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Authors: Steve Prentice

BOOK: Cool Down
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Knowing What You Sound Like
Once you have a handle on what you look like, it's also worth a moment to find out what you sound like. It's hard to accurately tell, given that when you hear your own voice, it gets distorted by your own cranium. To hear what others hear, you have to listen from the outside. Similar to the video example above, you can best achieve this with both a tape recorder and a mirror. The tape recorder, obviously, will give you a playback as to the tone, pitch, and speed of your speech. This helps you get a sense of how others hear you.
The mirror is a very revealing method of observing
how
you speak, since it allows you to see how your entire face as well as your hands and torso move as you speak. This is a surefire method of improving the timbre and the variety of your verbal communication, since anyone who observes himself speak will immediately and unconsciously seek to “brighten” his facial expression, which inevitably warms the tone of the voice. A warmer vocal tone delivers greater emotional connection with the other person and therefore adds greater depth and value to short telephone conversations, and long term relationships alike. It's one of the simplest and most useful pieces of advice I give to anyone who has to spend time on the telephone: Have a mirror nearby so you can see yourself speak. You cannot do much to change the physical structure of your vocal chords, of course, but there is a lot you can do to make them as influential as possible. Most of it has to do with slowing down.
If you find you speak fast, slow down. Not only does this make you easier to understand, it, too, lowers vocal tonality, both for men and women, which gives greater authority, presence, and influence. If you speak with an accent, do the same thing: Slow down. Accents add great variety to life and, in my opinion, should never be eliminated or suppressed. A far better and more impressive approach is to maintain an accent, but ensure it remains clear through slower, more considered speech.
People who make it their business to influence others constantly put this knowledge into practice. Great leaders think deeply and talk slowly. This allows them to take more time to convey a message, which, in a time-obsessed society, gives greater weight to the message itself. As with one's choice of image and dress, the choice of vocal pace also sets the tone of relationships. Fast talkers are perceived as nervous or perhaps slick. Agonizingly slow talkers can make people almost explode with frustration. But somewhere in between is the magic point where three powerful things happen.
•
You will be memorable
. The goal, in any conversation or meeting situation, is not only to be heard, but to be remembered, so that people act upon your suggestions or wishes. In a world of information overload, it is surprising just how powerful small things, such as a deeper, more soothing voice (for females and males alike) can be, when filtered through the emotional side of the listener's brain.
•
You will match the rhythm of the conversation
. Your conversation partners have a rhythm to their speech patterns, which reflects their ability to process and verbalize clear thought. Slowing down your speech creates an opportunity to listen for and pick up this natural rhythm and to match it, not beat for beat, but
slightly
slower, so that your spoken prose conveys even greater quality in comparison.
•
You will access the power of silence
. Talking slower makes it easier for silence to happen, and silence is a great conveyor of information. A pause allows a statement to add gravity to itself. Typically, the in-built momentum of normal conversational speech makes it easy—and certainly expected—for people to skip from one topic to the next with little gap in between. There is a profound fear that silence may be mistaken for boredom or a derailment of the train of thought. But a pause, especially when reinforced by eye contact, helps to make a point. It allows time for the other person to think about what you've just said. The pause gives the listener permission to reflect upon it and to make mental notes. A pause also reinforces influence. Since many people are afraid of pauses, they will leap in to offer their thoughts or comments, simply to fill the gap and to end the silence. This can be of great strategic importance, given what it reveals about the other person, or of the position they are trying to assert. To pause and to let the other person speak first is to again maintain a true level of control within the organic relationship that is human conversation.
If such suggestions sound silly or excessive, listen to the recorded speeches, or sound bites, even, of truly great orators like Winston Churchill or Nelson Mandela. You will notice that a great deal of effort is expended in leveraging all natural oratorical gifts. They match the words they want to say with the rhythm that will best carry it, so that the message is most effectively delivered and the desired responses or actions are attained. Rhythm is an emotion-focused reaction, one of our most basic and ancient attributes, and it resides deep in the core of human perception. It sits there waiting to leveraged fully by those who know its power.
One of the best circumstances where this can be put into practice, and one of the least considered, is answering a phone. Once again, the reactionary nature of answering a phone call causes people to forget that an opportunity for influence exists. Let the phone ring one extra time. Pause briefly to clear your throat, and take a moment to center and deepen your voice by saying a few words slowly and quietly to yourself—almost like a quick prayer—before answering. Yes, it sounds strange and goes against our reactionary nature, but this, too, helps loosen the vocal chords and lower the vocal tone. Nobody questions opera singers when they sing their own warm-up parts. Why? Because it's an expected part of their role as a vocalist. It makes them credible as a performer. Well, you're a performer, too. A quiet, three-second warm-up is all you need to change your voice and your attitude from reactive to proactive, from ordinary to influential for the call you're about to take.
THE POWER OF WRITING
Although writing is secondary by far to face-to-face communication, it will always remain necessary. Consider the numerous forms of writing that people deal with daily, including memos, PowerPoint presentations, email, text messages, proposals, speeches, press releases, and many more. But many people tend to write in the same way they travel—event to event. In just the same way that traveling time and distance are seldom factored into a busy person's mental assessment of an upcoming day, the act of writing is, due to time pressure and the speed of the moment, reduced to a quick activity, a hasty spell-check, followed by a swift mouse click on either “Send” or “Print.”
Don't dismiss the concept of poor writing as just meaning bad spelling and grammar. These are merely symptoms. All writing is an exercise in influence, and poor writing is that which fails to influence the reader in the manner you desire. What sort of influence? It might involve your reader buying your product or buying into your idea or simply attending your meeting. Influence might simply refer to the fact that your message gets read and attended to before all the other ones in a reader's inbox. As it is with the concept of meetings, the objective of any written communication is to pull more productivity or profitability out of a given situation. There must be a positive balance on the ergonomic balance sheet for the task to be worthwhile. In other words, the time it takes to write and send a message is time you can't get back. Your message must yield response or reaction in the reader that exceeds the value of the time you have invested. Many people simply write to get a task off their desk and out of their hair. That's the quick, but less effective way. It is quite easy to make your writing more effective, however. It doesn't require a degree in English literature, but it is best achieved by allowing enough time for planning beforehand and proofing afterwards.
Tips for More Effective Writing
• Include only one message per email/letter. Don't confuse your reader with two or more distinct messages. Only one will be remembered.
• Make sure your Subject Line completely summarizes your single message.
• Set up an agreement with your team to use prefixes in the subject line, such as [PJ] for “Project” so that they can set up their email rules to color all PJ messages in red, for greater visibility and quicker turnaround.
• Ask yourself what the intention of this message is, and what its payoff should be.
• Always write the most important single idea in the opening paragraph. Summarize it in the subject line.
• Use subsequent paragraphs to back up the main idea and make suggestions.
• Close off with an upbeat call to action—tell the reader what you want to have happen next.
• Allow time to proofread, spell-check, and grammar-check.
Planning Your Writing
Planning a written document, from a large presentation to the simplest email should not be an overly long exercise. It need take just a couple of minutes. What's important, however, is to ensure those minutes are given over to it, which can be quite a challenge in the high-speed world of event-to-event thinking. It should ensure that the true end result—the objective of the message—is known and is properly communicated. What is this “true end result”? It's not the moment at which the message is written and completed. The true end result is defined by what the reader does once having received and read it. All of your documents can be influential once you can answer these questions during your planning phase:
• What single message do I need to tell this reader?
• What action do I want from this reader?
• If I am responding, how will my response further the situation?
• If I am responding, what is the appropriate response time?
• What turnaround time should I expect once the reader receives my letter?
• What can I do/say to influence and improve that turnaround time?
• What tone do I need to adopt?
• How much detail do I need to include?
• What medium is the best for the context? Email? Phone? Face-to-face meeting?
• What will be my “hook” to grab the reader's attention? It can be as simple as a short, to-the-point subject line.
• What will be my call to action? How will I phrase it?
This may all sound very officious and obsessive for email, but the true end result speaks for itself: When your communication style stands head and shoulders above the style of everyone around you, people will gravitate towards it, and you will receive satisfaction more quickly. Your subject lines will grab attention; your calls to action will yield action. Your messages have to compete with many other sources of information that your reader must face every hour, perhaps every minute. It's up to you to ensure yours stand out, get noticed, and elicit the right type of response. It's like fishing on a river bank that's crowded with other anglers. You can hope your line gets noticed, or you can take a little time to walk upstream for a couple of minutes and enjoy unfettered access. Which do you think would yield the best results?
Proofing: Making Sure Your Writing Is Ready
Writing, just like personal appearance, needs proofing to be excellent. Event-to-event thinking allows people very little time to proof and correct their work, other than a rudimentary spell-check. Though most spell-checkers, and to some extent grammar checkers, catch the most obvious errors, they often overlook mistakes, and they are not able to refine the message's value. That's a human skill.
This poem, attributed to Guffey, Rhodes, and Rogin from their book
Business Communication: Process and Product
, highlights this fact simply and beautifully: It's fun to type this poem in your word processing program to observe how many errors the spell-checker detects:
I have a spell checker
That came with my PC.
It plainly marks four my review
Mistakes I cannot sea.
I've run this poem threw it,
I'm sure your pleased too no.
Its letter perfect in it's weigh
My checker tolled me sew.
1
The best kind of proofing involves the use of two sets of eyes to review the written material, as well as a little time to do it.
•
New eyes
. When choosing two sets of eyes, the best approach is two sets of
different
eyes. For your most important writing, make sure they can be reviewed by someone else. Yes, this takes time, but the time it takes to proof now will always be less than the time it takes to correct later. Someone else's eyes will see the things you don't see—oversights, mistakes, awkwardness.
•
Fresh eyes
. If you only have yourself to work with, then fresh eyes are the next best approach. Even when composing the simplest email, if you take a moment to look away and do something else before sending, your refreshed eyes stand a better chance at top-quality proofing. This ties in with the distraction factor described in Chapter 2, except this time we
want
the distraction to happen. When you complete an email, before reaching for the Send button, move your eyes elsewhere: Find the files for your next task; get up and get some water or a snack; or simply look around the room or out the window, just for a few seconds. When your eyes return to the written text, the flow of concentration will have been broken. In this case it's a good thing. For now, you will be able to review your work with reasonably fresh eyes. You will see errors that you didn't see before. You might even remember to attach the attachments as promised in the letter. This pause, this slowing down of the act of writing helps ensure that you are saying what you intended to say and that the end result will be what you want it to be.

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