Messaging is an essential tool to powering up your professional communications. In this week’s episode of “Power Presenting”, host Aileen Pincus of the Pincus Group talks about messaging, what it is and is NOT, and the value it provides your professional reputation.
Welcome to Presenting With Power and I’m your host: Aileen Pincus.
Have you ever been in the audience, at a meeting, or listening to a briefing and found yourself wondering: What’s The Point as the speaker drones on? It’s not uncommon. You probably were listening to someone who didn’t understand the assignment. The assignment for ANYONE doing to the talking in these settings is to supply the SO WHAT…and to do it quickly. The longer you spend leading up to your point, the harder it will be for your audience to stay tuned for your supporting information and detail.
That SO WHAT are your messages. Now in my practice, the number one challenge we see with executives speaking or presenting in these professional settings is understanding what a message is. Messages are your bottom line; the thing you want your audience to take away after listening to you. Sure, there’ll be more information than that you’re going to supply them—but all of those things should be in support of a few key messages.
That’s because in oral communication, you’re going to lose some of your audience if you don’t make it clear from the get-go that you’re giving your audience something worth listening to. Before you can get someone to understand the action you want to take, or the problem you’re laying out, or agree to support a conclusion, you’ll need to first give them the SO WHAT.
Messages must be short, powerful and clear in order to be persuasive. And they have to mean something to your listeners. If you say something like ” I wanted to go over the budget with you today so let’s get started and I’ll leave time for questions at the end”…. that’s a factual statement about the agenda but it isn’t a message. If you instead say, “Our budget is right on track, but there are a few issues I want to bring to your attention and get your thoughts on” we’re getting a lot closer. Now if you say, “The good news is our budget is right on track. I did identify two areas we need to watch however, and I’m going to ask for your support for a simple fix to make sure we continue to stay on track”, you’ve got something. Now your audience knows exactly what they’re about to hear, how it involves them, and an idea of what you’re bringing to this process.
Think about this: When your audience leaves the room after listening to you, bumps into someone who says, ‘what was that about’? What does your audience member say? If your listener says “oh it was just a status update—you didn’t miss anything,” you as the speaker have missed an opportunity. Now if instead they say, we had some forecasting problems Jane caught but otherwise, looks like the budget is on track”, you’ve succeeded in messaging that’s going to enlighten your audience AND elevate your value in an organization.
This is especially true if you’re briefing someone else on a situation. The last thing that decision maker wants from you is a hit list of everything you understand and did on any given problem. What they want is ONLY that information that they NEED to know or act on and what your take is on the situation. Let that person dictate how much additional detail or supporting information they need.
Messages are a way of organizing any presentation or remarks you make, formal or informal. If you know the bottom line “so what”…your “takeaways”, you then can figure out what additional information you need to include for your audience to understand those points and to be convinced.
Getting the SO WHAT: The Power of Messaging
- Post author:aileen
- Post published:October 18, 2022
- Post category:Presentation Training / Speech/Presentation Training / The Price of Business Show
- Post comments:0 Comments