|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
To develop and deliver a great Leadership Talk, you must understand that every Talk has three important parts. (1) Audience Needs. (2) Strong Belief. (3) Action.
(1) Audience needs: The first step in putting together a Leadership Talk is to understand the needs of your audience. As I explained in Part Two, they cannot be ordered to be your cause leaders. Their commitment is one of free choice. They will not make that choice unless they believe that their being your cause leaders will in some way help solve the problems of their (not your) needs.
All needs are problems. All problems are crying out for solutions. When you are helping them with those solutions, you are a long way down the road of motivating them to make the choice to be your cause leaders.
When you answer these questions, you have a good idea what their needs are. (1) What is changing for them? (2) Who would they rather have leading them besides you? (3) What action do they want to take? (4) What do they feel? (5) What do they fear? (6) What's their major problem? (7) What makes them angry? (8) What do they dream?
(2) Strong belief: Knowing your audience's needs is important, but it's only the first step in developing a Leadership Talk. The next step involves strong belief, not just your belief but theirs. Clearly, you must believe in the cause. But your belief is irrelevant. After all, if you didn't believe in the cause, you shouldn't be leading it. The key question is can you transfer your belief to them so that they believe in it as strongly as you do and will commit to becoming your cause leaders?
As I explained in Part Two, you are asking people to take leadership for your cause. Taking leadership is a special undertaking, calling for a special commitment. People will not undertake leadership lightly. It is not your choice for them to take leadership. It is their choice. And to weigh the pros and cons of that choice, they want to know two things: who you are and why you are there.
You must tell them or they will tell you. And if they tell you, you may not like what they say.
As to who you are: In their eyes, who you are involves your knowledge/skills as to meeting the challenges of the cause and your commitment to that cause. If they perceive that you have weak knowledge/skills and/or weak commitment, they'll peg you as unworthy and maybe worse, untrustworthy.
As to you why you are there. There is only one answer to why you are there: They must know that you are there to help them solve the problems of their needs.
Without communicating strong belief on both counts, who you are and why you are there, you cannot give a Leadership Talk to motivate them to be your cause leader.
(3) Action. It's not so much what you say that's important when giving a Leadership Talk, it's what the audience does after you have had your say. The function of The Leadership Talk is to have people take action that gets results -- and more results than simply average results, more results faster, and "more faster" on a continual basis.
Once you begin to see your leadership interactions in terms of physical action, you'll see your leadership, and the way you get results, in fresh ways. Challenge your cause leaders to take physical action by asking them, 'What three or four leadership actions, PHYSICAL ACTIONS, will you take to achieve the results we need?'
Having people move from simply saying they will do things to actually taking the physical action to do them will dramatically increase the effectiveness of your Talk.
I've been teaching the Leadership Talk to thousands of leaders worldwide during the past 21 years. Many of them have found that the difference between the Leadership Talk and presentations/speeches is the difference between typewriters and wordprocessors. I remember using a typewriter. I was happy using it. I had no idea that I needed a wordprocessor. But when I bought a wordprocessor and went through the trouble of learning how to use it, I saw how badly I had needed it all along. I saw that it was a quantum leap in terms of speed, efficiency, and productivity over a typewriter. So it is with the Leadership Talk and presentations/speeches. Once you go through the trouble of learning how to use Leadership Talks then applying them consistently on a daily basis, you will find they can transform your leadership effectiveness and boost your career in ways presentations and speeches could never do.
Such transformations won't happen immediately. It will take you awhile to learn the processes and be comfortable using them. Since you're not in one of my seminars, where the participants learn tested processes to create and deliver Leadership Talks in a relatively short period of time, you'll have to rely on putting them together piecemeal.
But in these initial stages of developing and delivering Leadership Talks, putting them together piecemeal is an effective way of beating the learning curve. After all, leadership is long and careers are short. You are not learning to give Leadership Talks as a short term endeavor. It should be a career-endeavor. Step by step, be constantly aware of the three triggers, Need, Belief, Action. Speak from and to those triggers. You may discover that giving Leadership Talks consistently is the best thing that ever happened to your career.
2005 © The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
PERMISSION TO REPUBLISH: This article may be republished in newsletters and on web sites provided attribution is provided to the author, and it appears with the included copyright, resource box and live web site link. Email notice of intent to publish is appreciated but not required: mail to: brent@actionleadership.com
The author of 23 books, Brent Filson's recent books are, THE LEADERSHIP TALK: THE GREATEST LEADERSHIP TOOL and 101 WAYS TO GIVE GREAT LEADERSHIP TALKS. He is founder and president of The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. ? and for more than 20 years has been helping leaders of top companies worldwide get audacious results. Sign up for his free leadership e-zine and get a free white paper: "49 Ways To Turn Action Into Results," at http://www.actionleadership.com. For more on the Leadership Talk: http://www.theleadershiptalk.com
Wind Chimes and more... Did you know that maintenance accounts for 50% to 80%... Read More Everyone wants to succeed yet everyone has a different perception... Read More In these days of restricted head count and tight budgets,... Read More Companies are welcoming a diverse range of employees (The Sunday... Read More We draw conclusions about people through observation, their behavior, past... Read More I recently surveyed CEOs and Business Leaders of large companies... Read More You can use this step-by-step method to hire applicants who... Read More This article relates to the Training competency, commonly evaluated in... Read More Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More As your website grows in terms of attracting more footfalls,... Read More I hear many complaints daily about the "unfairness" of politics... Read More Some say that in business as in sex: if it... Read More Motivation is a term that is so widely used, yet... Read More Are you uncomfortable with delivering disciplinary action, even involving employees... Read More Working virtually adds a whole new dimension to the phrase... Read More In his book, The Effective Executive, Peter Drucker pointed out... Read More Check Out Your E-HabitsAnother week has ended. And, despite moving... Read More I have always said that if I were to write... Read More There is a new trend taking hold in business today... Read More People want to understand their role - they want to... Read More Workplace diversity refers to the variety of differences between people... Read More How do you as a manager, supervisor or team leader... Read More Results of Poor Cross Cultural Awareness. Having a poor understanding... Read More To a narcissist-employer, the members of his "staff" are Secondary... Read More The other day someone asked me for one of my... Read More
Windchimes
for great gifts!
Forecasting Support Costs
Leadership: Stoking The Success Train
To Outsource or Not to Outsource
Innovation Management ? Diversity Can Make All The Difference
Making Assumptions - A Critical Communication Mistake In Business And In Your Personal Life!
Where Else in Your Business Do You Accept a 60% Failure Rate?
7 Steps To Hire The Best
Tales from the Corporate Frontlines: Ideas for Everyday Training
Business Innovation ? Tacit Knowledge
Let the Professionals Help You Out - Outsource
The Fairness of Office Politics... Integrity and Political Motivation!
Lets Flourish and Prosper!
The New Five Truths of Employee Motivation
Employee Discipline: How to Nip Problems in the Bud
Cultural Differences: Making it Work Virtually
What Every Manager Should Know About How to Become An Effective Executive
Operating on Perpetual Overload?
Power of Pinpointing Accountability
Bosses Are Out ? Managers As Coaches Are In
Performance Expectations - 5 Tips and 5 Questions
Diversity in the Workplace: Benefits, Challenges and Solutions
Hire Winners: Ask the Right Questions
Results of Poor Cross Cultural Awareness
The Narcissist in the Workplace
Are Your Marketing Pieces Up to Date?
A good consultant provides specialist abilities and experience, innovative ideas,... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More
Whether you choose to do your own books and accounting... Read More
IntroductionWhen Alex Osborn invented the creativity technique called brainstorming, I... Read More
Is building your own inventory management solution really your best... Read More
As an HR professional, you have responsibilities in several broad... Read More
Are you NICE or do you CARE? ... Read More
Wouldn't it be great if we got get the cheapest... Read More
When executives see themselves as solely responsible for the overall... Read More
In my work with business executives, I have come to... Read More
Here are some quick thoughts on ways to turn things... Read More
Left alone it doesn't take long for a building with... Read More
Once upon a time there lived an innocent, hardworking manager.... Read More
Facilitating good communication can make the difference between a well... Read More
Acknowledgement is about recognition or attention from another person. It... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More
Out of the box thinking is a popular fad today.... Read More
Project heroes. We've all heard of them. Some of us... Read More
October 2004 saw the introduction of the Employment Act 2002,... Read More
Why are people changing jobs so quickly these days?Here are... Read More
Quick, Easy, and Even Fun! 1. Smile, say "Hi! How... Read More
I believe that whether corporations expense their stock options is... Read More
What is the number one way to prevent failure in... Read More
As a business owner, time is of the essence. Running... Read More
The Security Consultant's Perspective...Implementing Personnel Security Initiatives should be the... Read More
Business Management |