วันศุกร์ที่ 2 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2555

group Speaking - Knowing When to Stop! Part Ii

Masters of the Pause

When you pause, you produce the pace from the starting of your talk. You let the audience know that the data is going to be coming at them at a pace that they can handle. You let them know right up front that you will be delivering your story in the form of a newspaper - not a textbook.

John F Kennedy Quotes

So to put the process all together, speaking properly is about is finding one person, giving one thought, and then taking one pause. One pause long adequate for them to ingest the last thing you said, reference it and catalog it, before you ask them to open up to new information.

group Speaking - Knowing When to Stop! Part Ii

A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House Best

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A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House Overview

As special assistant to the president, Arthur Schlesinger witnessed firsthand the politics and personalities that influenced the now legendary Kennedy administration. Schlesinger’s close relationship with JFK, as a politician and as a friend, has resulted in this authoritative yet intimate account in which the president “walks through the pages, from first to last, alert, alive, amused and amusing” (John Kenneth Galbraith). A THOUSAND DAYS is “at once a masterly literary achievement and a work of major historical significance” (New York Times).


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One person, one thought, one pause.

When you engage these behaviors, you will find that your association with the audience changes in many ways. Not only does the group dynamic change, but also the types of feedback you get from the group, because in many cases, you'll find habitancy in the audience who've been through lifetimes of presentations and never felt engaged at that same level.

When you expert Lock, Talk, & (especially) Pause, what you find is that habitancy truly come up to you at the end of the meeting say things like, "You know, Jane, I've heard this data before, but nobody's ever explained it in quite the same way. Somehow, you made it all understandable". Or, "Somehow, I felt that you truly cared about my insight what you had to say. This was a great presentation". That "somehow" was your giving them the capability to truly hear what you said.

The clear feedback you'll get is a good thing, too, because the more of it you get, the more it will reinforce your desire to hone The Skills every time you speak. And you will get a exiguous bit great every time you do. In fact, speaking well is a lifelong process - but one that just keeps on getting great as long as you do it.

Mark Twain gets a lot of quotes attributed to him that he never said, but one of the things he did say was:

"The right word may be effective, but no word was ever as sufficient as a rightly timed pause".
Way back then, Mark Twain knew good old Rule #3, that habitancy only start listening when you stop talking.

The Great One

When we ask our on-site participants to name the someone they reconsider to be the most sufficient speaker in group life today, Bill Clinton is the name that most often rises to the top. habitancy think of Bill Clinton, regardless of his politics (which we won't discuss here) as a great group speaker. And the reality is Bill Clinton was some poor kid from Arkansas who made it to a pretty high office because one thing he figured out how to do is speak.

Bill Clinton is opinion of as a great speaker for good reason. Bill Clinton is the expert of the Pause. There's no speaker today who knows more about how to get a message over by saying a few words and then pausing to let it sink in. In fact, Bill Clinton probably says fewer words in the middle of pauses than any other politician. [Editor's note: Barack Obama is fast on his heals, but still has a ways to go before he can steal the mantle. We think history will weigh in on this in time.]

When you listen to Clinton speak, you find yourself not just hearing what he just said, but also waiting in prospect for his next words. And that is the second think that the pause is so vital. When you don't give the audience frequent breaks in the stream of your words, important on their minds is when you are going to stop talking so their brains can have a rest.

But when you fill your stream of thoughts with opportunities for them to rest in the middle of each one, you will find your audience truly waiting to hear your next words. They are primed to listen, so the impact of the words when they do arrive is much, much greater.

Bill Clinton learned The Skills, and learned how to be a master, by listening to his hero in life - John F. Kennedy. coming up, you will hear for yourself how each of these masters deliver their words not to hear themselves speak, but with their audience's capability to hear and realize important in mind.

Bill Clinton is an sufficient speaker because he gives everybody in the audience all the time each needs to discharge what he said before he asks them to pick up on the next thing he's going to say. He gives them the time to discharge it, process it, and form a clear photo of the words before he asks them to take in new information.

Bill Clinton, and Jack Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan and Martin Luther King and just about anyone that has ever truly moved you by their style of speaking all know one thing: the most sufficient thing you can do when you speak is to Not.

group Speaking - Knowing When to Stop! Part IiDiversity Video | Diversity Meeting Opener | Great Minds on Respect, Tolerance & Diversity Video Clips. Duration : 3.22 Mins.


Inspiring quotes from some of historys greatest leaders set to dramatic music and coupled with classic footage. Let the likes of John F. Kennedy, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. inspire and motivate you through their own words, pictures and video. A great way to start any meeting or training session, the Great Minds will put your group in the right frame of mind for success. This DVD video contains quotes from Mark Twain, Mahatma Gandhi, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Albert Einstein, James Ellison, Franklin Thomas, Sandra Day O'Connor, Jimmy Carter, Mother Teresa, John F. Kennedy, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Ralph Waldo Emerson. www.trainingabc.com

Tags: diversity, respect, meeting, opener, tolerance

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