisation.

They deal with tough questions from potential and existing customers, financiers, shareholders, public inquiries and the media.

And there's an open session starting on the morning of Friday 30 November in Central London.

In the afternoon of same day there's an open session of "Perfecting Your Elevator Pitch".

This enables your business introductions become more powerful, effective and memorable when talking about what you do in formal and informal circumstances.

It boosts your performance in conversations with new prospects, chance encounters in lifts and in those tricky 60-second pitches at networking meetings.

And on Wednesday 5 December there's the opportunity to take part in the open master class on "Presenting with Confidence, Impact and Pizzazz".

This shows how to grab and hold audience attention - and boost your presentation content, structure and performance.

All three sessions allow participants to feel more confident when in the spotlight.

Details of the early bird offer and booking arrangements are at: http://www.michaeldoddcommunications.com/presentation_training.php

Or you can book your place by emailing enquiries@michaeldoddcommunications.com
UNITED NATIONS - THE NEXT MISSION

It's been great to work over the past couple of weeks with United Nations officials based across the world - including some of the most troublesome of trouble spots.

These dedicated people have to be ready to stand up to tough questions from CNN, the BBC, Al Jazeera and others in some of the most difficult circumstances you can imagine.

As luck would have it, the training itself was done under rather easier conditions than their normal working environments.

We ran sessions beside the Danube in glorious Budapest.  
Budapest 2012
Photo credit: York Smith
And training by the shores of Lake Geneva...allowing for a post-training excursion into the Alps.
Mount Blanc
Photo credit: Rick Ives

But it's not always so luxurious - for them or for me.

Word has come through that my next training UN mission is in Iraq...yes, really.
But before you panic and think your next training course with me will be the last, the good news is the sessions we're running there are in what's described as the relative safe zone of Erbil in Northern Iraq.

Nonetheless, advice on security matters from any reader who has been there of late would be most welcome.

MADAM BECKY FAILS TO SPANK SPEAKERS

The story about ex-brothel owner, Madam Becky, in the last issue of this newsletter generated more reaction than any other item this year.

(This clearly says something about some of the readers I manage to attract!)

You'll recall that Madam Becky was taking on me and my fellow speakers in a bid to become the UK Business Speaker of the Year 2012.

Madam Becky  

Madam Becky was promising to enthrall us all by showing how the principles she utilised to build up the profitability of her prostitution operations could be applied to other aspects of business.

Well to the disappointment of almost all, alas Madam Becky failed to show up when the rest of the two-dozen qualifying speakers gathered in Southampton for the finals.

So our fears that Madam Becky would give us all a right spanking because of her more wide-ranging worldly experience failed to materialize.

(However I have a suspicion that the sponsors of the contest may have been a touch relieved at her non-appearance.)

The judges then had the rather less exciting task of interviewing the rest of us throughout the day.

They had to gauge our speaking prowess in X-Factor style auditions to decide who should be selected to give their speeches in front of the live audience.

At the end of their interviews, the judges whittled the survivor list down to a final nine.
So it was a privilege to be selected amongst this group to convey our inspirational business message to the audience.
There was a fascinating collection of speeches, with the winner being Richard Watts for a very polished performance entitled "The Morale Factor".

So hearty congratulations to him.

Richard argued persuasively that rather than squeezing suppliers, business leaders should concentrate their efforts on rewarding those they worked with...including sometimes giving them a big hug.

Meanwhile one can only wait breathlessly to see whether Madam Becky will titillate the judges with an appearance next year.

One can imagine that until then, Madam Becky may be acting on Richard's advice and giving all those she interacts with a big hug.

DODD COMMUNICATION-BOOSTING SERVICES

Meanwhile, if you decide against having Madam Becky at your next conference, and you need a to transform your people into inspirational business communicators click here:

If you need to know how to perform at your peak in media interviews with the local newspaper, the TV news or anywhere in between then click here: 
  
And if you need a comprehensive communications-boosting programme for your key people click here: 



CHRISTMAS 2012 COMES EARLY

Ever since I can remember, it's been said that commercial activity for Christmas starts earlier each year.

In Manchester in 2012 this is certainly the case.

At a training gig near the Manchester United Stadium in Salford, the Beefeater restaurant has already begun the festivities - as I found when I had breakfast there.

In case no one believes me, here's a diner holding a 24 September 2012 copy of The Telegraph to prove that it really is up.  
Christmas 2012
Picture Credit: Jonathan Brind
The presence of the tree is part of a promotion to get you to book there for Christmas dinner - more than three months before the big day.

So in case I forget to say it in December...

Happy Christmas,

Michael