This content will enable you to lead the conversation, aligned with the purpose at different stages of the Presentation or Meeting to accomplish the main Goal.
The Content is divided into section & it's totally customized content as per the requirement of the all organizations.
This content will tell you What, Why & How of Purpose driven communication along with it's benefits.
In most of the cases People use to communicate without knowing the Purpose exactly. They just communicate not converse to listen & understand other party's point of view.
3. Know your why
Importance of aligning the purpose
with communication
Benefits of the same
Answer to the question – HOW
Common mistakes while communicating
4.
5. Purpose Clarity
Key Statements to Lead
Communicate to Your Brain First
Identify The Hurdles
Fight of RIGHT with RIGHT
3 Steps Ahead Approach
Spell Bound Context Setting
6. Communication Style & Approach
Confident Body Language
Soulful Pitching
Remember The Best Pitch ! You Ever Had
What Matters The Most (Other’s Purpose)
Be The Complement
Put On Your “Real Person” Hat
Manage Your Anxiety
7. View presentation as a conversation, not a performance!
Performance has right and wrong rules, but conversation is
more natural. There is no “one right way” to converse.
8. Your fundamental job as a communicator is to be
in service of the audience. Understand their needs
by listening.
Reinforce. It isn’t enough to explain the connection between your company’s purpose and its strategy — and between that strategy and its execution — once. You’ll need to repeat the message in order to increase understanding, instill belief and lead to true change overtime.
Greet/Acknowledge Anxiety. Acknowledge your anxiety first to stem the tide of anxiety spiraling out of control.
Reframe how you see the situation: View presentation as a conversation, not a performance! Performance has right and wrong rules, but conversation is more natural. There is no “one right way” to converse.
How to reframe the situation?
Start with questions. Questions are dialogic (Two way). They get the audience involved, as if in conversation.
Use conversational language. Many nervous speakers distance themselves conversationally with pronouns they use.
Be present-oriented: Focus on the present, not future consequences. Don’t anticipate what to say. Try tongue twisters.
Warm up your voice: Most nervous speakers don’t warm up their voice. They retreat into their heads.
Ask Yourself, “What Does My Audience Need to Hear From Me?”