I plan on talking about this more later, but I wanted to post this now because it is a historic speech and a historic moment in the recent U.S. History. What did you think of his speech?
I plan on talking about this more later, but I wanted to post this now because it is a historic speech and a historic moment in the recent U.S. History. What did you think of his speech?
Posted by Travis Dahle on Monday, May 02, 2011 at 09:17 AM in President Obama | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Last week President Obama gave his second State of the Union. Instead of talking about the politics in his speech, I wanted to touch on the idea of expectations.
Expectations can be both a good thing and a bad thing. If people have an expectation that you are a good speaker, they are more likely to listen to what you have to say and will want to see you speak. This usually comes with you being an effective speaker, so that means that you are a good speaker and people want to listen. However, the problem is that if you don't meet those expectations, people are going to walk away feeling disapointed.
This is how I felt during the SOTU. I have high expectations of President Obama's oration ability. He has consistently shown his powerful and engaging speaking style during his 2008 campaign and in his speeches since then. However, he did not come close to that in this speech.
So what can we learn from this? Make sure that you know what your audiences expectations are of you and work on meeting that expectation. If you don't, be prepared for people to be somewhat disappointed. When that happens, it could decrease the effectiveness of your speech.
There are several lessons we can learn beyond this, which I will be looking at in February's newsletter.
Posted by Travis Dahle on Monday, January 31, 2011 at 08:50 AM in Communication, Obama, President Obama, Public Speaking | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Two years ago I wanted to have a website up where I could talk about my ideas regarding communication. I've had a lot of ideas over those past two years and it is time for another year in review.
If you want a quick run-down of my thoughts on communication, you can take the abridged version and check out last years top posts list and then check out this years.
There were a lot of issues that I looked at over the past year, but these were my favorite:
Get off line to get some perspective - and work done. - Do we all spend far too much time on-line these days? It seems that sometimes we are so focused on keeping up to date with Twitter and Facebook that it kills some of our focus. I was off-line during the day for several days in a row and I got a lot accomplished in that time.
Is President Obama Speaking Too Much? - While I do think President Obama is a great public speaker, he seems to be on TV all of the time. At a certain point, saturation can get overwhelming - causing your effectiveness to decrease. In fact, the Decker blog once again put Obama on the top 10 worst speakers in 2010.
100 Posts! What's our focus been? - This was a fun post looking at what I had been talking about with my 100 posts since I had started my blog. Using Wordle to see what I was talking about was a great way to make sure I was focusing on the right things.
Are Super Bowl Ads Worth the Cost? Maybe, but what can we learn from them? - Super Bowl ads almost always have some very memorable ads each year. Is it worth the money spent? It depends on how effective it is.
Avoid making the big mistakes - what the Minnesota Vikings can teach us about public speaking - Being from South Dakota, I am surrounded by Vikings fans and saw the devastation of the fans when they lost the NFC championship game to the Saints. However, the mistakes that the Vikings made can also teach us a thing or two about presentations
Sherlock Holmes, Guy Ritchie, Robert Downey Jr. and Style. - I loved the new Sherlock Holmes movie directed by Guy Ritchie and starting Robert Downey Jr. The style that was used is a great example of how changing up a style is a good way to give some new life to an old presentation.
Educators need some new branding. - This one is a bit personal for me since I am in education and my daughter wants to be a teacher. However, I think it brings up some interesting points on what educators need to do if they are going to be respected.
I Hate Public Speaking song. - I found this song and a lot of people really seemed to like it, so I wanted to make sure to include it here as well.
Know who you are following on Twitter - don't just use Keywords. Being on Twitter, I am used to people just following you at random times. However, I got really annoyed one weekend when I was being followed by a lot of wedding people because I had posted a couple of comments about the wedding I was at - the following post was my response to those people.
Native American Day versus Columbus Day. - This is an issue that I feel strongly about. In South Dakota, we celebrate Native American Day - the other 49 states - Columbus Day. Once I learned the entire history of Columbus and his treatment of Native Americans when he reached the new world, my thoughts on this matter got even stronger. What are your thoughts?
Should Obama become the Hulk? - This relates mostly to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and how Obama was responding to it. Our body language and voice inflections tell us a lot about how we are thinking and feeling. A lot of people felt that Obama needed to be a lot angrier at BP and felt that his attitude was far too light.
Foursquare Badges Tell Stories - Which One is Another Story. - I use FourSquare and I remember the old foursquare game. The badges can tell some stories that might not be what you want to be told.
Posted by Travis Dahle on Tuesday, January 04, 2011 at 09:00 AM in Communication, Foursquare, Obama, Presentation Zen, Presentations, President Obama, Public Speaking, wordle | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Picture from Kathleen Dooher-AP, Washinton Post
This morning I awoke to the news that President Obama is going to nominate Solicitor General Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court. The biggest news from this announcement is that it will mark the first time in United States history that there will be three female justices serving on the bench at the same time.
However, what I am interested in is how he is going to use communication to get the confimation though. Using an effective communication strategy (better known as Public Relations) is key to winning the public vote, even if he doesn't get the Republican's vote.
Last year I noted that he was using a great story to paint Justice Sonia Sotomayor as the all-American tale of rising up from hard times to become a justice. It was a great story. Here is just a small part of the New York Times article that I quoted then:
Her up-by-the-bootstraps tale, an only-in-America story that in many ways mirrors Mr. Obama’s own, is one reason for her selection, and it is the animating characteristic of her approach to both life and the law.
It was well done and obviously successful since she was nominated. The question I have now is, will Obama learn from those hearings and once again focus on Kagen's story to gain public support? If he is smart he will. The story-telling that the Obama administration used last year was very effective.
As always, I have no idea if this person is qualified or not - I need to do some research before making that decision. However, I will be interested to see how the Obama administration appraches this issue, especially with the toxic environment that politics seems to be in since the health care debate and an upcoming election in November.
I'll try to keep a watch of the proceedings as they unfold and will continue to see how effective (or ineffective) their communication methods will be. However, in the opening article I am already starting to see a trend: serve das Dean of Harvard Law School and would make history by joining two other females on the court. However, the article was mostly focused on other issues that are not that condusive to telling a good story. Only time will tell if that is going to change.
Posted by Travis Dahle on Monday, May 10, 2010 at 08:30 AM in President Obama, Storytelling, Supreme Court | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
In 2008, then candidate Barack Obama revolutionized the way campaigns were done. His fundraising on-line, using his organization skills to create OFA (Obama For America - now known as Organizing For America) and his bevy of volunteers helped propel him to the Presidency. However, it was his speech making that defined him. He truly is a gifted speaker who is very comfortable getting in front of an audience and giving an impassioned speech. In 2008, Bert Decker had him as the top communicator in his annual best and worst communicators, Obama accepted the Democratic nomination for President in Denver at a football stadium in front of a massive audience and I was lucky enough to be one of the millions to watch him be sworn into office in January of 2009.
However, I think Obama is a little too comfortable speaking in front of an audience. To me, Obama is starting to hit the point of diminishing returns. For those who are not big into economics think of it this way: Let's say you can eat all of the donuts you want. The first one is pretty good - the second one, also good - the third one...well, it was okay - the fourth one you are done, no more please. Diminishing returns mean that after a while, you are no longer getting the same output value from the input. Let me put it this way: Obama's speeches can be very effective, but they are becoming watered down because he is speaking so much.
While I still feel that Obama is an effective speaker, he needs to realize that the power of his speeches are starting to diminish because he is speaking too much. People are starting to not pay attention because they figure they have already heard it and he's just going to repeat himself.
What are your thoughts? Is he speaking too much? Is he doing it out of necessity? Should he decrease his speeches or keep them they same?
Posted by Travis Dahle on Tuesday, March 16, 2010 at 08:09 AM in Obama, President Obama, Public Speaking | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
There are many people in the communication field that have talked about the importance of telling a compelling story when giving a speech. Duarte Design, Bert Decker, Garr Reynolds, Guy Kawasaki, and Dr. Simon Raybould of Presentation Skills have all talked about the importance of telling a good story when giving a presentation or a speech.
She was “a child with
dreams,” as she once said, the little girl who learned at 8 that she had
diabetes, who lost her father when she was 9, who devoured Nancy Drew books and
spent Saturday nights playing bingo, marking the cards with chickpeas, in the squat
red brick housing projects of the East Bronx. She was the history major and Puerto Rican student
activist at Princeton who spent her first year
at that bastion of the Ivy League “too
intimidated to ask questions.” She was the tough-minded New York City prosecutor, and later the
corporate lawyer with the dazzling international clients. She was the federal
judge who “saved baseball” by siding with the players’ union during a strike. Now Sonia
Sotomayor —
a self-described “Nuyorican” whose mother, a nurse, and father, a factory worker,
left Puerto Rico during World War II — is President
Obama’s choice for the Supreme
Court, with a chance to make history as only the third woman and
first Hispanic to sit on the highest court in the land. Her
up-by-the-bootstraps tale, an only-in-America story that in many ways mirrors
Mr. Obama’s own, is one reason for her selection, and it is the animating
characteristic of her approach to both life and the law.
Posted by Travis Dahle on Thursday, May 28, 2009 at 05:22 PM in Communication, Current Affairs, Obama, ppt, Presentations, President Obama, Storytelling, Supreme Court, White House | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
When I was on the high school debate team, my partner and I were by far the most succesful team from our school during our junior and senior years. We may not have been the smartest people on our team, but we were the best debaters. The reason for this is simple: we could communicate our ideas and arguments more persuasively than our peers on the team. The lesson we learned was a simple one: while you want to be smart and knowledgeable, you also have to be able to communicate those ideas persuasively if you want to be effective. Unfortunately, Timothy Geithner didn't learn that lesson until recently.
Posted by Travis Dahle on Monday, March 30, 2009 at 09:17 AM in Communication, Current Affairs, High School Debate, Obama, Presentations, President Obama, White House | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Using images in your speeches and presentations is an important feature that can help you deliver your message in an effective manner. As the saying goes 'A picture is worth a thousand words.' However, you want to make sure that your image portrays the CORRECT image. As with most things, people can interpret the image or picture that you use in a different manner then you intended. If you haven't heard, the New York Post is experiencing some negative feedback from a cartoon that has been interpreted a lot differently than the cartoonists intended.
Posted by Travis Dahle on Thursday, February 19, 2009 at 09:06 AM in Advertising, Communication, Current Affairs, Obama, Presentations, President Obama | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
In my post titled "Solving Problems With Communication" I discussed how President Obama's interview with Al-Arabiya and his overtures to countries like Iran was a great move in regards to communication. Too many times we let our problems grow bigger and bigger because we just don't communicate with each other: in our personal lives and/or our professional lives. It now looks like Obama's communication is starting to pay off. Over the past few years, we have listened to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran call America "the great devil" among other names and watch as their nuclear capabilities have grown and grown and our influence in the middle-east drop and drop. According to an article from the International Herald Tribune, Ahmadinejad has stated that Iran is open to having some dialog with the United States now, mostly because of the way that President Obama has approached the situation.
Posted by Travis Dahle on Tuesday, February 10, 2009 at 10:49 AM in Communication, Current Affairs, Obama, President Obama, White House | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by Travis Dahle on Tuesday, February 03, 2009 at 08:52 AM in Branding, Communication, Current Affairs, Obama, Presentations, President Obama, Taxes, White House | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
President Obama's first interview after he was sworn into office was with the Al Arabiya channel with people have been calling "Muslim TV" (which personally I think is in bad taste, we don't call CBS 'Christian TV' or anything like that). This was a bold move for President Obama. This is not a political blog and I don't want to get into the politics of should he or shouldn't he and what impact it will have. From a communication aspect however it was a great move. Too many times the problems we have in our workplace, our home lives and between nations is that we just don't communicate effectively with each other. What President Obama did was reach out to the Arab community by granting them the first interview of his presidency. Doing this is going to give him some good will and will hopefully bring in more dialouge with countries that have not been too keen on listening to us.
Do you do that in your business? If you have had problems with a worker, a co-worker, a client or anyone else, do you reach out to them to try and solve the problem or do you let it simmer? This is why effectively communicating with people from the start is so important. We waste so much of our time trying to fix things that could have been prevented had we communicated our expectations from the beginning. Take a look in the mirror this week and see if you are communicating effectively in your job. If you are not, then think about what you need to do to improve it. Believe me, it can only help you.
Travis
Posted by Travis Dahle on Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 07:09 AM in Communication, Current Affairs, interview, Obama, President Obama, Television, White House, youtube | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (1)
Posted by Travis Dahle on Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 08:59 AM in Communication, Current Affairs, Obama, President Obama, press briefing, White House | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)