How to Speak Clearly & With Confidence | Matt Abrahams
By Andrew Huberman
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Avoid Memorizing Speeches**: Never memorize speeches because it burdens your cognitive load by constantly comparing what you planned to say against what you're actually saying; instead, use a roadmap, structure, and familiarity with key ideas, and rely on note cards for specific data to reduce the risk of blanking out. [03:21], [19:09] - **Lead with Questions for Poor Communicators**: To communicate with people who are not good at communicating, lead with questions to draw them out and get them talking about something important to them, then give them space to say more by saying 'tell me more,' as exemplified by the mother-in-law who made instant friends on flights using this technique. [28:43], [48:46] - **Object Relabeling Disrupts Judgment**: In the object relabeling exercise, point at objects and call them something they are not for 15 seconds to disrupt internal judgment and evaluation that hinders presence; a student once froze thinking he wasn't 'wrong enough,' illustrating how we all carry heuristics that lock us internally instead of allowing external connection. [09:05], [10:02] - **Lego Manuals Build Narrative Rhythm**: Lego manual designers treat instructions as a story with varying rhythms—mixing hard detailed steps, simpler ones, and faster moves—to build motivation and accomplishment, unlike uniform steps that lead to boredom; this emotional engagement principle applies to speeches by disrupting patterns to keep audiences hooked. [17:12], [18:22] - **Structure Information Logically**: Our brains struggle with lists but excel with logical structures like problem-solution-benefit or what-so-what-now-what, which connect ideas like a story with beginning, middle, and end; for instance, instead of listing tasks for a graduate student, structure as what to do, why it matters, and next steps for better understanding. [30:10], [31:15] - **Three-Pass Video Review for Feedback**: Record presentations and review three times: audio only to assess content and filler words, video only for body language and presence, then both together for overall impact; like a dentist visit, it's uncomfortable but reveals insights that improve communication, as the best teacher is watching yourself. [33:17], [33:52]
Topics Covered
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Full Transcript
Do you ever recommend people memorize speeches?
>> Never. The reason memorizing is so bad is it burdens your cognitive load.
You've created the right way to say it and you're constantly comparing what you wanted to say to what you're actually saying. So having a road map, having a
saying. So having a road map, having a structure, having some familiarity with some ideas are important. If there's
certain words that you really want to get across or certain data, have a note card, read it. I'd rather you do that than put the cognitive burden on yourself of memorizing. Several people
asked about how best to communicate with people who are not very good at communicating. I would encourage people
communicating. I would encourage people to lead with questions. Draw the other person out. Often if you can get them
person out. Often if you can get them talking about something that's important to them or connected to what you want, then you can engage in that conversation. So again, it's pre-work.
conversation. So again, it's pre-work.
It's thinking about what's of value.
Lead with questions and then as soon as the person responds, give them space to tell more. My mother-in-law had a black
tell more. My mother-in-law had a black belt in small talk. She was amazing. Uh
she was from the Midwest. Every time
she'd fly out to visit, she'd come off the plane with three new best friends.
And her secret, and you mentioned this earlier, were three words. Tell me more.
Once somebody answers a question, give them that space to say more. And that
really draws them out and gives you some ideas of what's important to them so you can latch on and talk about it more. So
lead with questions. Give space for more communication. That's how you draw
communication. That's how you draw somebody who might be reticent or not comfortable speaking. Welcome to the
comfortable speaking. Welcome to the Hubberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and opthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest
today is Matt Abrahams from Stanford Graduate School of Business. Matt is an expert in speaking and communication on stage, online, in person, and in all circumstances. During today's episode,
circumstances. During today's episode, we discuss how to become a better communicator. Everything from protocols
communicator. Everything from protocols that work to eliminate ums, how to deal with onstage fright, how to practice speaking more clearly, and equally important, how to remember important
facts and synthesize information that you learn from others. Humans are
extremely visual and we are extremely verbal, and what we hear sticks with us.
and how things are said matters tremendously too. We all register
tremendously too. We all register people's levels of confidence or anxiety when they speak and that determines what we remember and what we forget and also what we remember and forget about them.
During today's episode, Matt explains tools that have been proven to work that you can practice alone or that you can use in real time to improve your communication skills. He also explains
communication skills. He also explains what it really means to communicate authentically. We hear about
authentically. We hear about authenticity all the time, but Matt makes clear exactly what that is, how to tap into it and how to deliver information in your own unique voice. He
also offers great tools for when things go wrong, and how to recover from those situations with grace. Matt Abrahams is considered one of the foremost experts in communication, and I'm sure that
everyone, women, men, young, and old, will benefit from what he teaches today.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.
It is however part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science related tools to the general public. In
keeping with that theme, today's episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Matt Abrahams. Matt Abrahams welcome.
>> Thanks, Andrew. I'm thrilled to be here.
>> Teach us how to communicate better, but please do it in the context of not just public speaking, but one-on-one interactions, >> spontaneous interactions, as well as planned interactions.
Basically, I'm asking you to solve a number of problems that people have, but I think we often hear that one of the major fears people have is public speaking.
>> Yeah.
>> But I think it's highly contextual, right? Like when we think public
right? Like when we think public speaking, we think like being forced out on a stage to talk about a topic we don't know or something. But what do you think that fear of public speaking is really about? Is it the fear of being
really about? Is it the fear of being shamed? Of saying something stupid, of
shamed? Of saying something stupid, of like dissolving into a puddle of our own tears on stage? What is it? Because some
sense it's kind of illogical.
>> Well, those of us who study this believe it actually has an evolutionary basis.
That when our species was hanging around in groups of about 150 people, your relative status meant everything. And
I'm not talking about who has the fancy car or who gets the most likes on social media. It's who got access to resources,
media. It's who got access to resources, food, shelter, reproduction. And if you did something that put your status at risk, that could be really bad news for you. So those of us who study this
you. So those of us who study this believe it's ingrained in who we are to be very sensitive to anything that puts our status at risk. And that can be being up in front of a big crowd or
talking to my boss about an important issue. All of those put us at risk. We
issue. All of those put us at risk. We
often hear that what is being said is perhaps not as important as how it's being said, right?
>> The tamber of one's voice, the eye contact, the body language, etc. Whenever I hear that, I often think like it's kind of a skewed perspective. It's
got to be the the sum total of it all, right?
>> Yeah. Absolutely. I mean, what you say is really important. If it doesn't make sense, if it's not logical, if it's confusing, that puts you in a bad light.
But similarly, how you say it. If you're
confident, if you're upright, if you use a a strong voice, that matters, too. So
those of us who do what I do are really intent on helping people not only craft messages that are meaningful but to deliver them in a way that can actually be connected, authentic and and engaging. Both are important.
engaging. Both are important.
>> So when I think about online communications and in-person communications where somebody is on a stage and they're um selected to give talk about something and the expectation
is that they're going to engage us.
I like to think of this concept that a friend told me about of you know that the first thing we want to know as a as an audience member is you know has this
person earned the right to have my time.
So typically people will talk about their you know their titles and their experience and um and so how much of the the fear of public speaking do you think
comes from uh people's kind of need to uh kind of explain or justify that they've like earned the right to actually take your time and and and talk to you. You because you hear a lot of
to you. You because you hear a lot of filling of of credentials and things like that. Let me just um sort of
like that. Let me just um sort of counter that with the possibility that came to me which is that people don't want to hear that at all. They just want to hear what somebody has to say, >> right? And I I tend to agree with that.
>> right? And I I tend to agree with that.
I I coach my my students, the the the folks I work with in the corporate world that what's really important is connection. So, if you can show that you
connection. So, if you can show that you have some value to bring by getting people engaged with your topic and showing that there is relevance and salience for them, that's all that
really matters. Your credibility, while
really matters. Your credibility, while it informs what you say, doesn't need to be the first thing you say. I'm on a personal mission to stop presentations and meetings from starting with people just giving their credentials, telling
the titles of what they're saying. Get
us hooked. I tell people it's like an action movie. How does every action
action movie. How does every action movie you've ever seen start? With
action. Do something that engages the audience. I'm not saying crash a car and
audience. I'm not saying crash a car and jump out of a plane, but make a provocative statement. Ask a question.
provocative statement. Ask a question.
Give some interesting statistics. Show
what you're saying means for the people.
And then you're able to engage them in a dialogue and that's where connection happens. So credentiing is important but
happens. So credentiing is important but it doesn't happen right away. You
demonstrate your credibility. I I teach my students that there are two types of credibility. There's your career and
credibility. There's your career and college credibility. Something you'd see
college credibility. Something you'd see in your LinkedIn profile, your resume, and then what I call Costco credibility.
You know when you go to Costco, they give you free samples. You try it, you like it. Show people through the
like it. Show people through the questions you ask, through the engagement you have, through the relevance you bring. That's how you build credibility.
>> I totally agree. And this raises the issue not only of credibility but of authenticity. We hear so much about
authenticity. We hear so much about authenticity. Authenticity. And I've
authenticity. Authenticity. And I've
been thinking a lot about that recently.
What is this authenticity thing? Uh,
you know, in terms of people being able to tap into it. Um or maybe that runs counter to authenticity, like you're not supposed to tap into anything. You're
supposed to just be you.
>> Yeah. So I I think it comes down to really understanding what's important to you and what you stand for and coming from that place. So what does that mean?
That means when you're talking about anything on a big stage or in a one-on-one interaction, understanding where the value is for you and then articulating that in as clear a way as
possible. So just be
possible. So just be true to your beliefs, but you have to first understand and take the time to think about what those are. Many of us are nervous or so worried about getting
through all our material. We don't focus on coming from a firm, clear, connected place. So it really has to do with
place. So it really has to do with introspection first and then you convert that into something that's meaningful for the audience. That's what I think authenticity is.
>> Yeah. I feel like part of this um authenticity thing that we're exploring also has to do with the person delivering the information that they're doing it in a way where they are not
constantly monitoring what the audience thinks of them. This
seems to be like central to effective communication. uh that monitoring for
communication. uh that monitoring for one's performance, >> right, >> and other people's perception of them, trying to get a running score of how well they're doing is really runs
counter to effective communication.
>> Absolutely. 100%. It is the the more we are in our heads judging and evaluating, the more difficult it is to be present and connected to somebody. I do this activity in my class on the first day
that that really shows how in our heads we can get. I borrowed this from improvisation. I have my students stand
improvisation. I have my students stand up and for 15 seconds they just point at different objects in the room and the only rule is to call it something that it is not. So you point at the ceiling
and you call it a car. You point at the floor and you call it a calculator. And
for 15 seconds, this is very challenging. I had a student once who's
challenging. I had a student once who's pointing at a chair. Nothing's coming
out of his mouth. And I go up, I said, "What's going on?" He said, "I'm not being wrong enough." I gave no rubric, no no requirements. I said, "Tell me more." I said, "Well, I was going to
more." I said, "Well, I was going to call the chair a cat, but a cat has four legs and a chair has four legs. I'm not
being wrong enough." Sometimes a cat sits on a chair. I'm not being wrong enough. We are all on this continuum
enough. We are all on this continuum he's on judging and evaluating. He's
clearly several standard deviations away from most of us, but we all carry around this judgment in our head. And what it does is it locks us internally and not allows us to be external. So, you're
absolutely right. And when I'm focused on judging what I'm saying, I'm using precious cognitive bandwidth that I could be spending on making sure you clearly understand my message. This is
why memorizing what you're trying to say works against you because that precious cognitive bandwidth trying to get it right gets in the way of actually doing it. So we need to train ourselves to
it. So we need to train ourselves to understand that the magic of communication happens in the moment and not what's happening in your head before.
What a great exercise. Uh, do you recommend people do that on their own if they're >> As long as they're not driving and you know who's really good at it?
>> That's not a red light, that's a green light. Exactly. Um, it's a one children
light. Exactly. Um, it's a one children are fantastic at this because they don't have the inhibitions that that that we do. But anything that gets you to
do. But anything that gets you to disrupt the judgment and evaluation that you do can be really helpful.
>> So if just a simple game like that, other improv activities as well, it just gets you to see here's what I'm doing.
This is my pattern, my habit. It it
identifies the heristics that we carry around that actually get in the way of our communication.
>> Oh, that's so cool. I sometimes like to play the game that I played when I was a kid where you look at clouds and you try and see what they look like >> and it's so much fun
>> and it's a very childlike game, >> but it forces you to see clouds differently. Um the contours uh become
differently. Um the contours uh become certain things and then um it's interesting. It almost always if you do
interesting. It almost always if you do this with somebody else it's kind of fun to do. Um it gives way to narration
to do. Um it gives way to narration where it looks like one cloud is eating another cloud. You start creating this
another cloud. You start creating this narrative.
>> Yes.
>> Right. And um I did this recently with someone and it was it was a lot of fun.
>> Yeah.
>> And and then at some point you're like wow that really looks like and then you know whatever it was that that we happen to see. What I think enables that and
to see. What I think enables that and what allows you to have that fun is that you're suspending judgment for a little bit and you're just letting things flow freely. And it is in doing that that you
freely. And it is in doing that that you begin to build a confidence in what happens in the moment. A lot of my work recently has been on spontaneous speaking, speaking in the moment. And
you can actually prepare to be spontaneous. If you think of an athlete,
spontaneous. If you think of an athlete, they do a lot of drills and a lot of repetit repetitive motions. So when
they're in the game, they can respond appropriately. You can do the same thing
appropriately. You can do the same thing with your speaking. But part of it is that mindset you have to take. Get out
of your own way. See what happens in the moment. and that frees you up to do what
moment. and that frees you up to do what needs to be done when you're in that interaction.
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when I do public lectures like or when we do live events >> sometimes um do some crowd work >> where I'll just cold call for I usually ask for a body part and I'm always
afraid of like what body parts come >> and then I try and weave it to some real neuroscience or health related fact and it it's always a lot of fun but I I do it as a way to break up the um the
cadence >> sometimes I think the difficulty in public speaking comes from the fact that as we go out there, we we've done some preparation. Maybe maybe we've memorized
preparation. Maybe maybe we've memorized it. I I typically don't, but we have
it. I I typically don't, but we have some sense of what we're going to say, beginning, middle, end, etc. Uh what's on the slides, >> but that the the cadence can become so regular
>> that we lose people.
>> And breaking up that cadence can be helpful, I think. Um, and when I step back from public speaking experiences, both as a the speaker, but also as an audience member, I feel like there's a
almost a songike nature to a talk, >> right?
>> Where it has an opener and then it has a, you know, a quicker pace and then it repeats itself and it's got some melodies and rhythms. And I like to think that really effective podcasting,
not not to make ourselves conscious of uh of what we're doing here, has some of the same.
>> Yeah. I want to tell you a story that relates to that. But I at some point I'm going to shout out the word earlobe and I want to hear how you respond to that because I I just I I I'm amazed that you get up and ask people to call out body
parts. Uh I did some work uh when I was
parts. Uh I did some work uh when I was researching my recent book where I interviewed the gentleman who's in charge of all Lego manuals. Uh I don't
know if you've ever built Lego or not.
Yeah. Their manuals uh have no words.
>> And I was I've always been fascinated by it. In my class, I will do a lesson
it. In my class, I will do a lesson where I will bring in a Lego manual and an IKEA manual, which is their antithetical. And I have my students
antithetical. And I have my students just discuss communication as using these as two representations of ways to get information across. The gentleman
who runs that group shared with me that Lego manual designers see the manual as a story, as a narrative. All you're
doing is putting pieces together. But
what they found is if you put all the same steps in the same order, you can you could each step could be the same number of moves with the same number of pieces, people have a very different experience than if you give some moves
that have a lot of hard detailed work, some that are simpler, some that are faster. So that rhythm you're talking
faster. So that rhythm you're talking about builds that motivation, builds that sense of accomplishment. They're
looking to bring emotion into the act of building Lego models.
>> Wow.
>> Isn't that interesting? And and that just emphasizes what you were talking about.
>> Is it the Scandinavians that >> It's out of Denmark. Yeah.
>> Oh, okay. My stepmom will be very pleased that we're talking about Lego.
She's Danish.
>> Yeah.
>> Um >> Amazing.
>> Yeah. Isn't that fascinating? And if you can do it with a manual that has no words, that's just has you putting bricks together. Think about what you
bricks together. Think about what you could do in your communication one-on-one or one to many. What you're
talking about, the rhythm, the patterns, the pattern disruption, all of that can lead to that engagement. I think about the way that we learn things as kids like um the ABCs.
>> Yeah.
>> Not just a string of letters, but it has proidity, right? There's inflections and
proidity, right? There's inflections and um >> ABCD. Everyone knows that, right?
>> ABCD. Everyone knows that, right?
>> As opposed to just A B C D. Kids don't
learn that way.
>> Absolutely. And putting things to music, putting things visually are lots of ways to help you remember. These days we hear a lot about the fact that uh people want short form content.
>> Yes.
>> And yet people I can attest listen to long- form podcasts and are still doing that. So I have a theory that's not
that. So I have a theory that's not based on any data that I've seen that people need a lot of um updating of visual information nowadays. You know
they're they're scrolling Instagram, they're scrolling Tik Tok, they're they're updating ah I don't like this YouTube video, switching to another one very fast.
But with audio, long form continuous um presence of the same voices or voice works. It's very soothing and we get
works. It's very soothing and we get into a groove with that. And I actually played this game. I um decided to just listen to the audio coming through on Instagram reels and just flipped them
>> on and and by the fifth one, it was incredibly jarring. It's really
incredibly jarring. It's really disruptive. It's like who are these
disruptive. It's like who are these voices and how to these voices? But the
visuals are very easy to track.
>> Interesting. Yeah. So, I think that it's correct that we can really update and we like the novelty of of new visual information, but that audio content needs to spool out over long periods of
time or else it actually is is quite aversive to us.
>> Yeah. I heard somebody once say that the difference of all the senses our auditory sense requires us to slow down more than anything else to to actually pay attention. And I think there's
pay attention. And I think there's something about that slowing down that makes us more engaged with audio. Uh,
and and I think you're right. I mean,
when you I my teaching has I'm curious if your teaching has had to change. Uh,
as I teach younger generations of students, I have to change things up so much more frequently. Somebody who took my class 15 years ago would be, "Oh my goodness, what are you doing?" But in a in a two-hour class, I change things up
like seven times. So, we go from a mini lecture to watching a video to partnering with somebody just to keep the students engaged because that's where they're at. they they need that switching to help engage.
>> I teach medical students neural development and a few other things >> and I use slides heavily there. But what
I've realized over the years is that if there's too much information on a slide >> Yeah.
>> they're not going to hear anything I say. And that if you switch a slide
say. And that if you switch a slide >> Yeah.
>> people, as somebody who studied vision, this makes perfect sense. People will
orient towards the new visual information and they won't hear what you're saying in the transition.
>> Yeah.
The other thing that I'm really obsessed by because I got my start teaching online uh on Instagram by doing drawings of different aspects of the nervous system and talking about them is that
there's this sweet spot when you're going to teach something with a visual.
I've realized that for instance, if I were to draw um an area of the brain or a brain circuit accurately with a lot of detailed information, it's too much,
right? they there's less learning in
right? they there's less learning in that case as opposed to sparser representation of the key elements. But
if I go to ball and stick model and just triangles and and circles, it doesn't work as well. So there's this sweet spot where there's just enough detail but not
too much where people can hear what you're saying, see the labels, see the stuff, and it and it gets imprinted in their brain. And when you look back
their brain. And when you look back historically, I'm obsessed with the history of medicine and the history of teaching medicine. When you look at the
teaching medicine. When you look at the diagrams that were really that have really propagated through time in the field of medicine, they're extremely sparse. They accurately represent just a
sparse. They accurately represent just a few elements of say the immune system and they're not the little bubble diagrams like I'm a macroofage, I'm a gal cell like uh like those little
cartoons don't work right in at least in the long run. Nor does showing all the detail that's there and you're just like whoa that's that's just like drinking from a fire hose. And so the really good
teachers and anatomists uh were able to just give the appropriate dose of information and not anymore. Kind of
like a great chef would just have like not overspice something and and it's not easy. No.
easy. No.
>> Um is and and you sort of have to be the teacher and the student at the same time to be able to do this.
>> Well, I think you're hitting on what's an essential element of any effective communication, which is really understanding your audience and their needs. You know, so many of us define
needs. You know, so many of us define success in communication is just getting the information out. I'm successful
because what I had in mind is now out.
>> I've made that mistake many times.
>> Yeah. Right. It's it's more about what do I need to say so that my audience understands it better. It's not about what I want. It's about what you need.
So, I have to do reconnaissance, reflection, and research to really think about how best to craft my message. Be
it a drawing or an important point I'm trying to make through my words. You
really have to think about your audience. And most people don't. Most
audience. And most people don't. Most
people are just so worried about getting the content out, they don't think about how it lands. Success is if your audience takes what you've said and and they're able to do something with it and understand it. You know, the F-word of
understand it. You know, the F-word of all communication is fidelity. It's
about accuracy and clarity of transmitting ideas. And if you're not in
transmitting ideas. And if you're not in sync with what your audience needs, then you're in trouble. Most of us create one message and just deliver it to multiple audiences and think we've been successful because we got it out. That's
the wrong way to think about it.
>> So, if you're willing, could we just take a couple of minutes and explore some of the tools and practices >> and then go back to some of the theory and then back to the tools and
practices. Um, I love this uh exercise
practices. Um, I love this uh exercise you said of like I'll point to the mug and I'll just >> try not to judge myself and I'll say bulldog cuz that just is kind of like where you know I'm like Bart Simpson
doing the roar shock test. Butterfinger
butter like bulldog bulldog bulldog. But
um what is that exercise good for? And
when could and should somebody apply it on their own or with other people?
>> That's an exercise that I use uh for for two reasons. I use it to show that we
two reasons. I use it to show that we have a tremendous amount of judgment that we make when we communicate.
Because if you ask somebody, why is it so hard to call something something it's it's not, they'll say, well, that's not what I'm used to, or I want it to be better than than something else I was
thinking. The other thing that I use it
thinking. The other thing that I use it for is to help elucidate how we heruristically think in these challenging situations. So, invariably
challenging situations. So, invariably when I do this in my class, I'll say, "Were you using any tools to help you figure out what to say?" And people say, "Yeah, I went in the category of colors
or in your case, the c category of of species of of dog." These are heruristics. Our brain is trying to help
heruristics. Our brain is trying to help us. And heristuristics are very
us. And heristuristics are very important. If we didn't have them, we
important. If we didn't have them, we wouldn't be able to make decisions. But
sometimes a heruristic locks you into a way of thinking. So let's imagine you and I come out of a meeting and you turn to me and you say, "Hey, Matt, how do you think that meeting went?" I
immediately say, "Andrew wants feedback." And I can itemize all the
feedback." And I can itemize all the things that went wrong or all the things we could have done better. But had I been really listening, not locked into that heristic of feedback, I might have noticed that you were looking down. You
were speaking more slowly and softly than usual, maybe what you wanted in that moment was not feedback, but what you wanted was support because you knew the meeting went bad. So if I lock into
a heristic too soon and not understand that I lock into that heristic, I might take our communication in a direction that isn't productive or could be harmful. The situation I just described
harmful. The situation I just described to you actually happened to me with a colleague and I itemized all the things that we did wrong. It took me six months to repair that relationship because he didn't want to hear what went wrong. He
knew he wanted me to give some support in that moment. So that exercise is to help us understand that we do a lot of judging that we don't need to do and that we have these heruristics or patterns that we get into that don't
allow us to be present and respond to what's needed.
>> Could you define heruristic? I I believe I know what it means but so it sounds like you mentioned heristic and pattern is kind of synonymous but um maybe just define it for people.
>> So to me a heruristic is a tool that we use often unconsciously to help us reduce the uncertainty in a particular situation. So for example uh imagine I'm
situation. So for example uh imagine I'm in the grocery store and I'm trying to pick out um the best uh tomato sauce or the best ketchup. I might use a heristic of which is the cheapest. How many
offerings from one brand are there? That
must be the best brand to buy. So these
are mental shortcuts that we use to help us in uncertain situations.
I'm recalling a story where when I was a junior professor, meaning before I had tenure, my first graduate student who's now a phenomenal professor in her own lab at the University of at the
University of Utah, excuse me. Um, we
were in my office and we were talking about something related to her first manuscript and I went on this long description of what we needed to do with the analysis and this and then she sat
very quietly and then she said to me, could you be more specific? And I
thought, oh my goodness, I just spoke for like five minutes and I think what she's asking is, what in the world are you saying? Which is probably what she
you saying? Which is probably what she was asking. She's probably going to
was asking. She's probably going to chuckle when she hears this, right? Um
and she had this amazing way of asking questions like that.
>> She would say, for instance, um uh tell me more.
>> Yeah.
>> Or what exactly do you want me to do for these experiments in the next couple of weeks, >> right?
>> And then she'd usually tell me a better idea as all great graduate students do.
>> Um but >> I feel like that's a bit of this. It's
it's that I was coming to it from the perspective of um kind of a fluency of of uh the sort of expectation that we both were on the same page and we weren't.
>> Not because I was the professor and she was the student. Actually, she was closer to the data than I was because she collected the data, right?
>> But um that's the sort of interaction that one-on-one you can catch and you can course correct, >> right? But in public speaking oftentimes
>> right? But in public speaking oftentimes people just get off stage and they either realize it went poorly or they get feedback that it went poorly. My
postto advisor once said if you get questions after a talk it means you did well.
>> Yeah. Absolutely.
>> If you don't it means they just want to get rid of you and have you go off stage.
>> So so now when I get questions after a talk I'm like okay excellent. Like that
means you engaged people. They have
questions.
>> Um so take note of that. If people have questions, it's very likely you you you bullseyed it.
>> Absolutely. And you're highlighting that if we get into our heads, we're we're not able to assess what's going on in the moment. A lot of communication is
the moment. A lot of communication is responding. And so I need to be present
responding. And so I need to be present enough to see how my audience is responding. Are they looking confused?
responding. Are they looking confused?
Do they look upset? Then I can adjust and adapt. So we have to be in that
and adapt. So we have to be in that moment enough to be present so we can respond. and the the preparation work we
respond. and the the preparation work we do in advance helps us be better prepared. Now, I would argue that in the
prepared. Now, I would argue that in the example you just gave with your uh former graduate student, part of the issue that I think she might have been having is when you relayed the information, it was just a list or
litany of things. And our brains aren't very good at remembering lists. I mean,
I I always will joke with my students, when you go to the grocery store, how many items do you need to buy before you have to write something down? For me,
it's three. I just can't remember much in lists. If you provide a structure to
in lists. If you provide a structure to the information, it makes it much easier. It increases processing ability.
easier. It increases processing ability.
So, a structure is nothing more than a logical connection of ideas. Everybody
listening has seen structure. If you've
ever watched a television ad, most ads are in the structure of problem, solution, benefit. There's some issue or
solution, benefit. There's some issue or challenge in the world. The product or service makes it better and you benefit in some way. That's a structure. There's
a logical connection. It's like a story.
It's a beginning, middle, and an end.
And our brains are wired for that. We We
understand story better than just a random list of things. I I'll joke with my students, bullets killed. Don't put a lot of bullet points on a slide because you're not helping yourself. So, in that
interaction you had with your graduate student, I wonder if she would have understood it better had you structured the information in a way that's logical.
A great structure for that might have been three questions. What? So what? Now
what? Here's what I here's what I want you to do. Here's why it's important.
Here's the next steps to help you accomplish it. All of a sudden, it
accomplish it. All of a sudden, it becomes easier for me to digest and understand. So structure is critical to
understand. So structure is critical to helping get messages across. Yeah.
Across those first five years of having my lab, I learned that the best way to interact with students and postocs, the most effective way was to have them
stand at the whiteboard in my office >> and write things down as we talked about a project and the things they would write down. We would eventually cross
write down. We would eventually cross some things out, maybe make some edits, but those were the as we called the doouts that they were going to take to the next phase of experiments.
by putting them in control of what the critical information was, >> right?
>> They could also stop me and say like what would happen here? So that's a very dynamic interaction. It's not a typical
dynamic interaction. It's not a typical lecture type interaction, but I've found that that works really well in other types of situations too.
>> Yeah. where the person can take notes, can ask questions about things that were unclear, but c where I get a strong sense of what their takeaway was and
also where I fell short or perhaps in rare cases succeeded in communicating what I was trying to communicate, >> right?
>> Uh I love that you are taking the time to have those interactions where there's that you get feedback in real time and there are things you can build into more formal or bigger types of communication
situations. I can take polls. I can have
situations. I can take polls. I can have people partner or pair with each other and share some information back. There
virtual tools allow you to to do lots of things. People can give you reactions as
things. People can give you reactions as you're as you're communicating. There
are ways to get feedback in real time that allow you to adjust and adapt, but one, you have to build in those opportunities in the structure, and two, you have to be present enough to pay attention to what's going on.
>> Do you recommend people tape themselves giving lectures and then review those videos? Absolutely. I I make all of my
videos? Absolutely. I I make all of my students as part of the work that they do, they have anytime they do a public presentation, it could be a panel simulation, a meeting simulation, a speech, they digitally record themselves
and they have to watch it three times.
Once with sound only, no video, once with video only, no sound, and then once both together. And anybody who does this
both together. And anybody who does this will notice different things, both positive and negative. I tell everybody, it's like going to the dentist. Nobody
likes going, but everybody's really glad they've been because you you see so much and you learn. And I I know many great communication teachers. The best teacher
communication teachers. The best teacher is watching yourself communicate. I
assume you've watched yourself. Have you
learned things when you watch what you see?
>> Yeah. I Well, yeah. I I will listen to podcasts with guests. Yes. And I do listen to solos to try and see where I can improve, >> right? uh I have one or two people who I
>> right? uh I have one or two people who I seek feedback from >> and I have always done my best to implement that feedback.
>> Um I mean I'm not going to share what some of the the things were because some of it some of it was subtle but but um >> and I never would have observed in myself and then turned out to be very
useful. I mean what when I think of
useful. I mean what when I think of effective communication on stage or in a podcast or in any form really I feel like it's really about getting outside the self judgment >> right
>> and at the same time you have to be connected to your audience I mean this is especially difficult on podcasts where it's a solo podcast I'm talking to a camera but I just imagine it's a an audience like a classroom
>> that's right >> and yet hands aren't going up at least not then they go up when we post it and you see the comments and critiques from time to time as well and and those are very useful. I mean coming from the
very useful. I mean coming from the landscape of teaching in the classroom, large lectures, small lectures and doing peer-reviewed science, you get a very thick skin.
>> Yes.
>> And yet nothing quite prepares you for being public facing. And now everybody's public facing unless they block their comments section. I mean, most everybody
comments section. I mean, most everybody out there, the the uh you know, the mom posting the cake she made for her kids and uh the kid posting the the birthday party photo that everybody's public facing now,
>> right?
>> And so I think it it gives people a thicker skin, but it I think for a lot of people it can be um it can be damaging for them.
>> I like though that you are taking the time to reflect and seek feedback. I
often say the only way you get better at communication is three things.
Repetition, reflection, and feedback.
You got to practice. Nobody has ever thought their way to better communication. You have to do it. You
communication. You have to do it. You
have to reflect. You know that definition of insanity, doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results. That's how many
different results. That's how many people communicate. Every night before I
people communicate. Every night before I go to bed, I spend one minute writing down what went well and what didn't go well in my communication that day. And
every Sunday, I spend five minutes going back over the previous week and I make a plan for the following week. I am not saying I'm a great communicator, but I certainly believe I'm a better communicator because I've been doing that practice for years.
>> You do that every week. every day. Every
day, every day I have a journal. I write
down one or two things that I thought went well and one or two things I did thought didn't go well. And then I pick one on the Sunday. I review them and it it has helped me. And then the final step in that is feedback. You have to have trusted others who can give you
honest feedback. But yeah, that
honest feedback. But yeah, that reflection practice I've been doing for a long time.
>> How long?
>> Probably I think it was after my kids were so probably at least 15 16 years.
>> Awesome. Well, this is why you're a Stanford professor. This is one of the
Stanford professor. This is one of the great pleasures of being at Stanford. I
mean, we're not at Stanford at this moment, but I have to say, I mean, there are other great universities on the planet, but I love it because everybody who's on the faculty there and the students, I mean, the students are really the the phenoms of the place.
Let's let's be honest, but >> is so committed to their craft.
>> Yeah.
>> Also true elsewhere, but since Stanford's the experience, I know it's it's just so awesome. You teach
communication and you're taking notes on your own communication every day and reviewing at the end of the week, >> correct? Fantastic. Um, yeah, I think
>> correct? Fantastic. Um, yeah, I think feedback is great. I think that, um, being a selective filter for feedback.
>> Yes, >> is great. I I do like to listen to other lectures. I listen to a lot of
lectures. I listen to a lot of >> Yeah.
>> lectures that perhaps other people would find boring based on content or delivery. Um, and I learn a lot from
delivery. Um, and I learn a lot from people's styles.
>> Yeah. Um, you know, it's also interesting to pull from the communication styles of people in really distant genres. Um, I won't mention some
distant genres. Um, I won't mention some of these, but um, you know, if you look at different fields of entertainment and communication, some people use more physicality,
>> some people are are more rigid. Um, I
think there's a lot to be learned from exploring these other landscapes.
>> I 100% agree. I I'm very fortunate. the
the podcast I host, I get to interview some of the world's best communicators, and it is such a treat to not only engage them in thinking through their
craft, but seeing them do it and observing the different ways people do things. I And it doesn't have to be
things. I And it doesn't have to be somebody who's famous or or has a whole bunch of notoriety. Uh, one of my son's kindergarten teachers taught me so much
about how to stay calm under pressure, how to monitor and manage and facilitate interaction. We just have to pay
interaction. We just have to pay attention to it and be open to it. Not
so that we copy, but so that we get ideas and we see how people do things.
The way you break down complex biological processes, I find amazing in terms of the accessibility that you bring to it. That's a skill that
somebody who is programming, you know, some programmer somewhere could use to explain to their end users how this works. We need to borrow and understand
works. We need to borrow and understand what people do. Uh we get caught up in our own way of doing it and and watching others, I think, is is a best way to do it.
Long ago, I realized that when there's a certain amount of energy in the body, what we call autonomic arousal, sympathetic tone, whatever, you know, people say fight or flight, but when there's a lot of energy in the body,
which is often the case when we're going to give a talk or we're in a novel situation, doesn't have to be on stage, >> that allowing oneself to physically
move, to walk, to pace, to gesticulate, >> helps uh dispel some of that energy. um
and makes it a lot easier to deliver the information than we're want to just sit really still and try and, you know, funnel all that through one's mouth, right? When we're calm, you know, and
right? When we're calm, you know, and relax, we can sit back and just move our mouth and our eyes a little bit and our head a little bit. So, I've seen that some of the best public speakers know
when to pace, know when to stand rigid, and it may be rehearsed, I don't know, but they're they're not um running against their natural tendency in those
moments. Um, and like there's a there's
moments. Um, and like there's a there's one neuroscientist, he's actually been a guest on this podcast before. I won't
embarrass him by saying who it is, and he has so much mental vigor and energy.
And the first time I saw him give a talk was actually at Harvard Medical School for the 50th anniversary of a foundation. And he got up there and he
foundation. And he got up there and he grabbed the microphone and he gave the talk like this. And I thought to myself, he's going to eat the microphone.
He's going to eat the microphone. And he
gave the most spectacular talk and he was funneling all his energy into that microphone right?
>> And I realized this guy isn't moving at all. But I I thought it was totally
all. But I I thought it was totally reasonable that at some point he was just going to take a huge chunk out of the thing. and and of course he didn't I
the thing. and and of course he didn't I thought >> wow he brought us all to that one location now clearly he's >> very experienced and skilled communicator >> but he's also an expert in that topic
and this is the thing that I always would remind my students and posttos who had some understandable stage fright which is >> there's no way that you aren't among at
least the top three people in the room in terms of the knowledge of what you're talking about >> yes >> right probably have the most knowledge, but maybe someone else is an expert there,
which can be a little scary, but at least you're then you're sort of their peer. So to remind oneself that in most
peer. So to remind oneself that in most situations where we're public speaking, you're among the top experts in that.
You spent the most time with the material, at least compared to the audience.
>> Well, and I would add to that that often when we're in those situations, the audience actually wants to learn from us. They're there because they want to
us. They're there because they want to take value from us. They're not there to critique and judge and evaluate.
Although that can happen, people don't like watching people fail and flail. We
we want to get some value. And if you remind yourself that I have value to bring and the audience wants that value, that can reduce some of the temperature of that. With regard to movement, I
of that. With regard to movement, I think movement is great. You just don't want it to be distracting. So there's
some rules or ideas around movement. So
move when appropriate during transitions. You know, stand-up
transitions. You know, stand-up comedians have have a rule that they try to follow is you never want to walk during the punch line. You want to land the punch line. All of us when we communicate, we have punchlines. We have
things that that really we want to have land. Stand still during that, but as
land. Stand still during that, but as you're doing the setup, move side to side. When you start, come in, move
side. When you start, come in, move forward. So movement can can help you
forward. So movement can can help you with that anxiety, but it also can help your audience understand what's what's important and what's not important. So,
if I'm transitioning from one point to the next and I physically move or I turn my body at the table if I'm seated, that signals information to you that's helpful for you to know we're moving from one place to the next. So, use this
need to move in a purposeful way.
>> I didn't realize that comedians don't deliver the punchline while moving, but now that makes perfect sense, >> right? Cuz you're distracting your
>> right? Cuz you're distracting your audience. Even Chris Rock, who moves a
audience. Even Chris Rock, who moves a lot, will sometimes stop during the punch line.
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Some exclusions apply. I wonder if you've observed in the classroom that social media and other newer forms of content are changing people's
expectation of how engaging something should be because the on-ramp to social media is a very fast one. I've never
observed anything that brings people to focus so quickly unless it's um seeing something really disturbing, which nobody wants to see. But you know, if you if you suddenly see two cars crash, you know, you're completely focused on
that. You're not going to go back to
that. You're not going to go back to what you were doing, right?
>> But setting aside bad events, traumatic events, social media has an incredibly smooth and fast on-ramp to a focal point, which has got you in the box.
>> Yeah.
>> A book doesn't typically do that for people, >> right? Uh so what's happening now um in
>> right? Uh so what's happening now um in terms of what you observe with people's expect audienc's expectation of how engaging something needs to be?
>> Yeah. So I I see this play out in a couple ways. One, when you when you
couple ways. One, when you when you think about a multi-generational workforce or a place where multi-generations are together, you know, people of our vintage, although I'm older than you are, are expect relationships and communication to
unfold in a certain way. And I think younger generations expect things to be quicker and more transactional. And when
we come together, that can breed misunderstanding and sometimes conflict.
So I I see it play out there and I find it really interesting and I try to coach the the students I have that they have to be appreciative of the ways in which people connect and the ways in which
people expect information to come in.
You know, if if you're just going to keep texting me things and I actually want you to pick up the phone so I can hear it in your own voice, that's going to cause some some issues. So we have to appreciate that others have different
ways of taking in information. I find
that many of the younger students that I communicate with, it's hard for them to do some of the initial work that we have to do in relationship building, trust building, uh just because they expect
things are used to things happening really fast and a lot of communication, a lot of connection at least at first takes time. So it's helping people
takes time. So it's helping people appreciate the time spent up front can lead to the exciting and in-depth connection that comes later. So it is it
is changing for sure. I was trying to think before our conversation what would be the the one piece of advice
to give people so that they are um more at ease with communicating in novel environments on stage or offstage. And
what popped to mind for me was um be friendly with people. I'm naturally
pretty friendly. Like if I'm getting a coffee, I'll be like, "How's your day going?" Or like I I will ask that and
going?" Or like I I will ask that and I'm genuinely curious. How's your day?
Now it's rare that somebody says like, "Today sucks." Occasionally they do.
"Today sucks." Occasionally they do.
>> Um >> usually they say, "Oh, it's pretty good.
Like how are you doing?" But in an Uber, for instance, I often find myself in conversation with people. Like
conversation is pretty fluid for me. I
realize for other people it's not >> right.
>> People won't believe this, but I'm actually very introverted. I spend a lot of time by myself, but I like people and I'm reasonably friendly and they're friendly with me. So, I I think being friendly helps >> you get good at communication.
>> Yeah.
>> Uh wouldn't you say?
>> Yeah. No, absolutely. I mean, my answer to that question would be curiosity. I
lead with curiosity. Ask questions,
observe things, point them out. You
know, a lot of people hate small talk because they don't know how to do it.
But if if you lead with curiosity, if you ask a question and you observe, that's where I think we can can one make it move forward in a way that's more fluid and more comfortable for people.
And quite frankly, people are most at ease talking about themselves. And so if you can get people talking about something that's important to them and then you know there there's a whole science behind conversation and uh
people who study conversation look at term taking because if you think about it, conversation is just taking turns.
There are turns that are supportive where you say something and I support what you say. So you might say, "Hey, Matt, I just got back from Maui." And I could say, "Oh, that's great. Uh,
where'd you stay? What did you do?" Or I could say, which is the other type of turn, which is switching. I could say, "Oh, I just got back from Costa Rica."
And a good conversation does both. So
being curious and then managing the switching and supporting turns allow for that conversation not only to develop but it allows you to get closer and more
intimate if you will that is closer in terms of trust building and the relationship you have.
>> Yeah. Almost always in Los Angeles, uh, I ask my Uber driver where they're from >> because oftentimes it seems they have accents and I can't place the accent.
>> And almost always I learn about a great restaurant based on their their uh their ethnicity, right? Um,
ethnicity, right? Um, >> I found what I think is the best Armenian restaurant in Los Angeles as a consequence of a great Uber ride. So
yeah, leading with curiosity. I I don't say where's the best restaurant. Um,
right.
>> I I think it inevitably leads to food, it seems. Um, dogs are food.
>> I'm curious about linearity versus nonlinearities in storytelling.
>> Yeah.
>> You know, some people have a style where >> they can spin a lot of plates simultaneously as I imagine it. You
know, they they can start one thread, maybe open up a couple other threads.
Some people have a very linear style.
Um, some people won't reference things they said earlier. Some people will constantly reference things they said earlier. I suppose it depends. But in
earlier. I suppose it depends. But in
general, if one is trying to communicate information, what's best from the standpoint of of people learning the information? So, as a teacher, as
information? So, as a teacher, as somebody who's trying to convey information that's important to people, I believe a linear approach that clearly lays out the foundations and builds is
probably best to help people really understand. Often in educating, you're
understand. Often in educating, you're layering, you're scaffolding, and that leads to a linear approach. That said,
the more spurious uh approach, the the approach that has lots of different avenues can be much more engaging and can also be successful. And it really doesn't have to be either or. I think
you can have a highlevel linear view that you're taking your audience on that journey, but at different points you can branch off and and share some interesting information.
You know, I see being a good speaker as like being a good tour guide. And I
actually was a tour guide at one point in my life. A good tour guide does a really nice job of setting expectations of where you're going. Most people won't go on the tour if they don't know where they're going. If I showed up and said,
they're going. If I showed up and said, "I'm your tour guide. Let's go." You
might say, "I don't know where we're going." But if I say, "Hey, we're going
going." But if I say, "Hey, we're going to do this and this and we're not going to do that." Then you can relax and feel comfortable and come with me. And I let you know at each point where we're
moving to the next place. But along the way, we can meander, we can wander, we can go check out some things and come back. So, as long as people have
back. So, as long as people have directionality and everything fits as a a larger narrative, I think you can play with either of these. But when it comes to
strict education, I think we've got good evidence that a linear approach that scaffolds is really what's most helpful.
>> Do you think that if people want to get better at communication, they should practice being a tour guide? I think
adopting that that that mindset that hey taking you through my material I'm like a tour guide. How would a tour guide explain this? They would introduce at
explain this? They would introduce at the beginning set expectations. They'd
make sure that you understand why we're moving from one place to the next and when you're done they really want you to take something away of value. I mean
most tour tours end up in the gift shop right your gift to your audience is something they can take away and do something with. So I think using that
something with. So I think using that analogy seeing what your job is through those that lens can be really helpful.
I'm remembering back to grade school where we were asked to bring an object that was really important to us and then kids would get up in front of the classroom and and of course what a what
a beautiful exercise for kids to yeah >> partake in because of course they know more about that object than anybody >> but I remember seeing or hearing different um styles. Uh some people get
in there and be like this is my whatever my transformer and they're really out there with her. this is my uh you know my goldfish goldfish. Um and then occasionally not
goldfish. Um and then occasionally not so occasionally you get this kid that would say well this is my pen and then and then you're like and you like speak up and then and and they're just not comfortable
>> sharing their their clearly >> intimate knowledge about this object and why it's important. They I mean you could just tell like they're they're closed up and so you tell them to speak louder and then they'd speak louder. But
um I think that's a lot of people >> like they're just not comfortable >> projecting their thoughts out into the room, >> right?
>> Uh what is the quote unquote solution or or how do we make space for these people? I'm I'm not saying this for like
people? I'm I'm not saying this for like politically correct reasons, but I wholeheartedly believe that these people harbor tons of useful knowledge.
Absolutely.
>> Maybe they want to get that knowledge out, but maybe that's just not the medium for them. Yeah,
>> maybe they write or maybe they just >> don't want to share their favorite object. So, I'm I'm sure you encounter
object. So, I'm I'm sure you encounter people like this, but by virtue of the fact that they're going into a particular job or or line of work that they they're told they have to get good
at speaking to a whole room.
>> Yeah. And I think that's unfortunate when people say you must be better at this. There are lots of ways to
this. There are lots of ways to communicate and everybody should find a vehicle in a way that's helpful for them. There are some roles that require
them. There are some roles that require certain types of communication and if that isn't something you're comfortable with, maybe you look at a different role. But I believe we can all learn our
role. But I believe we can all learn our communication skills.
I've spent much of my career helping people feel more comfortable and confident speaking in front of others, working on anxiety that goes around it, helping people to see that there are lots of ways to communicate. Maybe I
don't have to hold this object up and make it about me and my object. Maybe I
tell a story about the object or I tell a story about how I came to have the object. So, it's less about me and it's
object. So, it's less about me and it's more about the story. If we can get people to distance themselves sometimes from the the fear itself and get others engaged, it can work really well. I
coached a very senior leader at a at a very big company everybody's familiar with and he was really really nervous and as he got promoted he had larger and larger audiences and what he would do
what we worked on doing is in essence distracting the audience right at the beginning he would start by saying let's watch this 30- secondond video and then when the video was over he became a facilitator of what just happened so what did you think what does this mean
and he was much more comfortable facilitating interaction than actually being the center of attention so there are a lot of things we can do that that accomplish the goal of communicating the information that's not about the
spotlight being on me communicating it.
And I want to share one example of uh or take the the story about the kids doing showand tell. I used to do that in my
showand tell. I used to do that in my undergraduate classes that I taught, but I would I had a wrinkle on it. I'd have
people bring in an object and they'd have to share it. I had them use that what so what now what structure and then I had them tell about an object that they thought about bringing in but they
didn't. So then they had to say what
didn't. So then they had to say what that object was and why they chose not to bring it in. And that was far more illuminating about the person. And we
talk about authenticity. People just
emoted in a way that they didn't when they had this thing that I've I've made sure to think about this and it's going to make me look good and I've I've architected my conversation about this one object. But when they talked about
one object. But when they talked about the other object, their passion came out, their conversational nature came out. It was really illuminating to do
out. It was really illuminating to do that. My graduate adviser told me that
that. My graduate adviser told me that she'd much rather give a talk to an entire room full of people or an empty room than one person. Yeah, it's hard to do it for one person.
>> I think she's unique in that sense. I
think most people are terrified of giving a talk to a room full of people.
>> I'm still don't know why, but that's not because it's easy for me. I just I'm just I wonder what it is. I mean, you said there's this evolutionary basis.
>> I think I think it's that I think that the the consequences seem more real when you're in front of more people. For me
personally, the the the group size that's most anxietyprovoking is between like 10 or 12. Once you get above 12, 20, 100,000 people, it becomes to me more anonymous.
>> But it's that 10 to 12 range that's most difficult. So, in terms of how how you
difficult. So, in terms of how how you can best practice, I do, you know, vocalizing it is the most important part.
>> Say it out loud.
>> Say it out loud. You know, I'm amazingly eloquent in my mind. I'm not always as lucky when I open up my mouth. So, you
have to actually say it out loud. We
make so many assumptions in our mind uh connect dots that when we actually speak it we realize they don't do that.
Recording yourself obviously and listening uh getting trusted others. You
just have to get it out. And this isn't just for a big public speaking. I mean
this is in a high stakes interpersonal communication. Maybe I want to ask my
communication. Maybe I want to ask my boss for a raise. Maybe I have to give some feedback to a colleague that's not great. I have to practice this stuff and
great. I have to practice this stuff and I have to think about not only what am I going to say, but I also have to anticipate the responses and maybe roleplay some of that as well. You know,
athletes do lots of drills so when they're in the game, they can play it well. We need to do the same thing. It
well. We need to do the same thing. It
it amazes me when I work with with senior leaders of companies and they'll say, "Oh, I practice the presentation once or twice and I'm ready to go." And
I think, think about a stand-up comedian how many times they practice their routine over and over again. How can in just one or two times flipping through the slides you have that content? So
getting it out, practicing it, getting the reps, absolutely important. One
person, 10 people, nobody. It needs to be practiced.
>> We do think we know how to say something until reality hits us square in the face. It's almost like if we read a word
face. It's almost like if we read a word many, many times and we think we know how to pronounce it >> and then at some point we're required to pronounce it or we pronounce it incorrectly and then we realize we've
been essentially pronouncing it in our head. incorrectly for a very very long
head. incorrectly for a very very long time.
>> You and I talked prior and I I shared with you I've done martial arts for a long time and when you learn a new move, you learn it in the air and you can become a really great you can do that move really well, but then when you meet
another person and have to practice that move, that's where reality sets in. And
that's that's exactly what you're talking about. You have to you have to
talking about. You have to you have to experience it in reality in the real world and then you see where you're really at.
>> Yeah. I'm not a martial artist, but years ago like um spent a little time in a boxing gym and I can tell you shadow boxing is not the same as getting hit and the heavy bag doesn't hit back. I
mean it has some, you know, physical weight to it that's different than shadow boxing, but >> yeah, >> it's a whole other experience.
>> Exactly.
>> Like anything, >> it's that feedback.
>> Yeah. I've been um really intrigued by the uh famous choreographer Twilight Tharp. She's now in her 80s. She's
Tharp. She's now in her 80s. She's
incredible.
said and written incredible things about choreography. And um she said that she
choreography. And um she said that she has this practice where she'll um sort of develop a dance routine, then go through it in her head, then because she
was a dancer, she can try it, and then she has people do it, and then imagine it, and then they iterate thousands and thousands and thousands of times before they actually even perform it once in
front of a small audience and and not publicly. So it's it's an incredible
publicly. So it's it's an incredible thing that we would expect ourselves to be able to like get up and communicate information really well without having done that.
>> One new world that I think is really interesting with regard to this rehearsal is there's some VR tools now that you can actually dawn and practice the presentation and you can see a simulated audience and you and some of
these tools you can actually program the audience's responses. You can say
audience's responses. You can say they're favorable or they're ignoring you. So you can desensitize yourself and
you. So you can desensitize yourself and I think that's a really interesting vehicle for people especially people who are phobic to desensitize to to get in the in the goggles and practice the presentation and some of them you can
actually if you have slides you can upload the slides and you can practice referring to them. So I I think it's not only in reality but in virtual reality we can practice and prepare too. Do you
think that if somebody wants to get more fluid at uh presenting information that they could uh find a a friend who would select an object in the room for them at
random and then they'd have to give a a brief improv talk about it or something like that just to get comfortable >> taking on topics with some level of fluidity.
>> Yeah, I think improvisation is is a wonderful way to get better at communicating because improv isn't about being funny. Improv is about being in
being funny. Improv is about being in the moment and responding to what's needed. And so, yeah, doing anything
needed. And so, yeah, doing anything like that, you don't even need a friend.
You can just look at an object and start talking about it. Describe it. Share a
story about it. All of that could be useful. You could flip open a book and
useful. You could flip open a book and pick a word and then talk about what that word means. Those are some of those agility drills that can help you be better when you're put on the spot. And
and it builds a confidence, too. It's
like, I can do that. If I can do this when I pick a random word, I can do this when somebody asks me a question that I know a lot about the topic on. So, it's
a way of building confidence and helping with that in the- moment processing. I
feel like people over the age of 15 are not >> terribly comfortable uh embracing these theater-like games because it seems childlike, >> but it's actually that childlike level
of curiosity and communication that you're seeking when you are going to be an effective communicator.
>> Yeah. A class I co-e at Stamford uh through their continuing studies program is called improvisationally speaking. I
partner with a gentleman named Adam Tobin who's an excellent improviser and together I bring the communication piece and it's a way of giving people baby steps and permission to do some of these
improv games because we directly link a particular improv activity to a specific communication need and when people see that they open up. Uh at Stanford's graduate school of business there are
several courses that bring in improvisational ideas into very serious things. how how
to be a manager and adapt to management skills through improv, how to demonstrate your status and power through some of the things that that improv teaches. So, taking improv or at
improv teaches. So, taking improv or at least understanding some of those principles certainly can help.
>> When I think about the truly archival important information on the internet, very few things break through. I
sometimes play this game. I think like what is like true legacy content on the internet? And one of the things that
internet? And one of the things that breaks through is Steve Jobs uh 2015, I think it was, uh commencement speech at Stanford, >> the I have a dream speech. Obviously,
Martin Luther King, JFK said some um some pretty important things.
>> Um those were written speeches.
>> Yeah.
>> And they're reading from a script and they include story in many cases, >> so it fits. And yet like the job speech
which I've listened to many times um he's reading from a piece of paper. So
it runs counter to a lot of what we're talking about >> and yet it's extremely effective communication. Why do you think those
communication. Why do you think those examples let's just say JFK Martin Luther King Steve Jobs I should probably include a few others but those are the ones that come to mind. Why do you think
those are at least among the most effective um incidents of great communication that linger in people's minds?
>> Well, there are several factors. One, I
think, is that they're incredibly well written. They are they are poetic. They
written. They are they are poetic. They
are aspirational. They use rhetorical flourishes that that make them memorable repetition alliteration things like that.
They also are in a context in in a time when those messages were really important and needed and though they echo they connect at a level of what's going on in the zeitgeist of the moment
JFK's moonshot speech Martin Luther King's civil rights speech um Steve Jobs I would argue what was going on in the economy and the environment at that time that message really resonated so I think
it's a match of context and timing it's a match of really important ideas presented in a really important
way with specific rhetorical flourishes that really make them memorable. And and
I think also the the character that those people brought to it also makes a difference as well. I think other people could say those words and not have the same impact.
I'm having a hard time coming up with a memory from the last 5 to 10 years of really important public communication moments. I can remember certain things
moments. I can remember certain things happening that were televised and online. Um, but those were more things
online. Um, but those were more things that happened. I think we're getting
that happened. I think we're getting noisier. Not I think I know we're
noisier. Not I think I know we're getting noisier. there more messages out
getting noisier. there more messages out there in even in the the case of Steve Jobs which was the most recent in the example you gave things weren't as noisy
it wasn't as crowded right and so I think it's hard to hear those phrases or those speeches in these environments where there's so much noise going on
certainly when we observe traumatic events >> yes >> those are flashbulb memories right I remember the shuttle disaster yes >> certainly 911 I think the most salient recent one would the the assassination
assassination, excuse me, of Charlie Kirk. Um, you know, everyone knew about
Kirk. Um, you know, everyone knew about that. It was and it was and it was on
that. It was and it was and it was on video, >> right?
>> Right. That's so it's such a different thing for people to see a grainy video versus a high definition video.
>> Um, >> which is what we see now. Um, so that in some sense, >> you know, it creates this different threshold for what what's memorable, >> right?
>> And and those are all tragic events. um
JFK's assassination, you know, it's a grainy video and and shot at a distance and very few things get in the in the domain of
>> of not tragic, not traumatic uh get big signal the noise that really lasts long.
>> I think that's true. And I think people that we don't have the the people aren't referring to the same channels. So
people are getting the information differently as well and and that's also dividing our attention. So we're not seeing these things really bubble up.
But I do think it's also a commentary on where we're at as a society as well. I
think it would be lovely if we heard more and more positive speeches that resonate with people that were citing and quoting years from now.
>> Yeah, I think about this a lot.
>> Um, you know, I think about um the non bad events.
>> Yeah.
>> That get big signal noise >> and there are none come to mind right now. Forgive me folks if I'm missing
now. Forgive me folks if I'm missing some recent thing where some puppy did a super cute thing, but there's so many millions of those videos that I think
we've become saturated. It's like the uh uh information equivalent of highly processed food. Like our senses have
processed food. Like our senses have been dulled.
>> I think there's some truth in that. And
and I also think we're we're uh moving away from traditional oration as the way it used to be done, right? there just
aren't forums for that. Uh you can watch some TED talks there. I mean some amazing TED talks out there and other talks of that caliber. Um but I don't know that any have risen to the level
that you're referring to.
>> Yeah, I think Benet Brown's talk TED talk on vulnerability is one of the ones that I think is really legacy. Most
people younger than 18 probably haven't heard it, but anyway, we'll we'll put a link to it. And then there are a bunch of other really great TED talks as well.
You have an amazing TED talk. I saw one A talk online with 24 million views is not a trivial number of views. That's
and it was a hour-long conversation about effective communication. So
clearly people care about effective communication.
>> Yeah.
>> Um do you think that >> people being good at one-on-one conversation makes them better at onstage conversation? Or do you think
onstage conversation? Or do you think these are two completely different skills? I get this question a lot. I
skills? I get this question a lot. I
think I think there's a ven diagram.
There are people who are able to connect one-on-one in a way that's hard to do on a stage. A lot of it has to do with what
a stage. A lot of it has to do with what academics call immediacy. I'm present
with you. I'm focused. We're we're
engaged in that way. And that doesn't necessarily translate on a big stage or in a meeting. But some of the skills do translate. It's having structure, having
translate. It's having structure, having focus in terms of a goal for what you're saying, being able to start in a way that's compelling. So, it's a ven
that's compelling. So, it's a ven diagram. And there are people who can
diagram. And there are people who can command a presence on a stage and you put them in front of one person and they don't know how to to respond. So in
terms of messaging, I think there's a lot of overlap. In terms of presence, I think it really varies a lot and that but I believe everybody can learn to be better at communication. I wouldn't do
what I do if I didn't believe that. So
if you are good interpersonally but not so good in front of a large group, use the skills you have. find a path to hone and develop those skills in a different environment. And similarly, if you're
environment. And similarly, if you're good on a big stage, let's take what you do there and find avenues to help you interpersonally, but uh they're they're not always the same. And there are some
people who are good at both. I'm excited
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These days, we hear uh quite often about um neurotypical and neuroatypical.
>> Yes. Uh and I do think there's a distinct difference in the conversational style, the amount of procity. Um I don't want to say affect
procity. Um I don't want to say affect because uh I have some close friends who are neuroatypical and they tell me and I believe them that they have every bit as
much emotion underneath their voice as somebody who's like really you know really um you know sharing that emotion in in these inflections of voice and and
their bodily movements. Do you think that we need to adjust our kind of concept of what effective communication is based on this what seems to be an expansion of at least the understanding
of neurotypical neuroatypical?
>> Yeah, I I I certainly don't mean to conflate neurodeiversity and introversion and extroversion. But the
question you're asking to me is I I hear it as a similar way. Is is there one right way to communicate or one better way? And people who don't communicate
way? And people who don't communicate that way are they at a disadvantage? Uh
I think there are expectations for what effective communication is but I think it is a we can expand it and and there is value for people regardless of if it's neurodiversity or
introversion for example extraversion tends to get rewarded just because you get you hear it you see it but the I I think there are things that we can learn from people who are neurodeiverse that
can help to really connect and and be better communicators so too in the way that folks who are highly the introverted communicate can help. There
is certainly no one right way to communicate. There are better ways and
communicate. There are better ways and worse ways. And regardless of where you
worse ways. And regardless of where you are in terms of introversion, extroversion, neurodeiversity, you can communicate effectively. Play to your
communicate effectively. Play to your strengths. There are things that
strengths. There are things that introverts do that are amazing that really help move communication forward.
People with certain types of neurodeiversity in terms of the creativity or the level of detail with which they communicate can be really helpful. We just have to find those
helpful. We just have to find those advantages and and lean into them to help.
>> I find that when it comes to podcast guests, >> yeah, >> if somebody wrote a book at some point, they tend to be pretty comfortable podcasting independent of whether they've been on a lot of podcasts
before, >> which raises the question, is the practice of writing out one's thoughts by hand or typing them out an effective way to prepare to speak or just get
better at speaking generally? And I do understand that eventually you got to if you want to get better at push-ups, you got to do push-ups. If you want to get speaking, you have to speak.
>> But do you think writing and transferring ideas onto paper helps people become better communicators?
>> Short answer is yes. But I think it's a two-part process. The first part is the
two-part process. The first part is the thought process that goes into what you're going to write. Having written
some books, I know you're you're writing a book, you you think differently about your content. You have to think about
your content. You have to think about the audience. You have to think about
the audience. You have to think about how do these pieces fit together? or is
there a scaffolding that's needed? So,
it's the thought process that helps, but then the actual putting pen to paper, fingers on keyboards, when you have to make word choice, when you have to think about the syntax, the grammar, you are
more intimately involved with your content than you are when you're just thinking about the ideas. So, so I think at both levels, it's helping you hone your message. I'm a very nervous writer.
your message. I'm a very nervous writer.
I'm not a very nervous speaker. I I am very nervous about what I write, but I'm a better editor than I am writer. And
that editing process really trains your brain to be ready to respond to questions, to focus information. And so
I think each of those steps, the ideation, the actual crafting, and then the editing prepare you to communicate better. And all of us can use different
better. And all of us can use different parts of those. You don't have to write a book to be able to use those skills to speak better.
I used to prepare my scientific talks by building the slidesh >> and I required that there be nothing else going on in the room because in my head I'm thinking about what I'm going to say as I build the slide. So the
building of the slides oneself.
>> Yeah.
>> Including sometimes the illustrations etc was an important part of preparing the talk.
>> Right.
>> I find that if I can just cut and paste figures it's much worse.
>> Yeah. I call it a franken deck. people
like uh uh accumulate different slides and slam them all together like Frankenstein was an amalgamation.
There's no story there. There's no
thought process that ties it all together. So the slide was the
together. So the slide was the manifestation of your thought process >> and that's why I think it was so useful to you.
>> Can I share a story?
>> Sure.
>> You're the guest, but I I really want your thoughts on this.
>> Uh we have a colleague at Stanford. I
his name escapes me, forgive me, but years ago we were um we were Pew Fellows, which was this group where you know Congratulations. Thank you. I I
know Congratulations. Thank you. I I
still don't know how it happened for me, but it happened.
>> Anyway, we had to give our talks the fourth year >> and you know, talk about being in a room full of people where you're like, whoa, this is a serious. It's people from all around the the the country and you know,
and it's not just neuroscience. And so,
you know, you're humbled to be there. I
don't care how good you are.
many people in the room are going to be better than you. There's this one guy, he's now a faculty member at Stanford, and for his talk, he got up there and he
said, "Rather than show you a bunch of data, I'm going to play you a movie and a song >> and he put up this video of these oil droplets bumping into one another." And
the sound or the song corresponded to the oil droplets bumping into one another. And my first thought was, "This
another. And my first thought was, "This guy's crazy." Like, he's legitimately
guy's crazy." Like, he's legitimately crazy >> or he just kind of doesn't care.
This is pretty cool.
Um, but then he went on to give a talk about how he was using sound in order to develop novel molecules. He went on to win a MacArthur Genius Award. He's built
$1 microscopes in centrifuges that they're using in Africa to diagnose diseases in areas that have very little funding. He's one of those.
funding. He's one of those.
>> Yes.
>> And I remember thinking like, wow, like this guy is incredible.
>> Yeah.
>> Just spectacular levels of uh communication ability. He I think he actually is a genius. You know, the these genius awards. It's kind of a funny name, right? Um
>> and and I realiz >> I would know I never got one. What's
that?
>> I never got one. I didn't get her. And I
think some people that get them are geniuses and I think some are not frankly you know and and um >> but that talk was really >> it wasn't just humbling. It was really eye opening for me
>> because it made me realize that if somebody >> has true command of the material and they believe in their own unique vision enough
>> that you really can use something as uh what seems as vague as a bunch of oil droplets bumping into I mean it was pretty but it looked like a lava lamp frankly and some music but it was the
perfect bringaround because it it was such high signal to noise >> and hats off to him. He's amazing. If
people try to do that and it doesn't work yeah >> it fails spectacularly. If it works, it succeeds spectacularly.
So, do you think, you know, there's something to, you know, whether or not we should stay conventional or we should try hooks like that? I never once thought I should do
that? I never once thought I should do something like that when giving a talk, >> but it was I mean, you can probably tell by the way I'm relaying the story. it
still sits in my body as one of the more fantastic experiences in my entire academic career. So I was like that was
academic career. So I was like that was incredible and I'll never forget it. I I
think what that particular talk did is it violated expectations and in so doing it made it stand out. Should people test boundaries and push things in
communication? I think they should, but
communication? I think they should, but I think we need to be a little thoughtful about that and perhaps AB test them, run them by some other people, say, "I'm thinking of doing this. What do you think?" And make sure
this. What do you think?" And make sure that the risk you're taking is calculated. I have this conversation all
calculated. I have this conversation all the time with my students and and the people I coach around humor. Now, I'm
not saying telling a joke is similar to your experience, but it involves risk.
And if it works, humor is an amazing way to connect. But if it fails, it's a
to connect. But if it fails, it's a great way to disconnect. So, you have to think it through. You have to understand the costs and the benefits and I think
test it out on a few people and then see what happens. It sounds like this person
what happens. It sounds like this person did uh not only violated expectations but they were able to give you a visceral experience of what it was that
they were studying. So it wasn't just a concept which many of these you and I both attend lots of academic talks. I
mean it can get very theoretical, very conceptual, but made it very tangible and because of that that was helpful to the goal that they were trying to achieve. So I often challenge people,
achieve. So I often challenge people, how could you communicate this information in a way that really gets people engaged and involved? Could you
do something on a whiteboard? Could you
use an analogy? Is there a story you could tell or a question you can ask rather than just detailing the information? So do something that
information? So do something that violates an expectation but in line with and supports the goal that you have.
>> Do you think that some introspection about who one is is helpful? You know
like I couldn't give that talk even if I had half the knowledge I couldn't give that talk like I can give the talk that I give. Um, and sometimes I wonder
I give. Um, and sometimes I wonder whether even if a talk is very dry, it works because the person is dry >> or if somebody has more theatrical, it
works because the person is theatrical outside of the talk. This kind of brings us back to authenticity. Sometimes I
wonder if people just need to figure out who they are and how they process information in the world and just try and share that the same way that a
musician would share their song or um an artist would share their visual art or um or some other form of art because that's the filter that they experience
the world through. Yeah, I think a lot of times we we want to hear things because we want to access these other portals that we can't get to.
>> I think understanding what works for you and where your strengths are is absolutely important. But at the same
absolutely important. But at the same time, you don't know where some of those strengths are if you don't try other things. And that's why coming back to
things. And that's why coming back to this notion of improv as a one example, you don't know until you do it where your comfort levels are and where those boundaries are. And you might learn that
boundaries are. And you might learn that there's some things you can do really well that would help you be a better communicator. So absolutely
communicator. So absolutely investigating what works for you and leveraging that is important, but also expand a little bit to see where you can
grow. I think the work you do, the work
grow. I think the work you do, the work I try to do in terms of podcasting and writing and teaching, we're trying to expose people to more information that
they could then adapt and adopt so that they can perhaps expand the way they communicate, they research, whatever it is. So, I think you do have to
is. So, I think you do have to absolutely play to your strengths, but you have to explore what those strengths might be as well. I'd hate for everybody just to do only what they're good at.
>> Can we talk about uh damage control?
Yes.
>> Uh you know I I do think having coached students and postocs through public speaking and having seen one complete meltdown. I I this person is now a
meltdown. I I this person is now a professor. He's doing incredible work.
professor. He's doing incredible work.
He's you know he's went on to get a job and everything but during a practice talk >> in front in front of a small number of people. It was like total meltdown.
people. It was like total meltdown.
Total meltdown. No recovery. just we had to just delay and do it another time despite >> so he he literally just stopped talking walked off the >> he froze and and he apologized and then we said no it's fine I mean it was a small venue and then we tried to you
know encourage him along and and maybe he hadn't slept well he had a lot going on but it ended with him sitting on the side of the stage asking everyone to please leave >> oh okay >> it was so it was heavy you know it was
heavy and it was very important for us to all get back in the room again and and he did that and then he went on the job market and he got a position and he's tenure faculty member someplace now so uh he recovered himself is you know we
all have bad days but I think hearing that some people are probably like oh my goodness >> right >> um what to do if one does forget what they're trying to say on stage or >> right
>> um just choke >> you know I I recommend if people are nervous that they actually have some outlet for that movement as I talked about before pacing or even bouncing one's knee behind the podium very effective at dispelling energy and
getting one to relax it I just think it's a a use it's been a useful tool for me and and I think for others have suggested too as well. But how bad do
you think it is if somebody suddenly stops on stage and just says sorry I lost my train of thought and goes back to it? Do you think it humanizes them or
to it? Do you think it humanizes them or do you think that it actually is deadly for the message?
Like with my students I have to say it depends. It depends on the circumstance
depends. It depends on the circumstance that you're in. I do believe that audiences are more forgiving. What I
advise the people I teach and coach to do in those moments is instead of saying, "Oh, I forgot what I want to say." Why not say, "I get sometimes so
say." Why not say, "I get sometimes so passionate about what I say, I get a little ahead of myself," which is likely true, and use that as a as a reason to reset. Let me share with
you what I advise people to do to avoid blanking out and then what to do if you do blank out. First and foremost, avoid memorizing. Memorizing invites blanking
memorizing. Memorizing invites blanking out. So, let's not memorize. Let's have
out. So, let's not memorize. Let's have
a clear structure, a road map, but we don't know every word that we're going to say rational. The fear of blanking out leads
rational. The fear of blanking out leads and increases the likelihood of blanking out. So,
out. So, let's not worry about blanking out as much as we do. How do we do that? We
rationalize. I ask everybody to think about what is the likelihood in this upcoming communication, whatever it is, one-on-one big presentation, that you'll blank out. Most people say maybe 20%.
blank out. Most people say maybe 20%.
Well, that means 80% of the time you're not going to blink out. I'm not a betting person. I'd take those odds. So,
betting person. I'd take those odds. So,
realizing that it's not as likely to happen, that's step one. Step two, ask yourself, if it were to happen, what's the worst thing that would happened for me? Well, it would be incredibly
me? Well, it would be incredibly embarrassing. It would be awkward, and
embarrassing. It would be awkward, and it might have some short-term implications. But who in their life
implications. But who in their life hasn't been embarrassed, been in situations that are awkward, and had short-term implications? So, when you
short-term implications? So, when you put it in that context, all of a sudden, blanking out isn't as likely as you think. and it's not as bad as you think.
think. and it's not as bad as you think.
That reduces the stress you have about doing it, which reduces the likelihood.
So, by not memorizing and rationalizing, you can actually reduce the likelihood of blanking out. Now, let's say the worst happens. You blank out. You You
worst happens. You blank out. You You
don't know what to say. First and best thing to do is just what you do if you lose your phone or lose your keys.
Retrace your steps. Repeat what you just said. Most of us can remember what we
said. Most of us can remember what we just said. And then that gets us back on
just said. And then that gets us back on track. If that doesn't work, the final
track. If that doesn't work, the final rip cord I think you can pull is to distract your audience. What does that mean? Ask a question. This will happen
mean? Ask a question. This will happen to me. There'll be I teach the same
to me. There'll be I teach the same class a lot. Sometimes I can't remember, did I say this this time? I just need a moment to think. I'll just pause and I'll ask my students a question. They
don't they think that's logical. Anybody
can come up with a question. If you ever hear me, anybody listening, if you ever hear me say, I want to pause for a moment and think, have you think about how what we've just discussed can be applied to your life, that means I have
forgotten what I want to say next. In my
mind, I'm what the heck do I say next?
Most of the people in my audience are like, how would I apply that in my life?
That's great. It gives me that fraction of a second. Gives me that sense of control. Most of us can leverage a
control. Most of us can leverage a question to buy us that time. So, let's
not say, "Oh my goodness, I forgotten.
It's the worst thing ever. I get
passionate sometimes. Sometimes I can't I get ahead of myself. Give me a moment or just ask a question. It's similar to I advise people who are nervous speakers never to say, "Oh, excuse me. I'm so
nervous." A lot of people try to pre-apologize for their nervousness. And
all they do is prime us to pay attention to everything they do that's nervous.
So, let's not call attention to the mistakes we make. Let's just do what we can to get through them. And that's
going to help.
>> Great advice that I'm sure will help a lot of people.
>> I hope so. The most spectacular example of a recovery I've ever seen was actually a job talk at Stanford.
>> Yeah.
>> I don't know if I should include this person's name. He's now a professor at
person's name. He's now a professor at UNCC Chapel Hill, but he could have been a faculty member at Stanford because of I think the data, but also what happened
was he spilled water into his laptop during the talk.
>> You know, they have that podium, everyone's given water in case you get thirsty. Keep the water below, folks.
thirsty. Keep the water below, folks.
And he he spilled it. But the way he handled it was so cool.
>> What'd he do?
>> It spilled.
He didn't say anything. He took the bottle, put the cap back on, put it underneath, reached underneath. There
was no towel. He said, "Uh, could somebody perhaps get me a paper towel or a towel?" They brought him a towel. He
a towel?" They brought him a towel. He
spped up whatever moisture was on his laptop. He said nothing the entire time.
laptop. He said nothing the entire time.
This is Mark Zilka. He's a total badass.
Um, and then he went back and finished his talk.
>> Yeah.
>> I was like, >> that was awesome.
>> Composed under pressure. That was
awesome. You know, contingency planning is a really important part of all communication is thinking about what what could happen that would lead this conversation or communication in one direction or the other, positive or
negative. How would I respond? It makes
negative. How would I respond? It makes
sense. You know, when you plan a trip, a vacation, you you think about what happens if the flight's delayed? What
happens if the room isn't ready? We
should do that in our communication as well. Not to script it out, but just to
well. Not to script it out, but just to be ready. So, I think everybody
be ready. So, I think everybody listening now, what would you do if your technology didn't work in that moment?
Think about it. And then when it happens, you you've got that recovery plan and that you just build that confidence. Perhaps he had thought about
confidence. Perhaps he had thought about what happens if I can't use my tech. And
that's what helped him be calm.
>> Incidentally, he works on pain.
I don't know what that's word, but it was just an awesome display of of calm under pressure or something under pressure. I I think it it was the fact
pressure. I I think it it was the fact that he just kept things moving forward >> and stood in silence. The the ability to stand in silence in front of people demonstrates confidence in so many ways.
And so the fact that he was able to take care of business in silence, I think added to that.
>> I feel like when people get nervous, their um voice gets up into their heads.
>> Yeah. they start going up on their tiptoes and they start esphixxiating themselves by speaking much higher than their natural tone of voice is.
>> Um so sometimes I encourage people to um >> slow down.
>> Yeah.
>> And try and drop their voice down further into their throat and chest a little bit.
>> Right.
>> Um it can be artificial like there's one very salient example of a former CEO >> uh who perhaps didn't have the voice
that they spoke with. Um but um but assuming it's still your voice.
>> Yeah.
>> Right. Oh, absolutely. Uh you taught me when you were a guest on my show uh a lot about breath and how breath can impact not only your confidence and the anxiety you feel, but how doing breath
breath work can really help you still your your whole body and allow your natural voice to come out. Because when
we get anxious, we breathe shallow. Less
air is being pushed out. It's being
pushed out faster. Our voice starts sounding like this. And sometimes this is actually really appropriate. If I'm
really excited about something, I should sound like this. But I want it under my control. So breath work and having an
control. So breath work and having an authentic natural voice is really important. You one thing you might find
important. You one thing you might find interesting that's come out in the literature since the last time we spoke is that while the physiological side double inhale long exhale is still the best way to calm down quickly turns out
that all exhale emphasized breathing slows the heart down >> just subtly but significantly enough that it helps you calm down. So if
people can't remember like what breath work to do physiological side, just emphasize an exhale. Extend it. Make it
a little bit more vigorous. If you need to be covert about it, maybe just extend it a little bit. Maybe walk back to the podium or away and do that long exhale.
That seems to really make a big difference because you're offloading carbon dioxide. But also there's this
carbon dioxide. But also there's this pathway through the vagus nerve that literally slows your heart rate down when you exhale. It's pretty spectacular that we have these mechanisms in us. You
know, >> I think it's fantastic. And I and I give credit to you. Every single lecture I give when I talk about anxiety, I talk about what you shared with me. It's all
about the exhale. And I will always say the rule of thumb and then I'll joke the rule of lung is you want your exhale to always be longer than your inhale to help you calm down. And people have found that liberating. So I appreciate
that you shared that with me and know that others are taking advantage of that.
>> You're welcome. And it came from a place of need that I came across those tools.
Uh because I think that we can prepare, prepare prepare >> but it's the knowledge that things happen in the moment that we can't control.
>> That's right. I mean, that's the really scary thing.
>> That's right. And if you think about it, most of our communication is that it's spontaneous. We don't know what's going
spontaneous. We don't know what's going to happen. I mean, a lot of what you and
to happen. I mean, a lot of what you and I have been talking about is is planned communication. It's the presentation,
communication. It's the presentation, the pitch, the meeting with agenda, but most of our communication is spontaneous. We don't know how it's
spontaneous. We don't know how it's going to unfold. You ask me a question, I don't know what that question is. I
don't even know if I know the answer.
You ask me for feedback, I make a mistake, I have to fix it. Most of our communication is spontaneous. And
getting comfortable with that discomfort of not knowing how this will transpire is a big part of the mindset shift that you have to have to do better in spontaneous speaking.
>> Beta blockers, yes, beta blockers, no.
So, I have a heart condition and I take beta blockers regularly and I see how it slows down your thinking in your body.
I'm not a fan. I think cognitive behavioral ways of managing anxiety much better. Now, there are pe I'm not a
better. Now, there are pe I'm not a medical doctor, obviously. Uh there are some people for whom beta blockers might work, but I I actively discourage people if they're just wanting to take it to manage anxiety. I think there's so many
manage anxiety. I think there's so many other things we can do first before you have to go to there. But I I my experience has been it makes me fuzzy and I'm not as quick, >> which makes sense because you're not
getting as much oxygenated blood to your brain.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. Getting a great night's sleep the night before clearly helps.
What do you do or recommend for people that get a lousy night's sleep the night before?
>> Well, I wish I I I would like to ask you that question. I am an awful sleeper. I
that question. I am an awful sleeper. I
am a really good Let's fix that today because I am a lousy sleeper. Uh
absolutely it is better to get a good night's sleep than it is to stay up all night cramming.
>> I tell everybody to train for a big communication event like you would train for a sporting event. You need to eat well. I call it communication hygiene.
well. I call it communication hygiene.
You need to eat well, sleep well, exercise. Um, it is much better to stay
exercise. Um, it is much better to stay on routine than to deviate from your routine. Uh, there is some research
routine. Uh, there is some research around caffeine consumption. Caffeine
consumption is actually really good when you're ideuliating for creativity. When
you actually go to present, uh, you shouldn't deviate from whatever your standard protocol is for caffeine. You
shouldn't all of a sudden go cold turkey. But taking additional caffeine
turkey. But taking additional caffeine because you didn't sleep well the night before can just agitate you during the presentation and communication. So, uh,
getting a good night's sleep is great. I
am not the best person to give advice on how to do it.
>> Well, we could have a long discussion about this some of it for for afterwards. I would say the um
afterwards. I would say the um >> couple of things that have helped me over the years traveling to give talks both for the podcast and academic stuff, etc. is >> if you're going to stay in a hotel, >> Yeah.
>> pull the plug on the alarm clock in the hotel. Use your phone instead. put on
hotel. Use your phone instead. put on
airplane mode. Use that one. Why?
Because I've been woken up many times at 4 in the morning because someone prior to me had set the alarm clock.
>> That just happened the other week.
>> I always unplug that. I actually cover all the bright lights in the room. I put
a towel by the by the door crack. You
want to get I mean, an eye mask is ideal.
>> Um >> I try to ask for a room away from the elevator because that'll keep you up all night.
>> Yes. Um those are just some of the like zerocost things that are very helpful.
But the number one thing to recover sleep that you didn't get is this non-sleep deep rest aka yoga nidra practice. Yoga nidra is the thousands of
practice. Yoga nidra is the thousands of year old uh practice of doing long exhale breathing. Uh it's a 10 to 30
exhale breathing. Uh it's a 10 to 30 minute practice. We can provide some
minute practice. We can provide some links to scripts for these that are excellent. Uh where you're slowing your
excellent. Uh where you're slowing your heart rate down. You're doing a body scan. But the goal during yoga nidra is
scan. But the goal during yoga nidra is to stay awake with your body relaxed.
And it teaches you how to fall asleep more easily.
>> I would argue based on experience that yoga nidra and ndr, which is essentially the same thing, but we've removed the intentions and I just call it non-sleep deep breaths. These are zerocost scripts
deep breaths. These are zerocost scripts out there. My voice, other people's
out there. My voice, other people's voice, also teaches you how to be very alert and very relaxed in your body at the same time, which is a very valuable skill for a lot of different venues,
including public speaking. Um, so it will get you better at falling and falling back asleep. So I can send some to >> Awesome. I I I I'm going to take partake
>> Awesome. I I I I'm going to take partake as soon as we're done.
>> Yeah. And of course, you're not drinking much caffeine, right? You said you have you only I do one cup of tea a day.
>> So it can't be overconumption of caffeine.
>> No, it's my I I I get in my head and I think too much.
>> Your forebrain's working too hard.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, yoga nidra will help with that because the essence of yoga nidra and NSDR, forgive me, but is it works so well and it's zero cost. So,
it's one of these things like I'm not trying to pitch anything, you know, where you have to go pay for something.
I didn't develop it. It's been around for a long time. There's this
instruction in yoga nidra that's also in these NSTRs where you teach yourself to move your brain from a state of thinking
and doing to just being and feeling to literally get out of thought.
>> Right?
>> And to do that is very difficult unless you give your brain enough to do. And
this is why NSDR instructs you to do a kind of focused body scan and relaxation because if you just try and not think, it doesn't work, >> right?
>> Um, >> you think about not thinking.
>> Yeah. There's also some really interesting data on the vestibular system in falling asleep. I'll share
this now. Just you can try it. I did
this last night. I woke up at once in the middle of the night. Keep your eyes closed.
>> If you have to get up and use the restroom, do that first. But keep your eyes closed and move your eyes slowly from side to side. This is not um uh EMDR. Uh but move your eyes from side to
side. Then move them up with your
side. Then move them up with your eyelids still closed down. Roll them
left or counterclockwise. Roll them
right clockwise. And then try and cross them a little bit like stare at the bridge of your nose and exhale. Now this
might sound crazy. It sounds completely wacky right?
>> But what it does is it takes you your vestibular system into a state. We know
this based on data that mimics the state you're trying to achieve, which is that you need to forget about your body's position.
>> Oh, >> you can't fall asleep if you're thinking about your body position. In fact, one of the prerequisites to falling asleep is forgetting about that, which is why there are now also data showing that
rocking back and forth, >> the reason it's effective at making babies and adults fall asleep, they have beds that actually rock from side to side, is because you forget about your body position when your whole body is in
motion.
>> So, try this and I think you'll find that it will greatly facilitate falling or falling back asleep.
>> Absolutely. Tonight, tonight I'm putting in practice. This is this I get I get
in practice. This is this I get I get free free consulting here. Thank you.
Sure. Sure. Yeah. Cuz I think that a a decent night's sleep the night before is great. Otherwise, do NSDR in the morning
great. Otherwise, do NSDR in the morning or before a talk um if you can. Um I
think anything to bring your level of autonomic arousal down if you're if you're sleepd deprived.
>> Yeah.
>> Can help bring more ease to the the public speaking.
>> Something else that I really encourage people to do to help is to have conversation prior to whatever the big communication is.
>> This is huge. Yeah.
>> To to connect with people, have conversation. Whenever I do a keynote,
conversation. Whenever I do a keynote, whenever I'm doing a big presentation, I will always be talking to people.
Sometimes I have to go find them because I'm behind stage and I got to wait to the big introduction. I'll go find somebody and just have a conversation.
That focus and present orientation that it brings and just that act of speaking.
I am so amazed at, you know, anybody who does any athletics or music, you know, you should warm up first, but people don't warm up before they speak. They
think they can go from silence to brilliance without it. Having a
communication with somebody as mundane as you want it can really help. Did do
you use this technique? It looked like it resonated with you.
>> Absolutely. Um because I've often and I still spend a lot of time preparing for podcasts and doing things in isolation.
>> Right.
>> And I've noticed that if I do that for too long and then I go like to the corner cafe that the conversation with the barista feels like like what is going on here? It really because you're in your head.
>> Yeah. uh then it starts to feel like relief and then you your brain shifts to a different state. A long time ago I realized that having some form of communication in route to a talk or something can be very helpful.
>> I've found and I'd be curious what you think that um part of that is the speaking part of it is also the taking turns piece because we're going to be
speaking. generally just us speaking,
speaking. generally just us speaking, but that really getting into a conversation where I listen to what's coming back forces me to also um practice withholding speech.
>> Yes.
>> Because I feel like a lot of bad talks are when people are just kind of fire hosing or they're adding little elements to the sentences where they don't need them >> and it's it's just nervous. It's just
nervousness, >> right? Filling the space.
>> right? Filling the space.
>> Filling the space.
>> So there's some like you said w you need to warm up, >> right? and and that that turn taking
>> right? and and that that turn taking that switching I is engaging for the brain. I would suggest though that when
brain. I would suggest though that when you are up on a stage giving a big presentation leading a big meeting you can actually engage in dialogue. It's
not just calling on people but you can ask them. You can say imagine what it
ask them. You can say imagine what it would be like if and now you're imagining it. We are in a communicate
imagining it. We are in a communicate you you're responding even though I'm not hearing it. I can use an analogy or tell a story. We are communicating taking turns in essence. you're just not
responding vocally to me. So, a big challenge is to be engaging. And there
there's several ways to do it. There's
physical engagement, getting people doing something. There's mental
doing something. There's mental engagement, using analogy, stories, questions. There's linguistic
questions. There's linguistic engagement, taking people into the future or the past by saying, "Picture this," or, "Imagine how it used to be."
Those are ways of getting a dialogue going even though the other person isn't speaking back versus just me broadcasting information.
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love your thoughts on an experience that I've had where that I think many people have um where one of the most terrifying things
is when you are in a small room, maybe 10, 15, 20 people, they say we're going to go around the table, introduce yourself, who you are, >> right? like I want to go first because
>> right? like I want to go first because if I have to hear people >> right >> go and then it's coming around. I don't
know why but some circuit must ramp up where I as soon as I start speaking I'm like hearing my own voice and I don't have any problem public speaking in case people haven't noticed but there's something about that anticipation
>> right >> without it being my turn to speak that makes it such like really awkward >> and then I realized at some point if I just focus off myself and just really
listen to what people are saying when it comes around you just say I'm Andrew or you're whoever and then you share the information that needs to be shared. But
if I'm anticipating having to speak, it's like terrifying.
>> Yeah. It's that buildup because it's getting closer and closer and closer and and the anxiety that you're feeling is getting stronger and stronger. I I don't like go around the room and introduce yourself. If there's a need for people
yourself. If there's a need for people to do that, I will always have people partner up or get in groups of three and then have somebody introduce somebody else. It's just much easier.
else. It's just much easier.
I do exactly and I coach exactly what you what you do. I tell people, listen to everybody else and think to yourself a question you would ask them based on what they've said because that causes you really to focus on what they're saying. So, you're not getting into your
saying. So, you're not getting into your head and you're not really living at the the peak all the anxiety feelings you're having. Now, to help people introduce
having. Now, to help people introduce themselves, I have a way I like to teach people to introduce themselves. Don't
start with your name. Start with
something you care about, you're passionate about, something that interests you, and then say who you are for two reasons. There's actually a third. First is you're going to stand
third. First is you're going to stand out because nobody does this. So people
are actually going to remember you.
Second, if you start with something you're passionate about, you care about, you can use emotion and inflect your voice. It's very hard to inflect your
voice. It's very hard to inflect your voice when you say your name. And then
finally, if you're a non-native speaker or you're speaking to non-native speakers who might have an accent, hearing something in advance primes our brain to say, "Oh, that's how that person speaks." So we'll actually pay
person speaks." So we'll actually pay attention and understand their name more. I don't know about you, but when
more. I don't know about you, but when people with accents introduce themselves to me, sometimes it's hard for me to remember their name because my brain's trying to get used to that's how they speak. So, you're helping everybody. So,
speak. So, you're helping everybody. So,
when I introduce myself, I don't say, "I'm Matt Abrahams." I say, "I'm somebody who's passionate about communication. My name's Matt Abrahams."
communication. My name's Matt Abrahams." And then I'll say something else.
>> You'll do this at a party uh or social.
So, I envision what you were saying is more like a meeting, not at a party.
Yeah. But even even at a party, I I might say I might talk about the the environment first or connect myself to the environment before I say my name.
>> Yeah. But I think leading with something that you care about or concerned about or something in the environment before you say your name is a much better way to introduce yourself. It can't be too long, but it can really help.
>> Try it next time you introduce yourself.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Know that's a it's an interesting one. I I miss having a dog
interesting one. I I miss having a dog because the dog could absorb a lot of the awkwardness.
>> Oh, yeah. He was just so handsome.
People had to look at them.
>> Having having a young child does the same thing.
>> Yeah. Like kids are are a wonderful bridge to to all sorts of things.
>> But you can find those bridges in lots of things. Yeah. A now dear close friend
of things. Yeah. A now dear close friend of mine I met waiting in line. I was at a conference, you know, these academic conferences. We were at some buffet line
conferences. We were at some buffet line and I didn't know anybody. I was sent by my department and there's this guy standing next to me. It was we were standing too close where you know we kind of had to talk and I just look
around the room and I noticed that lots of people were wearing different shades of blue and I just say did I miss the the memo about wearing blue and he looks around and he said yeah that's weird and we started a conversation there. I
didn't need a dog. I didn't need a kid.
I just made an observation and that broke the ice enough for us to talk and now we're good friends. Whenever I
travel to where he is I visit. Whenever
he's out here he visits. So we put a lot of pressure on ourselves around this initiation of communication and just being inquisitive and commenting on something in the environment can help.
Can we do the British windup? A lot of people won't know what that is. That
there's this like much older lady that lives in my neighborhood and she has this little tiny dog.
>> Yeah.
>> And I figure if I just walk over to her, she's going to like be a little scared, but like she I see her often. And so I I did do a windup. I walked over to her and I said, "Wait, is that the
>> dog that mauled that kid over in Englewood?" And she was like,
Englewood?" And she was like, >> "You're pulling my leg." And then, you know, we become friends, right? No, cuz
I'm not going to just walk up to her like, "Hey, can you kind of like someone looming on you, right?" You know, it's like a little scary, right? Um, so I I stole the wine. I guess they call it in Britain, I think they call it a windup,
right? So, I wasn't trying to be funny.
right? So, I wasn't trying to be funny.
I just I really like this lady and and her dog is super cute and clearly I need to get another dog. Um,
>> if one thing has come from this interview, it's Andrew needs another dog.
>> Thanks to you, many, many more things have come from this uh interview. Far
more utility as well. But I mean, I don't suggest anyone smoke. But I think um back in the day, this was the whole thing of people like buming a smoke.
They'd take breaks. I you I worked a job where I did some packaging and building of like scooters and wagons at a toy store in downtown Palo Alto. And uh on breaks you'd go into the alley and like
there were people working at the bakery next door and you'd you'd strike up a conversation. I didn't smoke, but you'd
conversation. I didn't smoke, but you'd strike up a conversation and then you'd get to know somebody, right?
>> Uh by name, >> right?
>> Uh but nowadays people are often in their phones.
>> We use the phone as a pacifier and as a way of of not having to engage. Uh I I I have encouraged my two kids uh to help
them get out of this cycle to to to show something that you're looking at at the phone. Invite some hey this is pretty
phone. Invite some hey this is pretty cool. What do you think? Check out this
cool. What do you think? Check out this meme. So it's a use the phone as you're
meme. So it's a use the phone as you're saying that cigarettes used to serve as a way to initiate conversation as long as it's appropriate. And it's funny I know exactly the toy store you're talking about because I know that bakery no longer exists but I used to go there
all the time.
>> They closed Prolific Oven.
>> Yeah. It's gone.
>> It's now a great restaurant by the way.
I guess we can say cuz they they both it was Palo Alto and Sport World. It was
one of the oldest businesses. They had a skateboard shop in the back, but prior to working in the skateboard shop. I wor
I sold shoes and I uh used to build wagons. A radio flyer wagons and and
wagons. A radio flyer wagons and and tricycles and stuff.
>> I used to go there as a kid because you we not only would get a toy, but we'd get to have a treat, too.
>> Oh, yeah.
>> Those were fun outings.
>> Yeah, that place was cool. It was a familyowned. Yeah, it's a
familyowned. Yeah, it's a >> um All right. Well, now we're taking people down memory lane here, but if in downtown Palo Alto, >> uh, you can check it out. I think the I think the sign is still there, but it
might be. Yeah. And and that that
might be. Yeah. And and that that actually brings up something useful. I
mean, I had jobs where I was a they didn't call it a barista then, but, I worked at a muffin shop around the corner, which then got me that job. I
think from conversation across the counter. I think my niece worked a job
counter. I think my niece worked a job selling frozen yogurt before she went off to college recently. So,
>> get a job. Yeah. you know, as a kid, get a job where you interact with people.
>> Having a job uh where you're in customer service as a kid is so educational for so many reasons. Communication being an important one. You learn how to
important one. You learn how to communicate with a lot of different people. You learn how to be in service
people. You learn how to be in service of other people's needs in that moment.
I think it's it's wonderful. I uh my first job and a job I had a lot during high school, I worked at an athletic club folding towels and when people would come in, I would give them the towel and we'd have some small talk. It
taught me to be very comfortable. I had
to announce I mean this sounds so silly but I the gym is closing in 30 minutes but as a high school student I had to say that with a hundred people in the gym that was nerve-wracking but that was
part of my desensitization.
So cool. Yeah. I think that um I I don't want to sound old because I I am old.
I'm 50 now. Uh if I feel good I feel good. I'm going to go another 50 years.
good. I'm going to go another 50 years.
That's the goal. Hopefully healthy all along. But I think being a camp
along. But I think being a camp counselor >> Oh, yeah.
>> is the perfect example of um doing something you barely understand how to do and having to project confidence doing it. I mean, they teach you a few
doing it. I mean, they teach you a few things. At least when I did it, it's
things. At least when I did it, it's like suddenly you're like in charge of all these lives. I mean, it's you think about it, it's pretty wild. But, you
know, >> by the second session, you're you're in a groove. Like you're telling people
a groove. Like you're telling people what to do, when to listen, letting them, you know, do what they want when they want. you you can't use um you know
they want. you you can't use um you know harsh forms of communication. You need
to be you know but you need to keep them safe. So you need to like use your voice
safe. So you need to like use your voice appropriately. Um
appropriately. Um >> you know raise it when it's necessary if somebody's in danger that kind of thing.
So doing that sort of thing I think is how we learn how to communicate.
>> Oh absolutely. And and unfortunately some of those opportunities and jobs are changing and we have to find other vehicles to help people. I when I left high-tech, I taught high school for two
years before I graduated to to do what I'm doing now. And I learned so much about communication teaching 14, 15 year olds that I never learned working in adults running organizations like I did.
So getting these opportunities is precious yet we don't have a lot of those opportunities. One thing I think
those opportunities. One thing I think we can all do with the younger generation and even colleagues we have is role model and talk through some of
the things that we're thinking about in terms of our communication. So I with my children will often say I have to have a difficult conversation tomorrow with a colleague or with a boss and I'm really worried about this or I'm thinking about
saying it this way. We don't often get meta about our communication and yet they're learnings that we can pass along and you know you you saw it I see it where where we're both affiliated with
our teaching. I mean people are
our teaching. I mean people are brilliant and they're really good communicators but they don't weren't always that way. They had to learn and they had to do it. And when you start talking to people which I have the advantage of doing is asking them how
did you get to do that? What do you do?
There's so much richness in that. And I
think we just have to open up that conversation, role model it, but also talk about it with the younger people in your life, the people you're trying to uh build up, and that'll really help.
>> Do you think by virtue of the pandemic and the lockdowns and social media that there is a swath of people right now who um really don't know how to engage the
same way that >> um people even younger than them do. So,
this isn't an agist thing. It's really
that they missed out on an opportunity uh to engage there. What is it? The Gen
Z stare. Is that a real thing?
>> I don't know about the Gen Z stair, but I do think there there are critical periods in development. Uh not just in we that generation of kids lost a
critical development. Uh one of my sons
critical development. Uh one of my sons was in high school and high school is a is a great place to learn about yourself and about communication. And if you're doing it through a screen, that's a very
different experience. Now, I think he's
different experience. Now, I think he's a very good communicator, but they they they missed on an opportunity. A lot of how you learn is by testing and trying things out. And if you lost a couple
things out. And if you lost a couple years of that testing puts you at a disadvantage. I know because of what I
disadvantage. I know because of what I do, we can build that back and learn it.
But there are there is a whole swath of people who had to struggle in a way most of us didn't.
My graduate adviser who I really admire very much. She's passed away but I have
very much. She's passed away but I have always admired her was once described by somebody I think quite aptly as quiet but not shy.
>> And I realize it's a very powerful phenotype. And I mention it because some
phenotype. And I mention it because some people listening to this conversation might think, you know, I'm just not that chatty. Like I just I'm right.
chatty. Like I just I'm right.
>> But they're not necessarily shy. like
they're perfectly happy to be in conversation and and be quiet until there's something that they want to say and sometimes she wouldn't say anything and sometimes she would say things and indeed she was very very smart but she's
also very at ease. So I came to learn that there are people who are quiet but not shy >> and I think that's a phenotype we don't often acknowledge when we hear about
introverted extroverted my father was exactly that way. My father uh most intelligent person I've ever known. He
was very quiet, but he wasn't shy. And
if he had something to say, he would say it. And it would often be very profound.
it. And it would often be very profound.
And it it was the way he lived in the world. And people people appreciated it.
world. And people people appreciated it.
And and he leaned into it. He had
opportunities to speak and would sit back. And I learned a lot from him that
back. And I learned a lot from him that sometimes the most effective communication is to just listen and be present. Uh so I I agree that there that
present. Uh so I I agree that there that there are people who who have a lot of value to add and they just might be reticent in the moment and I don't think there's anything wrong with that. We
need lots of we need diversity not only of ideas and opinions but diversity in the way we communicate. We hold in this in our culture this notion that the the extroverted confident person is the is
the right way to communicate and that's not always true. You can get into a lot of trouble, especially extroverts who who speak first and think second.
>> Especially nowadays where everything is recorded. Yeah.
recorded. Yeah.
>> People will say stupid things that they wish they hadn't said. I mean, chairs of departments, fortunately, not at Stanford, but chairs of major university departments have gotten themselves fired
by being too loose with their thumbs on what was formerly called Twitter. I know
at least one prominent example. You just
go like, "What were you thinking?"
>> Right? And apparently
>> they weren't filtering well enough.
>> Brilliant people.
>> And and it wasn't even something that like it was clear they really believed.
They just said something really offensive and really stupid. And
>> it's like at least at that time it was sufficient for them to lose their position.
>> Yeah. I wasn't into anything nefarious or bad. I was a good kid growing up. But
or bad. I was a good kid growing up. But
I can't imagine growing up with everything being recorded.
>> Yeah. It's probably a tense time for a lot of people, but people seem to be vocalizing and sharing more as opposed to less, >> right?
>> Although I I suppose there's a sampling bias because we're not hearing from the from the quiet ones without social media accounts. I feel like almost everyone
accounts. I feel like almost everyone has that social media account. Now,
>> what I do admire about all of this social media is how people who are younger than I am, at least are able to manage their presence in so many different domains. I can
barely show up, you know, dressed appropriately for a conversation.
They're able to manage their presence on different platforms, some virtually, some in person. And that's an art.
That's a skill to be able to to be able to project yourself in different ways in different venues. And and again, I'm not
different venues. And and again, I'm not saying be disingenuous or inauthentic, but there's a skill there. You know, I I coach a lot of senior leaders who I would I I'm trying to coach to really be
mindful of your presence, how you show up, what it means. And I see in my students who are generally in their mid to late 20s who this comes easy to them.
This is just something they know how to do. So the I'm not bashing social media
do. So the I'm not bashing social media ever, but I do think that there's some skills that come with it that that others could benefit from.
>> Maybe that's why the younger generation is so much better at it, cuz I see my peers from high school. I see I see people 10 years 20 years older than I am that seem to have an immense need to be
seen on social media. It's part of my job which is why I do it. But prior to that I didn't really have social media accounts or didn't use them. But in any case, there's no judgment from me on that. I just I agree it's it's a lot of
that. I just I agree it's it's a lot of cognitive load.
>> It is. But they they are able to switch in and out of those of that in a way that that is hard for me and certainly hard for some of the people I work with.
I'm curious about martial arts and running. Um, but as in particular
running. Um, but as in particular martial arts, do you think that playing a sport or engaging in martial arts can actually teach you how to be more
comfortable in your physical body in a way that transfers to public speaking, one-on-one communication, small group communication, just presence, posture, stance.
>> I enjoyed the question. Thank you. I
don't often talk about my martial arts.
I' I've been doing it over 40 years and it's it's a very much a part of who I am and I absolutely think what I've learned in the martial arts have helped me do better at what I do and I think what I
do have has helped me be better in the martial arts. There is a presence and a
martial arts. There is a presence and a connection that you need to have to do martial arts well especially when you're working with somebody else. uh it gives a kind of confidence that I know I can
handle myself in circum in circumstances. I don't expect to be
circumstances. I don't expect to be attacked, but I know that in a situation where things go sideways that I can have some presence about myself. And that
confidence is invaluable in everything I do. And martial arts is really a form of
do. And martial arts is really a form of communication. I'm observing what my
communication. I'm observing what my opponent or that my training partner is doing. I am trying to connect and
doing. I am trying to connect and anticipate the next move but not get locked into it. It it really trains your brain and your body to be responsive and
to be open. You know, people focus a lot on the marshall, but the art side is really what as I get older is what really attracts me. Art is about
expression, style, connection, and that to me uh as I've matured in my training has really become this new wealth of knowledge. You know, somebody said
knowledge. You know, somebody said you've been studying the same thing for 40 years. It's not the same thing. It
40 years. It's not the same thing. It
changes. It's multiple levels and ways of uncovering. So, I think it's great. I
of uncovering. So, I think it's great. I
think everybody should have some physical activity they do that helps them in whatever professional activity or their personal lives. You you can learn so much about yourself and how to
connect with others. I think there's tremendous learning in uh for lack of a better term, exercise, >> but there's something unique about martial arts or a sport. Not to say that
running isn't a sport. It can be. Or
that resistance training isn't a sport.
It can be. But I think if people are just exercising and only viewing it through that lens, >> that um they're not gleaning the full benefit. I actually try and make my
benefit. I actually try and make my resistance training sessions a sort of meditation.
>> Yeah.
>> I don't allow myself to text or in most cases uh bring in too much other information.
I'll listen to music or a podcast. Yeah,
>> but I'm careful with that. I want to focus on what I'm doing. And I think it's great practice for cognitive pursuits. My running is my meditation. I
pursuits. My running is my meditation. I
I really when I run, I I might listen to something, but I really meditate. I find
I'm very creative as a result of it. And
uh when I don't do it, I miss it. One
area that I like about the martial arts, at least in the styles I've trained in, they vary in terms of their activities.
So some of the stuff is completely spontaneous. You're sparring. It's it's
spontaneous. You're sparring. It's it's
spontaneous. There's some rules, but you're sparring. And in the style I
you're sparring. And in the style I train there there are things called katas or forms where essentially a pre-arranged dance of moves long longer everything is scripted. Uh and then
there in my style we do these things called self-defense techniques where you practice certain moves to get out of each of those is training you a different way of thinking and being just like there different ways of thinking
and being in communication. Sometimes
it's completely spontaneous. Sometimes
I'm giving prepared remarks. Sometimes
it's Q&A where I'm saying some things I've prepared but others I haven't. So
finding vehicles to help you train in different ways uh crossraining if you will for your communication can really help.
>> Fantastic. And I I really like this idea that we need to consider the uh the different styles of different audiences.
>> Yeah.
>> Along those lines, I solicited for questions uh from the audience on social media and there's some terrific questions here. Great. Uh, terrific
questions here. Great. Uh, terrific
because I know they relate to questions that many other people are sure to have as well. Uh, to kick it off,
as well. Uh, to kick it off, somebody asked, "Why do you think women apologize before sharing their opinions?
What should they do instead? Do you
observe this?" I see this often.
Apologizing is a way of trying to connect, yet I think it can backfire. So instead
of saying I'm sorry or I didn't do work, start with something that you're confident in. And if you do need to
confident in. And if you do need to apologize because there's something you didn't do or you need to do, have that come later. The way you start an
come later. The way you start an interaction sets the tone for the whole interaction. And if I start by putting
interaction. And if I start by putting myself one down because I apolog I'm not prepared or I should have done this differently. Then our interaction is
differently. Then our interaction is going to be very different. So start
with something that you're comfortable with and confident in and then if you need to apologize, apologize later. It
really makes a big difference.
>> I'm going to layer in an additional question. I've seen people give talks
question. I've seen people give talks that begin with I didn't sleep that well last night or I'm jetlagged so forgive me if I blank
blank and blank. Basically trying to preload the talk with um maybe a buffer so that if they make a mistake they're more protected. I it drives me crazy but
more protected. I it drives me crazy but maybe I'm just crazy.
>> No, it bothers me too. You know, Andrew, my wife taught me a long time ago I can't pre-apologize. And that's what
can't pre-apologize. And that's what people are trying to do, right? So, and
all you do in those circumstances is prime people to pay attention to whatever it is you're doing. So, if I say, "I didn't sleep well." Then people are going to be looking, oh, he's stuttering over his words. He's
stumbling. You know, you want people to focus on your message. Don't
pre-apologize. Just get to what you're doing. And if something comes up, you
doing. And if something comes up, you get to decide in the moment, do I address it or do I just keep going?
>> How to communicate well across cultures and accents. You talked a little bit
and accents. You talked a little bit about this earlier, but maybe we could uh revisit that.
>> So, culture and context loom large in all communication. Uh we have to think
all communication. Uh we have to think and when I talk about culture, I'm not just talking about country of origin.
Different organizations have different cultures. Different departments within
cultures. Different departments within organizations have cultures. Different
generations have have different cultures. So, we just have to be
cultures. So, we just have to be sensitive to that. Uh our messages have to play differently. So, whenever we communicate, we have to think about who we're communicating to in the context and culture in which we're communicating.
We live in a diverse society, in a diverse world where we hear lots of viewpoints, lots of people from different places. Accents loom large. On
different places. Accents loom large. On
my show, Think Fast Talks Smart, I interviewed a lot of people who are experts in non-native speaking. And what
they all tell me is the goal of a non-native speaker is not to sound like a native speaker. It's impossible. It
can't be. You're not a native speaker.
Rather, focus on getting your message across. Take the pressure off of
across. Take the pressure off of yourself. So, what does that mean? That
yourself. So, what does that mean? That
means I might make my point and then what I do is I repeat it with a story or I give an example or I tell an analogy.
It's about getting the point across, not about worrying about am I using exactly the right word and the right syntax. And
the reality is, I don't know about you, but a lot of native speakers of English, they don't speak English so well either themselves. So I think if it's all about
themselves. So I think if it's all about getting your point across and using repetition and other tools to help >> how to deal with interrupting.
We have a colleague at Stanford by the way that told me if they interrupt it's a sign of interest which helped the interactions. But the question here is
interactions. But the question here is how should we handle interruptions?
We still want to make the interrupter feel heard in most cases, but sometimes it can be distracting. Two ways. First,
set expectations upfront. Setting
boundaries can be helpful. So, if I'm going into a situation, I might say, I want to spend the first 5 minutes laying the foundation to what I'm going to say, and then I'd love to take your questions. So, if the person does
questions. So, if the person does interrupt, they're violating an expectation that was set. And that puts you in a better position to maybe shut it down. You can say, "Thank you. I hear
it down. You can say, "Thank you. I hear
you're really anxious. I really want to get through this material. So, setting
boundaries can help. I believe one of the most useful communication tools is paraphrasing. Paraphrasing is where you
paraphrasing. Paraphrasing is where you take what somebody has said, you synthesize it, and you distill it down to something important. If somebody
interrupts you, you can take the floor back by paraphrasing what they've said and moving back on. So if I'm talking about the financial implications of something and you come in and give me your opinion, you interrupt me, I can
say cost is really important. And in
fact, I just took it back from you. If
you are somebody who wants to just share your overwhelming knowledge and you you're one of those people who bloiates, I can stop that by interrupting with a paraphrase. I can say that point you
paraphrase. I can say that point you just made about X really important.
We're going to talk about that next on the agenda. I think paraphrasing is the
the agenda. I think paraphrasing is the most polite way to get control back, be it from an interrupter or somebody who's just talking too much. It can feel uncomfortable to interrupt somebody with
a paraphrase, but if you're in front of a room of people or a meeting, not doing it is actually more rude to the other people than it is being rude to the person who spoke. So paraphrasing, I think, gets you out of those
circumstances.
>> Someone said, "How do I prepare for a speech?" that I think there's a lot
speech?" that I think there's a lot there's a lot that goes into that, but perhaps there's a shorter answer um that you could give us a you know a sort of
key key bins of preparation.
>> Absolutely. Let me give you top a few top things. First and foremost, you have
top things. First and foremost, you have to think about who is the audience I'm speaking to. What's important and
speaking to. What's important and relevant to them related to the topic I want to speak on. All of us when we communicate suffer from the curse of knowledge and the curse of passion. We
know a lot about what we're saying and we care a lot about it and because of that we can make assumptions, start too deep, etc. First, think about your audience relative to your topic. That's
number one. Number two, come up with a clear goal. Many of us take our audience
clear goal. Many of us take our audience on a journey of our discovery of what we want to say as we're saying it. We we
don't have a clear path. To me, a goal has three parts: information, emotion, and action. What do I want them to know?
and action. What do I want them to know?
How do I want them to feel? And what do I want them to do? Once you have an understanding of your audience and your goal, then apply a structure. Don't just
list and itemize information. Problem,
solution benefit past present future, what, so what now. There myriad
structures. If you do that, you will have content that's meaningful to your audience and increases the likelihood of fidelity of the communication. Then you
have to practice. It's not enough to have a good message. You have to practice the delivery. If you do those things, you will give better talks. You
will have better conversations and better meetings. I was thinking about
better meetings. I was thinking about something a few moments ago for people that are afraid of public speaking because they might choke or dissolve
into a puddle of their own tears on stage or or freeze or whatever. Um, do
you think it's useful? I would think it would be useful to try and think about what you want to happen as opposed to what you don't want to happen. That's
right. That's right. A lot of people envision the worst and they self-create that. Right. It's a self-fulfilling
that. Right. It's a self-fulfilling prophecy. Imagine what the potential
prophecy. Imagine what the potential could be. Set yourself for that positive
could be. Set yourself for that positive expectation. And it doesn't have to be
expectation. And it doesn't have to be this is going to be the best communication ever. Just be I'm going to
communication ever. Just be I'm going to add value. People are going to learn
add value. People are going to learn something. People will prevent people
something. People will prevent people won't make a mistake that I'm advising them to avoid. Just have a a positive outcome in mind and that can really
help. So thinking about what value is in
help. So thinking about what value is in it for you and for your audience before you communicate can really make a big difference.
>> A few people asked questions uh that relate to interpersonal relations that you may be equipped to uh solve for them. But like how should I win an
them. But like how should I win an argument without losing somebody? I
think that's a is that a different podcast?
>> That that would be a whole different podcast. Here's what I'll tell you
podcast. Here's what I'll tell you though. Listening is important. A lot of
though. Listening is important. A lot of our arguments are over things that that really don't exist. When I've been I've done some mediation work in my life and the number one thing I make people do
when I'm I bring two people who disagree together is I make each listen to the other and often the argument disappears.
People didn't realize that. And the
second bit of advice, I learned this from two friends of mine and my wife and I deploy this a lot. When we are set up to have a disagreement, we each declare how important whatever the issue is to
us is because we assume, you know, if I'm really passionate about something, I assume when we're arguing that you're equally as passionate. But that's not always true. But if I come at you with
always true. But if I come at you with my full passion and you're not as passionate, I'm going to make you more passionate. So all of a sudden, we're
passionate. So all of a sudden, we're fighting. So if I want to go out to
fighting. So if I want to go out to Chinese food, my wife wants to go out to Mexican food, I might say, for me, Chinese food is an eight because I really have been craving it. She says
Mexican food for me is a three today.
There's no fight. There's no argument.
But if she says it's an eight and I have say it's an eight, then we have the issue. So understanding the
issue. So understanding the prioritization and really listening to understand what's involved, you can mitigate a lot of the conflict that you're having.
>> Somebody asked, "How do I get rid of filler words, um, like, etc." >> I had a guest on my show. She's a psycho linguist, and she helped me realize that
filler words are not bad. Filler words
are actually helpful. They do things for us. They they save the space. So if I'm
us. They they save the space. So if I'm not done talking and I don't want others to interrupt, I say ama. There's
research in the child development literature that says when we speak to kids, before we say a new term or give a new idea, we will often preface it with a filler word. Um uh we signal what's
coming next is important. And I think that's why it drives us nuts. Uh when
somebody says so many filler words because we've been trained as kids that something important follows it and when all that follows it is another um we get frustrated. So the goal is not to
frustrated. So the goal is not to eliminate these. The goal is to make
eliminate these. The goal is to make them not distracting. In fact,
playwrights and screenwriters will actually add filler words to make it sound human.
The best way I know to reduce filler words, especially the ones that are most annoying, and those are the ones that sit in silence. So I'm done speaking. um
and then I start speaking again. Those
are the ones that really stand out is a breath technique. I learned this from
breath technique. I learned this from somebody who has been teaching communication skills for a long, long time. His name is Jerry Weissman and
time. His name is Jerry Weissman and it's called landing phrases.
When we speak, we need to be pushing air out.
If I am inhaling, I can't speak. I
invite everybody listening and watching to try to say um while inhaling. You
can't do it. So if I train myself at the end of my sentences and phrases to land the phrase to be out of breath, I have to inhale. Not only can I not say um I
to inhale. Not only can I not say um I can't say anything, I build in a pause.
So as you speak, train yourself to land.
And the reason I call it landing a phrase, it's like a gymnast who does all those flips and twirls and then they stick the landing. So at the end of each of my phrases, I'm completely out of breath. I inhale and then I start
breath. I inhale and then I start speaking again. You can reduce
speaking again. You can reduce significantly the filler words. Now, you
have to practice this. And the way I teach everybody to practice, look at your calendar or schedule every day. And
once a day, read out loud everything on your schedule. And at the end of each
your schedule. And at the end of each one, land the phrase. So, I might say, "Going to lunch with Andrew, working out at the gym, seeing my son for dinner."
At the end of each one of those phrases, I've landed my my phrase. I'm out of breath. I'm training myself how to do
breath. I'm training myself how to do that. You'll get rid of many of your
that. You'll get rid of many of your filler words.
>> Fantastic.
I'm going to try to do that.
You don't have many filler words.
>> I have to check some recordings of the podcast.
Someone wants to know how to tell a story without turning it into a sermon.
>> Like how to know when it's going on too long.
>> There are two ways to answer that question. One is about time. How long
question. One is about time. How long
does it take? My mother has a wonderful saying. She likes to say, "Tell the
saying. She likes to say, "Tell the time, don't build the clock." Many of us are clock builders when we communicate.
We say much more than we need to. So if
you have to tell a story, think about what's the most critical few. In the
military, they talk about bottom line up front. Get that bottom line up there. So
front. Get that bottom line up there. So
don't say more than you need to. The
other part is you have to make the story engaging and relevant to the people you're talking to. A lot of people have such a preamble to get to the start. A
colleague of mine likes to talk about parachuting in. Just jump right in and
parachuting in. Just jump right in and then build the the rest of the story. A
lot of us, well, it was a rainy day and then it was this and it was that was that and you just get to the story first. So, if you parachute in and you
first. So, if you parachute in and you remind yourself to be concise and clear, you're going to tell more engaging and better stories. Several people asked how
better stories. Several people asked how to ask for a raise.
>> There are several characteristics I'd like people to think about when you ask for something that you want, especially from a boss or an authority figure.
First, think about context.
Look at your boss's schedule before you ask for a raise. Are you the fifth meeting in a row before you go in? Maybe
it's better to go tomorrow when you're early. So, context matters. People I
early. So, context matters. People I
have a colleague who studied parole decisions judges make and he found that that decisions are different before lunch and after lunch even though the cases are the same. When you ask, you
have to you have to think about that.
Second, when positioning yourself, think about from your boss's perspective, what are the criteria they would think about in terms of giving a raise. Often we
come and say, "Well, I've done this.
I've done this. I've done this and this colleague got that. Think about what value you have brought to them. So
approach it from their perspective and think about how you can position it so that you are demonstrating your value again from their perspective. And you
should practice. You should you should roleplay. Talk to other people. Say I'm
roleplay. Talk to other people. Say I'm
thinking of saying this just so the words come out instead of just thinking in your head what you want to say.
Several people asked about how best to communicate with people who are not very good at communicating. That's a hard one. Uh I would encourage people to lead
one. Uh I would encourage people to lead with questions. Draw the other person
with questions. Draw the other person out often. If you can get them talking
out often. If you can get them talking about something that's important to them or connected to what you want, then you can engage in that conversation. So
again, it's pre-work. It's thinking
about what's of value. lead with
questions and then as soon as the person responds, give them space to tell more.
My mother-in-law had a black belt in small talk. She was amazing. Uh she was
small talk. She was amazing. Uh she was from the Midwest. Every time she'd fly out to visit, she'd come off the plane with three new best friends. And her
secret, and you mentioned this earlier, were three words. Tell me more. Once
somebody answers a question, give them that space to say more. And that really draws them out and gives you some ideas of what's important to them so you can latch on and talk about it more. So lead
with questions, give space for more communication. That's how you draw
communication. That's how you draw somebody who might be reticent or not comfortable speaking.
>> Do you ever recommend people memorize speeches?
>> Never. Uh there are times where I recommend being very familiar with how you start. Commencing is the part the
you start. Commencing is the part the point where people are most nervous about speaking is about 30 seconds before in about a minute into what they're doing. So you can be very
they're doing. So you can be very familiar, but the reason memorizing is so bad is it burdens your cognitive load. You've created the right way to
load. You've created the right way to say it and you're constantly comparing what you wanted to say to what you're actually saying. So having a road map,
actually saying. So having a road map, having a structure, having some familiarity with some ideas are important. If there's certain words that
important. If there's certain words that you really want to get across or certain data, have a note card, read it. I'd
rather you do that than put the cognitive burden on yourself of memorizing.
We talked a little bit about this earlier, but maybe we can just recap and add it anything that you want to the question that's very common here, which is how to reduce pre-talk anxiety.
>> And it could be public speaking or it could be one-on-one communication.
>> We could talk a lot about this and when you were on my show, Andrew, we talked about some of the biological things you can do. When it comes to managing
can do. When it comes to managing anxiety, you have to manage both symptoms and sources. The symptoms are the things you physiologically experience. You have shared great advice
experience. You have shared great advice on breathing etc. I'll give one example.
When I get really nervous, I persspire and blush. A great way to manage that is
and blush. A great way to manage that is to cool yourself down. The reason you're persspiring and blushing is your heart rate's going up, your body's tensing up.
It's like when you exercise, the palms of your hand are thermore regulators for your body. Anybody who's ever held warm
your body. Anybody who's ever held warm coffee or tea on a cold morning has felt themselves warm up. I will always hold something cold before I speak and it helps cool me down. I blush and persspire less. So there are things we
persspire less. So there are things we can do to manage physical symptoms. The breath work that you talk about is really helpful. But we also have to
really helpful. But we also have to think about sources, the things that initiate and exacerbate our anxiety.
I'll give one example. Many of us are made nervous by the goal that we have. I
advocate for having a goal when you communicate, but sometimes that goal makes us nervous. My students are afraid they're not going to get a good grade.
The entrepreneurs I coach are afraid they're not going to get funding. Uh the
people listening might be afraid their boss isn't going to support their idea.
So, we're made nervous by a potential negative future outcome. So, the way to counteract that is to become presoriented. Lots of ways to do that.
presoriented. Lots of ways to do that.
You can do deep breathing. You can walk around the building, have a conversation with somebody. I tell people, do what
with somebody. I tell people, do what athletes do. Listen to a song or a
athletes do. Listen to a song or a playlist. That helps you get focused.
playlist. That helps you get focused.
Start at 100 and count backwards by a challenging numbers. Try 17s.
challenging numbers. Try 17s.
Really have to focus and be present oriented. My favorite way, and this is
oriented. My favorite way, and this is going to sound really silly. I like to say tongue twisters out loud. You can't
say a tongue twister, right, and not be present oriented. And it warms up your
present oriented. And it warms up your voice. It's an opportunity to warm up.
voice. It's an opportunity to warm up.
So before I ever do any of my podcast interviews or a big talk, I will say a tongue twister out loud three times fast and it gets me present and warms me up.
So to manage anxiety, you have to manage symptoms and some of the things that initiate and exacerbate. There are a whole bunch of those. And if you do it, you begin to create for yourself an
anxiety management plan and you can invoke that plan. And actually just having that plan helps reduce the anxiety you have. The very first thing we do in my strategic communication
class is we have our students create an anxiety management plan. And not only does it help them in the course, I have students years later say, "My grandmother passed away. I use the anxiety management plan to help with the
eulogy or I'm doing a best man toast and I'm using it." Giving yourself tools to help manage anxiety is one of the biggest gifts you can give to yourself.
>> Fantastic.
These are incredible bits and frankly entire meals of advice uh for people. Public communication and just one-on-one communication and
everything in between is so important.
And people really carry around a lot of fear and anxiety about them. But you've
given us a ton of practical tools and I know these are time- tested and there are data on many of them and the real world data are really what count the most.
>> So I want to thank you for coming here today to share them with us. Also for
the books that you've written. We'll put
links to those in the show note captions and uh that you continue to get out there and on here as a public educator.
you know, there are many many people and books uh talking about these topics, but you've clearly thrown yourself into these as like the guy who's really tackling them for the greater good. So,
I really appreciate the breadth and specificity of what you've shared, and I know everyone else will as well, and I know that they're going to apply them.
So, my goal was to do this outro without saying um once. I guess I just said um.
>> You did it well. Thank you. Very fluent.
>> Come back again.
>> I'd love to. Thank you.
>> Thank you for joining me for today's discussion with Matt Abrahams. To learn more about his work and to find links to the various resources we discussed, please see the show note caption. If
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