Welcome to another exciting episode of the Melinda Lee Speak in Flow Podcast! In today's episode, we're delving deep into the world of executive communication. Whether you're a seasoned leader or aspiring to be one, this episode is packed with invaluable insights to help you hone your communication skills and lead with finesse.
**Episode Highlights:**
1. **Crafting a Compelling Vision**: Discover the secrets to crafting a vision that captivates your team and drives performance to new heights.
2. **Mastering Conciseness**: Learn the art of brevity in communication. Find out how to convey your message effectively without overwhelming your audience.
3. **Powerful Presentations**: Uncover the key steps to delivering presentations that command attention and establish you as a formidable leader in your field.
4. **Navigating Crises with Poise**: Gain valuable strategies for handling crises with grace and composure. Learn how to steer your team through turbulent times while maintaining trust and confidence.
5. **The Art of Feedback**: Explore effective techniques for providing open and honest feedback that fosters growth and development within your team.
6. **Embracing Authenticity**: Understand the significance of authenticity in leadership communication. Learn how to cultivate genuine connections and build trust with your team.
7. **Choosing the Right Communication Mode**: Discern when to leverage live interactions and when to utilize digital channels for effective team communication.
Tune in as Melinda Lee, alongside industry experts, unpacks each of these components, offering practical tips, real-world examples, and actionable strategies to help you elevate your executive communication skills.
Don't miss out on this enlightening conversation! Whether you're leading a small team or a multinational corporation, mastering executive communication is the key to driving success and fostering meaningful relationships in the workplace.
Join us on the Melinda Lee Speak in Flow Podcast, where communication meets excellence!
About Melinda:
Melinda Lee is a Presentation Skills Expert, Speaking Coach and nationally renowned Motivational Speaker. She holds an M.A. in Organizational Psychology, is an Insights Practitioner, and is a Certified Professional in Talent Development as well as Certified in Conflict Resolution. For over a decade, Melinda has researched and studied the state of “flow” and used it as a proven technique to help corporate leaders and business owners amplify their voices, access flow, and present their mission in a more powerful way to achieve results.
She has been the TEDx Berkeley Speaker Coach and worked with hundreds of executives and teams from Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Caltrans, Bay Area Rapid Transit System, and more. Currently, she lives in San Francisco, California, and is breaking the ancestral lineage of silence.
Website: https://speakinflow.com/
Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/speakinflow
Instagram: https://instagram.com/speakinflow
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mpowerall
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Welcome to the speak in flow podcast, dear
listeners where we dive into techniques and strategies to
change the way our world communicates for the better.
Today's episode is all around executive communication. I had
the opportunity to interview an entrepreneur Kimi, and also a
corporate leader, Michelle, around executive communication.
And so in this episode, I thought to bring in all the
learnings that I've discovered through our interviews, as well
as bringing some components that I've developed along the way,
and what executive communication means to meet. Let's face it,
our world has changed quite a bit. And I think that before
executive communication meant that you had to have a pedigree,
you had to have the right education knowledge, and that is
how I demonstrate executive communication. That's not true
anymore. So today, we're gonna dive into the eight components
of what it is. And first, its vision. Then second, be concise,
third, present powerfully to a group. Fourth, influence. Fifth,
know how to manage a crisis takes provide powerful open
feedback, seven, be authentic. And then eight, know whether to
do digital or life. First, a clear vision, have a powerful
vision for the future, make it so clear in your mind. And once
you have that clear, you communicate it in a way that is
concise, and effective. Without having a clear, concise vision.
People are lost. People don't know what their role is, people
don't know what to do. So you lose productivity. And you lose
your respect as the leader. So take the time to reflect and
take the time to find relevant examples, stories to illuminate
the direction that you want your team to go. Really paint that
visual picture of where you want them to be, and be clear and
specific. Then for have some follow up right and tie your
goal, your team's objectives and goals to the strategic direction
to the vision of the future, and then have regular follow up.
Once you have the vision, once you're following up with where
the team is going, then you want to be to continue to be concise,
concise with your words, bottom line it How am I going to say
what I need to say in the fewest words possible? That's a
question you can ask yourself. If you don't, if you're spending
a lot of time bringing too much fluff in or going off on a
tangent people get annoyed, we just don't have the time and we
don't have the luxury of time. So ask yourself, How can I say
the exact thing in the fewest words possible. And then if you
need to add to it great, I be intentional about what you add
to your communication. So once you've mastered the skill of
being concise or understand how to do that, third, go to
presenting powerfully develop your ideas and present it to a
large group. This demonstrates your ability to lead, lead and
be effective as a leader in front of a group one to one is
important one to one builds meaningful relationships. And
then go to the group and present it in a way that exudes your
leadership. If you're still feeling nervous, and I know a
lot of you may still feel that way. I share a lot of techniques
and tools to help you get more into a confident state. Using
some breath work. This is a this is a really powerful one that I
like and I've been using lately, which is taking one breath and
then another one. And then you can do one, hold it at the top
or exhale, but you could take two after inhale, inhale and
then take another one and then exhale. And if you're still
feeling nervous, use your nervousness to elevate your
performance. Those nerves are there to actually elevate so if
you not if you're not afraid of them, use them to turn your
nerves into excitement. My daughter uses a very fun phrase
called nervous sighted. I'm not I'm nervous related to
transforming your nerves into excitement and elevating your
performance. Even in presenting to a large group, you will be
seen as an effective leader. And after you present your ideas,
the fourth key to executive communication is influence. How
do you influence people and the ability to embrace help them to
embrace your idea? How do you transform naysayers into
believers of your idea? And that begins both at the beginning
before you even enter the room. Michelle, it's that this great
pre socialising before you enter into a meeting, talk to the
individual naysayers that may not be on board with you. Ask
questions. When someone is furious, get curious, ask
questions. Where are they coming from? What causes them to be a
naysayer, what causes them, they're probably really
concerned. And you want to give them the time to talk to you
about their experiences, talk to you about their concerns, and
ask the relevant questions and really put yourself and when
you're listening to them, really listen, be present, and put
yourself in their shoes. And then include relevant examples
and stories. And how to potentially help them to
transition where they're, where they're from, to where you want
them to go. And so that is one key technique you can use for
building influence. Then once you built up influence, you have
the allies, you have people on board with you, you move into
crisis management, of course, not everything is going to go
the way you want, there's going to be some crisis, there's going
to be some obstacles. So your ability to manage the crisis is
also included in your executive communication. Most people will,
will go into the crisis and get consumed, they get emotional,
and then and then suddenly everybody's communicating the
wrong information. When there's a crisis, it's important for you
to take a leadership role, and breathe and be objective. Ask
the right questions. Sometimes the people's perspective, even
though it seems real in their mind, is probably not the real
story, or real objective perspective. And so you have as
a leader can ask the right questions, and then formulate
what the objective communication is, be authentic, be timely,
with your communication. If you don't have all the information
talam, right, be authentic, I am waiting for the right
information, I'll give you this is what I know. And if when I
have the relevant information, the more accurate information
I'm going to share that with you. Right now, this is what I
have. So be timely with managing the crisis, as well as be
accurate in information you share with people. And that
requires that you answer you ask the right questions. Then
providing effective feedback, the sixth component of executive
communication, provide open honest feedback. I know
sometimes feedback can be very challenging, because you don't
want to hurt people's feelings. You don't want them to feel bad.
And there's a way to do this so that it's both respectful, and
also mutually beneficial for everyone, you're going to have
the opportunity to get to know the person, they're gonna get to
know you where you're at. So don't be afraid to have this
open dialogue. As a team leader, you want to have the entire team
feel comfortable providing feedback in a way that's
respectful, specific, objective, timely. And then, and curious.
Also get to the perspective of the person that you're talking
to. Which leads me into the seventh piece, which is
Authenticity. Authenticity is interesting, because as I
mentioned before, executive communication can be perceived
as I have authority over you. And I have all this experience.
And so I'm only going to show you that. Nowadays, authenticity
means that I am real, I'm a person. Yes, I have experienced
and I also have some potential areas to improve. And it's okay
for me to show that. I talk about how authenticity when you
hide some of your potential perceived weaknesses. People
can't get a sense of you, they can actually sense that you're
closed off
to allowing yourself to do some reflection of where your
strengths are and also where your perceived areas of
improvement Don't accept them, be accepting of them and find
help to either improve it or find other allies to help
support you in this area that will help you to feel authentic,
and be seen as that leader of respect, because most leaders
are respected when people can connect with you. But if you
have a guard not being authentic, they're not going to
be able to connect with you. And then therefore the trust that
you lose trust as a leader. Then finally, the eighth component is
know when to use live or digital communication. With so many
modes and platforms and how to connect digitally, I think it's
powerful to be able to know when you talk live and when to talk
digitally. Because as a team, it's, it's important, it's
important, especially if you so there's two things that you want
to consider. How will you know each other, and how clear the
situation or the direction is? First, if you don't know each
other, well, then maybe a team is forming. And you don't know
the direction people don't know the direction, it's very
unclear. that lends itself to a live meeting, when it's unclear
when you don't know it. Because when you're live, and people can
read each other's verbal cues, body language, you miss that
when we're in the small box virtual box. So take the time to
gather people, especially when it's the time is complicated.
You don't know what's happening, and they don't know each other.
But if there's clear direction, and people know each other, then
digital communication is a powerful way you save time, you
don't have to travel back and forth. But you could do follow
up so you can have a quick conversation over a digital
platform. So knowing when to use each is an important skill as a
leader, and demonstrates your executive communication and
intention for your meetings. So you know what the purpose of the
meeting is, and the platform. So all of these components I know I
said a lot today, but those are your opportunities. When you
dive into each and master each, you will have an executive
presence, that communication that demonstrates you as the
powerful leader that you are that appear to make a
difference. If you have any questions about these, I invite
you to message me I invite you to just get on a call with me.
And I'm going to start to break these down in the following
episodes and give you more clear strategies and techniques to do
each. But in the meantime, I can't wait to see you on the
other side to the next episode. I'm your sister and Flo take
care