What makes a speech
a great speech, one people remember, especially your teacher? The key is in
your message, not your presentation. Use the six sticky principles taught by
Chip Heath and Dan Heath in their book Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others
Die, and give a speech
you'll get an A on.
Unless you live in a cave, you know the story of
Jared, the college student who lost hundreds of pounds eating Subway
sandwiches. It's a story that almost wasn't told for the same reasons that many of our papers and speeches are boring. We get so
filled up with statistics and abstractions and all the things we know, that we
forget to share the simple message at the core of what we're trying to
communicate.
Subway executives wanted to talk about fat grams
and calories. Numbers. While right under their noses was a concrete example of
what eating at Subway can do for you.The ideas the Heath brothers teach are ideas that
will make your next paper or speech memorable, whether your audience is your
teacher or the entire student body.
Here are their six principles:
·
Simplicity - find the essential core
of your message
·
Unexpectedness - use surprise to grab
people’s attention
·
Concreteness - use human actions,
specific images to convey your idea
·
Credibility - put hard numbers aside and
bring your case closer to home, ask a question that helps your reader decide
for him- or herself
·
Emotions - make your reader feel
something, for people, not for abstractions
·
Stories - tell a story that
illustrates your message
Use the acronym SUCCESs to help you remember:
Simple
Unexpected
Concrete
Credible
Emotional
Stories
Unexpected
Concrete
Credible
Emotional
Stories
Let's take a brief look at each ingredient:
Simple -
Force yourself to prioritize. If you had only one sentence in which to tell
your story, what would you say? What is the single most important aspect of
your message? That's your lead.
Unexpected -
Do you remember the TV commercial for the new Enclave minivan? ?A family piled
into the van on their way to a football game. Everything seems normal. Bang! A
speeding car slams into the side of the van. The message is about wearing seat
belts. You are so shocked by the crash that the message sticks. "Didn’t
see that coming?" the voiceover says. "No one ever does."
Include an element of shock in your message. Include the extraordinary.
Concrete -
Include what the Heath brothers call "tangible actions by human
beings." I have a friend who consults in the area of organizational
development. I can still hear him asking me after I told him what I was hoping
to achieve with my staff, "What does that look like? Exactly what
behaviors do you want to change?" Tell your audience exactly what it looks
like. "If you can examine something with your senses," the Heath
brothers say, "it’s concrete."
Credible -
People believe things because their family and friends do, because of personal
experience, or because of faith. People are naturally a tough audience. If you
don’t have an authority, expert, or celebrity to endorse your idea, what’s the
next best thing? An anti-authority. When an ordinary Joe, who looks like your
next-door neighbor or your cousin, tells you something works, you believe it.
Clara Peller is a good example. Remember the Wendy’s commercial, “Where’s the
Beef?” Almost everyone does.
Emotional -
How do you make people care about your message? You make people care by
appealing to the things that matter to them. Self-interest. This is the core of
sales of any kind. It’s more important to emphasize benefits than features.
What will the person gain from knowing what you have to say? You've probably
heard of WIIFY, or the Whiff-y, approach. What’s in it for you? The Heath
brothers say this should be a central aspect of every speech. It's only part of
it, of course, because people aren’t that shallow. People are also interested
in the good of the whole. Include an element of self or group affiliation in
your message.
Stories -
The stories that are told and retold usually contain wisdom. Think of Aesop's
Fables. They have taught generations of children lessons of morality. Why are
stories such effective teaching tools? Partly because your brain can’t tell the
difference between something you imagine to be happening and that thing
actually happening. Close your eyes and imagine standing on the edge of a
50-story building. Feel butterflies? This is the power of story. Give your
reader or audience an experience they'll remember.
Chip Heath and Dan Heath also have a few words of
caution. They advise that the three things that hang people up the most are
these:
1.
Burying the lead - make sure your
core message is in your first sentence.
2.
Decision paralysis - take care not to
include too much information, too many choices
3.
The curse of knowledge -
·
Presenting an answer requires
expertise
·
Telling others about it requires you
to forget what you know and think like a beginner
Made to Stick is
a book that will not only help you write more effective speeches and papers, it
has the potential to make you a more memorable force wherever you walk through
the world. Do you have a message to share? At work? In your club? In the
political arena? Make it stick.
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