Maximize the Impact when an Executive Communicates
Leadership communications: How a communicator in the social media world can support and maximize the impact when an executive communicates
Mark Schumann (@dmarkschumann), past Chair, ABC
http://re-communicate.com
The first half of the presentation focused on leadership communications in the social world, while this section focused on the anchors of executive communication.
6 Anchors to helping leaders become better communicators:
- Candor – Nothing is more important than making sure people feel like you’re telling the truth. You can do this by telling people something they don’t know, sharing insights, and giving them something they haven’t heard before. We always have to find something new – people tend to believe it must be the truth if it’s something new. Tips – share something that surprised you – for example, tie it to something that happened today (hold up the iPad to look cool), people believe it’s more candid and timely if you talk about what’s going on in the news. Likewise, they’re going to believe more if you tell them something that’s not on a PowerPoint slide (seems less rehearsed). Finally, tell me what you want me to remember, and if you do that, you need to look me in the eye.
- Clarity – It’s so easy to get caught up in a convoluted narrative. Be direct (candor) and summarize your message to provide better clarity. Remember the message. There’s always a clearer way to explain it, and never stop at trying to make the message simpler.
- Curiosity – Contributes to an image of caring. Connect with people and have a human moment. Walking the halls is a huge opportunity to illustrate this. Leaders shouldn’t just hurry past them on way to meetings. Everyone has a story, and the more a leader can demonstrate an interest in the people they’re speaking with, the more open they’ll be to listening. Begin your talk with a question to learn what people have to say, and then speak to those questions.
- Caring – Find me something that will touch my heart, and I’ll show you how it changes my point of view.
- Content – The punchline must be heard. People need to know what they need to remember and what they should do with that information. Give the audience meat – always have great content or information.
- Conversation – Leaders need to be trained in having a conversation, not a speech. A speech should be nothing more than a conversation with a whole bunch of people.
“I can say anything (as a leader) as long as people believe I’m being candid, clear, and caring.”
Tip: Never say “but” ever again – it makes people defensive. Say “and” – it makes people feel inclusive.
Strengthen a Leader’s Candor
What gets in the way:
- Truth – Especially when the truth hurts, it can’t always be delivered so directly.
- Spin – Too much explaination and details looks suspicious.
- Fear – Often people are afraid of what they’re about to hear, and then they’re afraid of what they didn’t say.
- Lawyers – have a great relationship with this area, understand the rules – what can and can’t be said.
- Media – not talking directly with people – recorded messages.
- Pride – Sometimes leaders let their pride get in the way
Things to consider:
- What do you need to communicate? Use the CEO sparingly, only when you need them.
- How informal must we be? They start with a comfort in formality.
- How spontaneous can we be? Don’t kill questions by making people wait till the end. Questions are spontaneous.
- Who else should we include? Have the people there who can answer the questions, but don’t make them look like they don’t know the answers.
- How much conversation can we stage? Facilitate discussion between leaders, reveal how they work together. People want unscripted moments.
Reveal a Leader’s Caring
What gets in the way of caring:
- Distance – Physically (higher floors) and on the org chart, leaders need to be connected to the real world at all times.
- Uncertainty – Not knowing what to say.
- Entourage – They have to break out of their comfort zone and involve others.
- Formality – This keeps people at an arms length
- Logistics
- Timing
5 Reminders a leader must live by to be perceived as someone who cares:
- You are being watched – always – especially now with technology
- You are never alone – people are always watching, listening, etc.
- You only have a moment – reactions by individuals are a collection of small moments
- You can disappoint people – It’s easy when the expectations are great
- Social media doesn’t make you social – It’s about being human and opening up
Articulate a Leader’s Clarity
What gets in the way of clarity
- Details – They know the topic and want to tell everyone everything. People just need to understand the big picture and only include what’s necessary to illustrate this.
- Voice – This is the way we say things. They might use the company’s voice, not their own.
- Lawyers – Certain ways we have to say things.
- Editing – Being too close to the content.
- Tradition – People may infer things based on past practices
- Deadlines – Not enough time to craft the correct message.
6 things corporate communications must be able to tell their leader with a straight face:
- No one will understand you
- No one will believe you
- No one will follow you
- No one will care about what you are saying
- You would be behind in the polls (if you were running)
- Your head cheerleader is losing their cheer
Organize the content
Know your audience:
- Who am I trying to reach?
- What do they hunger for?
- What must they understand, believe and do?
- Who do they trust?
- What do they hope for?
- What disappoints them?
- What angers them?
- What do they want to get the message – video, live, phone?
- How few words?
- What will make me crazy?
Stimulate a Leader’s Curiosity
- Clarify and develop the communication competencies
- When you coach, support, advise, and nurture
- Capture and package the soul – people react to the person
- Protect the leaders from themselves
How to reinvent what others must see in a leader
Detox – Documentation of habits, discard certain things, deny them opportunity to go back to bad habits that get in the way
Declare – This is the kind of communicator I want to be (everyone wants to be better when they understand how important it is to their job) – discover, describe, develop – long term effort to be more effective
Deliver – Prepare, rehearse, focus on detail, delegate, and debrief




