He is a crocodile wrestler, which is what he says being the father of twins under three feels like , and when he's not doing that he's helping founders to refine their pitch. Martin Barnes of Eightsecondstoconnect shares how founders can develop their brand story and why that's so important in building connections with an audience, especially when raising money. Martin also shares about a new product which has a name that is ridiculous even by the standards of Silicon Valley — it’s called Mmhmm and offers a variety of still and animated virtual backgrounds to enliven your conversations when giving your pitch.
Read the article version of this episode - https://theunnoticed.cc/episode/8-seconds-is-all-you-have-so-learn-to-pitch-from-this-crocodile-wrestler
If you like this podcast, then subscribe to our newsletter here
Please visit our blog post on PR for business please visit our site:
https://www.eastwestpr.com/blogs/
If you want to know how to get noticed this show is for you. I have interviews, tools, tips, everything that an entrepreneur could need in order to help their organization to get noticed for free. Thank you for joining me on the unnoticed show.
Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched!
Start for FREE
Please rate the show here.
Thank you for listening to this episode of the unnoticed to show. I hope that you've enjoyed. If you have, please do rate it on any of the players. If you'd like more information, go over to EASTWEST PR and subscribe to our weekly newsletter. Or connect with me on Linkedin that's just Jim James. I'd be delighted to connect with you and let me know how i can help you to get noticed.
How to #getnoticed mastermind.
#getnoticed with courses and masterminds developed by experienced PR agency owner Jim James.
Support the show (https://lovethepodcast.com/Unnoticed)
The UnNoticed Entrepreneur is hosted & produced by Jim James.
Hello, and welcome to this episode of speak PR today I am absolutely delighted to invite Martin Barnes who is joining me from Somerset Martin. Welcome.
Martin Barnes:Hello, Jim, how are you doing? lovely to see you.
Jim James:Lovely to see you too. Now you and I know each other Martin from Beijing. So I'd expected that we would be speaking across the planet, but you're back due to COVID. Now, Martin, I've always admired what you've been working on, which is helping people and companies to communicate. Tell us? What are you doing now? And how can you help business founders to get noticed and to tell their story?
Martin Barnes:So thank you, yes, I focus on helping people enjoy pitching and presenting. And specifically founders who are at the very beginning of their entrepreneurial journey, their business journey. So people who have amazing ideas that keep them awake at night, who have seen a problem and have a solution. And my job is to come in and help people enjoy telling the story of how their business can potentially grow.
Jim James:And how do you do that? Because lots of people have got value locked up in their business. And they're just so focused on what they're building that they haven't got the confidence, or the skill set to tell people? How do you help them unlock that Martin? Because that's really the the number one the secret, isn't it?
Martin Barnes:Absolutely. I think it's a really interesting question. From my perspective, and having spoken to other people presenting and pitching is what we do. But we've kind of forgotten that. And I have this story that I tell myself that cave paintings are really the world's first ever pitch. And the cave painting is the slide for that pitch. And so I imagined the cave people in the cave with a torch with a cave painting. And the community of tribe people is there and they're telling each other how to survive. And that was 65,000 years ago. We are storytelling creatures. That's how we communicate. And we kind of forgot that. And now we are so empowered with opportunities and technology and tools to start telling stories that we kind of need to remember or be reminded how to do that.
Jim James:So what would be a process that you take people through, then Martin, and you mentioned tools, all into sharing cool technology for people to use,
Martin Barnes:I love tools. And I go from a whiteboard, to a laptop, and even a smartphone for pitching. And I believe that you develop your ideas on paper on a whiteboard, on post it notes where you are thinking freely, and you can get into a creative flow state. And then through a process of digitization, organization editing, you can then choose PPT, keynote, Prezi, whatever software, you want to then share that message. But it's very much a process driven. And it goes from analog to digital. And the major problem I see is people jumping into PowerPoint with half an idea and then trying to let PowerPoint help them organize their thinking.
Jim James:But just before that, before you get into the kind of writing it down. How do you help people this distill the essence of the story? Because that's often for many people the kind of the first place to start this the hardest to articulate what it is that makes them special? How do you help with that?
Martin Barnes:That's that's a great question. So it's all about discovery, and listening, and questions. And so I have a sort of big list of maybe 80 discovery questions that I go through when I'm working with my clients. And they're sort of clustered within very tangible mechanical questions about what it is you're doing. And then there's more emotive questions. Why are you doing it? Who are you helping? And so kind of going through this discovery phase where you explore the questions from end to end, and you're just encouraging people to talk. And our job as communication people is to listen and then to identify where the story is. And another mutual friend of ours from Beijing, Jade from gunho pizza. I worked with him developing his brand story as he was developing his latest enterprise business. And I asked him afterwards, I said, what what is it that why did you choose to work with me? And he said, you're very good at helping people understand what they know, but packaging it in a new way. And my experience is that it's often the thing that someone will say, on the edge, which is the most important and my job is to keep my ears opening and collect the edges because that's where the real insights are.
Jim James:And you talk about founders because often if it's the founder is so busy Inside that the edges are almost out of focus for them. So what do you think are the sort of challenges that founders face, say compared to a marketing director of a large company, because it sounds as though you're really helping the founders to find their voice and the narrative,
Martin Barnes:a founder is in the eye of the storm, as well as being in the hot air balloon. So they know that all the grains of sand, they know what all those do, but they also have the bigger picture of seeing the potential and the growth. And the reason why they have this amazing idea. And their job is tough, because they go from the big picture to the small details, the big picture to the small detail all the time, like a roller coaster. And I think, for other team members of an organization, they have their job, they have the goals, they have the KPIs, but the founders on the front of the ship with a compass and a map and a destination, and figuring out how to get there.
Jim James:And in terms of the sort of tools you mentioned before, are there some ways that people can kind of use some tools to help them to articulate because not everybody is even comfortable? Or has the vocabulary to build the story, right. And that's one of these we find by companies go to an agency is that will you write this for me? But are there some tools that people can use that can help them to kind of explore the edges of their story?
Martin Barnes:It's great, great question again. I mean, I listened to your podcast podcast A while ago, and you were talking about the hero who is the hero, and you had a great set of insights, where a lot of people think that they're the hero, when actually it's their customers and their teammates were the heroes. And that really resonated with me, because I remember when I worked in advertising, and a lot of the senior people would say, What's the story? What's the story? And I was like, how do I tell a story. And it's only when you sort of go into a little bit of the previous framework of storytelling, and, for example, the three act play, and the protagonist, the antagonist, the climax. I mean, you've outlined that in other podcasts I think people should listen to. And once you have a basic understanding of storytelling structure, you can then see the map. And I've developed a process called the three beat mountain, which is a pitch structure. And it's very loosely based on the three act play. And so whether it's Star Wars, Romeo and Juliet, Monkey King, Spider Man, all stories are generally told in the same way, on a structural basis. But it's the details of the characters in the drama that make it compelling. And so my structure, the three beat mountain is a way of saying, what do you want to say first? What do you want to say? Second? What do you want to say third? And what's your call to action? And don't say any more than that?
Jim James:How do you then make sure that if you like, it's different for each company, because one of the problems with this kind of formula approach seems to be that there's a danger that everyone's ending up with the same, the same story, because there's the problem with possibly AI generated content is, it can all end up looking kind of vanilla, really, so much, how do you help the founder to stand out? Because that's really what they want to be doing? right?
Martin Barnes:Exactly. I mean, very, very good insight. And understanding is that a structure is a tool, it's like a screwdriver. So it does the same job. But the carpenter makes the chair, and the founder makes the pitch. And so I'm, I always, as well as talking about structures and tools, I talk about your goals, and your audience, because you pitch to the audience in front of you. And the biggest mistake I see founders making is they make that pitch. They go, gosh, I've finished that. Now I can just pitch it to everybody. And then you're watching audiences going, why am I listening to this? This is not about me, I'm, you know, you're the hero of your story. I'm supposed to be the hero of your story. And so a pitch needs to change for every single audience. And you can do that, once you understand how the structure works. So the the the audience and what you're trying to achieve with the audience is really important. And then once you know that, you can put that thinking into the structure and that helps you get to the end.
Jim James:So here's a question then for you, Martin is the storytelling genius. If you're creating a different set of messages, and a different pitch for each audience, how do you as the CEO, the founder, kind of remain a consistent person personality. Because if you think about, for example, you mentioned Star Wars and Obi Wan, you're a mentor, aren't you? If you're, if you're the CEO, you're creating a facility or a structure for people to become a hero move on their journey. But how do you as the founder then remain, like consistent in your own personality and your own impression in the eyes of these different audiences?
Martin Barnes:As absolutely, then we're now opening Pandora's box and realizing there's another box inside, because if, if you have to, essentially pitch to every audience, you need to sort of then step back a moment and go, what are my values? What is my mission? What is my vision, and once those high level concepts are really clearly understood, then you can cherry pick from that tree of vision, the right fruit for the audience in front of you. And again, it's, it's not about sharing everything. It's about sharing what matters to the audience in front of you, that's going to move you closer to your goals. And I, I, I'm not an expert in this, but I have an understanding, because through failure, I used to over pitch, because I felt it was important to get as much information transferred down as possible. But then I over pitched and failed, because people were just like, timeout too much. you've, you've knocked me over, you've hit me with a truck. And I want you to get in a Lamborghini. And so again, once you've as a leader, a CEO, or a leader, founder, you develop your mission and vision. And then you can pitch the key points of that to your different groups.
Jim James:You've got a new website called eight seconds to connect.com. Tell us is that the window of opportunity that we've got to convince someone to either buy from us or invest in our business?
Martin Barnes:In a sense? Yes, I think I was redoing some research recently. And I read some academic papers that talked about attention, talked about message talks about audience, and there was a lot of ideas that people were coming up with saying, you need to pitch your pitch, you need to have a hook that grabs people's attention really quickly. So you know that they're listening before you deliver the main meal, for example, to continue the food analogy. So for example, you go to a restaurant, you look at the menu, that's part of your experience, you choose an entree, that warms up your taste buds, and then you have your main meal. And the same thing with a pitch is if you jump in with the best bit first people may have not tuned in yet. And so I came up with this concept of kind of you have this eight seconds to connect, because I was also hearing about Tick Tock and social media attention span and YouTube video duration, we tune out very quickly. And so I wanted to sort of focus on building on this Harvard based research to then say, Well, how can founders hook attention? When they know they've got attention? Because they can see head nodding and eyes and smiles, then they can deliver the main message. So what sort of tools or technologies, perhaps even a little bit off from PowerPoint, and visme me those ones? We know, do you have any kind of niche storytelling tools that you think people should know about? Absolutely, there's a new one that's just come out this year. It has a fantastic name, it's called Hmm. So it's like a gesture. It's an add on, or it's a tool for making zoom calls more interactive, because what it does is it allows the speaker or the presenter to be bigger in the frame of their online pitch. And therefore they're no longer like a little side postcard stamp sized image, but they're actually part of the presentation. And I've started using it I got on board with the beta version. So I'm in the beta testing group. I've used it a couple of times, and I can feel the the higher levels of engagement through using this tool. And this is just one of many tools, which I think has been developed as a reaction to COVID. And the fact that we're now pitching, presenting and telling stories in very different ways. But that's really a tool that we use at the end. At the beginning, for example, when we talk about connecting, I I recently worked on my pitch and people when people ask me what I do now, I tell them I'm a crocodile wrestler, and I get a smile and a confused look. And then I explained that I have twins under three, and my life feels like wrestling crocodiles. But when I'm not wrestling crocodiles, I'm a pitch coach, and I help you enjoy pitching. And I've used this with the British Chamber of Commerce in Beijing with groups in the southwest of England. And I always get a smile. And so I'm sharing the story because my a sec is to connect is talking about crocodiles, but I'm not Painting an incredibly vivid picture in my mind of my audience that they will remember. And that is the key. And so I'm working on an online course, where I want to help people create their opening pitch that catches attention. So the whole reason of eight seconds to connect is once you've got that attention, then you have a runway to sell. If you don't have that attention, you're going to drive off a cliff.
Jim James:you talked about the oral part, how important is see the graphic part, or the video part of storytelling.
Martin Barnes:In my mind, there are three things that a presenter controls as they pitch, they present what they say as their story. They control how they say it with their performance, their tonality, that eye contact. And then there's their slide design. And to me, the most important is story, then its performance. And then finally, it's your slides. And being able to visualize and tell visual stories where the image that is your background is amplifying your main message, and it's not conflicting. So a lot of people will make the mistake of having too many images on a slide, because they want to show everything. But then what they say doesn't really sync up with what they're showing. And so reducing the visuals, and choosing one emotive image that really resonates is way more powerful.
Jim James:What do you say to people who are worried about leaving things out? Because we always have clients that say, I want to put this into the release? Oh, and this? And this? And they need to know that as well. You know, how do you deal with the anxiety of kind of leaving something out people missing something important?
Martin Barnes:another great question. I mean, a pitch and a presentation is an incredibly high value moment, because you have somebody's attention. And so a lot of people will pitch the same information they have on their website. And I'm like, don't use someone's attention for what they could read much quicker on your website, use their attention to really start building rapport. And you have to have the confidence and the trust, and the bravery to say I do have more to say, but I don't have to say it now. And you are allowed to leave things out. It's like if you're meeting someone at a networking event, and they don't let you enter the conversation, you just back off. Same same rules.
Jim James:And I suppose the point of it is if you've got your hook, right, you create a level of interest, which means you don't have to dump everything. Because you're really starting a relationship not trying to close a deal in the first 30 seconds. 30 minutes, right?
Martin Barnes:Absolutely, absolutely. And I learned this the hard way, I have made so many mistakes of over pitching over speaking, being too keen all of those things I've done. And now I'm like, patience is a virtue.
Jim James:When I think as you say as well, if you identify what your customer is looking for, then actually the narrative is, what would it take to make them into a hero? Then it's not about you and sharing everything. It's about what will be the one solution that you could provide to them. Right?
Martin Barnes:Exactly, absolutely. And it's one one piece at a time, so that they can have a sense of ownership over what we're sharing.
Jim James:Now Martin, canyou be sharing wonderfully with us today? If you want to find out more about you? How can they do that?
Martin Barnes:They can visit our website, which is eight seconds to connect.com. And here we introduce our methodology, we share some really early insights. And there's also a free PDF, which shares how to pitch online. Because again, with our 2020 situation, that change of work, the change of opportunities, people need to really be confident when pitching
Jim James:Martin Barnes joining me, although from Somerset, to talk story, thanks so much for joining me today.
Martin Barnes:So thank you, Jim. It's been really great to talk with you.
Jim James:So you've been listened to Martin Barnes, who's a storyteller extraordinaire, we knew each other from Beijing, where he was living for 16 years, and has now come back to the UK. So hope you found this of great interest as I have. And if you'd like more of this kind of information, you come to our website, speak pr.co. And until we talk to you again, we wish you the best of health, a profitable business and that you keep on telling stories and presenting for trying to get them all within that magic. Eight seconds.


