Brilliant SPEAK|PR finds its VOICE Image; find out how you can find yours!
The UnNoticed Entrepreneur June 12, 202000:18:1812.61 MB

Brilliant SPEAK|PR finds its VOICE Image; find out how you can find yours!

A conversation with Ed West, professional presentation coach to CEO's about his recent articles on the power of Donald Trump's prose, and what we can learn about hyperbole, repetition and voice image.

Ed and I talked about Voice image, the 'secret' of people who use their voices professionally. Actors, radio broadcasters, television presenters, politicians, tele-marketers, professional speakers, all of whom depend on the impression their voice makes for success, know its importance. 

Thanks to Ed's great guidance I went off to evaluate my own voice image, and share in this podcast how people who are responsible for being the voice of the company need to take into consideration breath control, articulation, volume, pitch, tone, pausing and speaking rate.

Listen to how to alter your Voice Imag when talking with different audiences, including cultures. Having lived in Asia for 25 years I realize in my own video's that I am speaking very ssslllooowwwllyyy.

I checked my own EASTWEST PR page using the Flesch-Kincaid readability test and found that it has a grade level of about 7. It should be easily understood by 12 to 13-year-olds!

Listen to this and our other episodes to get a high-level view and practical level tools for getting noticed for free.

Read the article version of this episode - https://theunnoticed.cc/episode/brilliant-speakpr-finds-its-voice-image-find-out-how-you-can-find-yours

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Jim James recently returned to the UK after 25 years in Asia where he was an entrepreneur. Among his businesses he introduced Morgan sports cars to China, WAKE Drinks, founded the British Business Awards, The British Motorsport Festival, EO Beijing, and was the interim CEO of Lotus cars. At the same time he continued to own and run the EASTWEST Public Relations Group which he founded in Singapore in 1995, and still runs today.

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Jim James:

Hello, my name is Jim James and I am your host on the speak PR podcast. I've been an entrepreneur for over 25 years and on this show, I like to share thoughts and tips and technologies that will help business owners on small business managers and marketing people, tips and tricks that we use in the industry of public relations to get our clients noticed. Now today I'd like to talk to you about voice and about the voice that we have, because I received my videos back today from the editor of my speak PR series and I have to say, these are brilliant. My series which is five episodes are seamless, and they're brilliant. Now did I say they are brilliant. Now speak PR is probably the most brilliant toolkit that any entrepreneur could hope to find, and to use, and I would be your trainer and your coach on that brilliant speak PR mastermind course now This is all sounding great because I have got my radio voice on. Now the truth is that when I watched the video, I was pretty disappointed and pretty shocked. I thought, Oh, do I sound like that I look very laboured and sound quite sharp on really the the conversation that I had this morning with an old old friend called Ed west of Fox West, led me to talking about this with Ed. Now ed is a coach and a voice trainer. And he's been giving media training for over 25 years and Ed and I knew each other and worked with one another in Singapore all those years ago. And Ed runs a company called Fox West and he's coached seven of the 10 Singapore Stock Exchange CEOs and hundreds of other leaders. And he and I were chatting about what it takes to present Well, this is what it does, and he kindly share with me an article that he's written recently on the subject One of the case studies we have, of course, is Donald Trump. So, in his article, he says that Donald Trump has perfected the art of the use of simplicity and a simple words. Now, there's a test done by a group called Rudolf Flesch and Peter Cade is known as the flesh Kincaid readability score. And these are one of the most widely used measures of readability and they use also by the US military to evaluate manuals and so on. Now, in doing the test of Trump's speeches and his spoken word, they found that Trump Donald Trump speaks at the level of a of a 10 year old of a fourth grade student. And in comparison, Hillary Clinton speaks at the level of a 13 year old and Bernie Sanders does at a 16 year old. So as an example, in his one of his speeches, He used the words I used to use. I used to use the word incompetent. Now I just call them stupid. I went to an Ivy League school. I'm very highly educated. I know words, I have the best words, but there's no better word than stupid, right? Forgive the bad accent, but it sounds a little bit more plausible than by my British accent there. Anyway, so they found obviously that in in his debating style, that Trump was very quick into the point and of course, this is the audience that he is appealing to. So Huffington Post review of the second presidential debate noted on average that Trumps Trump's sentences were far shorter if it had less than 10 words per sentence, whereas Clinton had over 15. For example, He said, Obamacare will never work. It's very bad, very bad. Health insurance. So Donald Trump has perfected the art of many things. But one of the things he's perfected the art of his simplicity in his approach, both in his sentence construction and in his words. So I had to look and see how am I doing on my own score. So I used a website called web FX comm to check my own school. And my website has the average grade level of grade seven American. So anyone that goes to my website, if you're older than 12 to 13 year old, you should be able to understand the contents of my website. So I don't mean to be dumbing down to my my business partners and colleagues and clients. But it seems as though we've written a website that can be easily understood by young people. So how is it that when I listened to the presentation of my brilliant speak PR episodes on the video, that I don't recognise myself. So one of the issues of course, is That have paced. So when we're talking to our friends and our colleagues, we have a certain pace. And then when we're talking on like a podcast or to other people, in a more formal setting, we tend to slow down. So there is this idea that we can test their own speech. And we can read out what's called the rainbow passage, and it's used by language therapists to see how much of that passage that you can get to the the issue is that native speakers, I speaking English now, we have a sort of a continuous stream of sounds. Often without clear cut guidelines and borders between words it kind of all becomes seamless. Now, this then creates problems for two groups of people. One is for all of these AI tools like otter, for example, which I'm using now, which of course, identify those ones. words, what they call weak form words. And can can often have that we don't properly articulate. But the other area and the other audience that this of course is problem for our non native English speakers, or non language issues speaking in Spanish or German or French, or any other language. So when I looked at myself speaking on my speak PR course, which if I mentioned already is brilliant, the speak PR videos, I'm speaking quite slowly. Now, I'm wondering whether that's because I have been away in Asia for over 25 years, often, in fact, the majority of time working with people that don't speak English as a first language. So have I started to modify my own language presentation style, because the assumption is that I'm talking to people that are not going to understand me unless I slow it down. So when we're speaking in a media interview, and we're speaking Also maybe online at zoom call or conference, we have to think about our articulation of the words. And to think of these weak form words how well we are structuring those, and about the sort of speeds now, slow speed is usually regarded as about 110 words per minute. conversational speed is between 120 at the slow end, to 160 to 200 words per minute in the fast range. And I suppose, if you hear people arguing, perhaps for example, Italians or Spanish and some of these Romance languages, you hear the movie very close to the Mandarin, when it's spoken at speed and anger, or ingest in comedy, for example. Now, people who read books for the radio are often speaking at about 150 to 160 words. So, in other words, trying to speak at the top end of conversational so that it keeps the passage going. Now, auctioneers and commentators as we know from sports, for example, Like for motor sports are speaking for example, 250 to 400 words per minute in the range. So if we're giving a speech or a presentation, the concept of normal speaking, quite possibly doesn't really apply because we have to moderate our speech to the audience. And this is of course, the beauty of public speaking or speaking with zoom and video is that we can see whether the audience are coming with us. So experienced an audience reaction will tell us that one size of delivery presentation and speed isn't going to fit all. So this is something that we have to think about. And when we give a presentation on audio only, for example, like radio, and I've done some radio for example, with with BBC Radio four, we have to also then be aware of what our own voice images and maybe just think about, if you're doing radio or if you're then communicating to your staff. voice messages, for example, or giving them a podcast listen to what do you sound like? There's an old saying that people have a great face for radio, and a cut. When I went to the BBC as a student at Manchester, that used to be the old gag, that was why we did radio, not TV. But, of course, how our voice presents an image as well. So those of you that haven't seen me will have a sense of who I am by my voice. How we articulate our voice gives the impression of who we are, where we're at, in our life journey, where we're at our professional journey, how seriously we're taking our audiences and so on. So if we're doing media interviews, for example, one of the worst things that I've experienced is where a client is pretty much talking down to the journalist. In one case, I had one client, telling the journalist, you know, that they really didn't understand they were not up To the job. So the voice and the tone of voice, especially when language is not shared, is really important. Professional presenters will have a professional voice that they that they like to put on. So the voice image is a collection of different parts. Now it's your breathing. It's your articulation. It's the volume, it's the pitch. It's the tone. It's the pausing, and how often, I want you to listen and to take note, but if I want to talk about the brilliant speak PR programme, this is what I might do, I might race ahead and make it much faster and much more interesting. Because we find this a lot with the TV commercials. They've got all those T's and C's to get in within the 32nd package so that you don't miss anything and so that when you bring up to buy the product, they can't be accused of not telling you all the details of what may or may not Be in the second clause is on the third page. So we find now going back to Donald Trump, that we have the simplicity. We have the repetition. And we have finally hyperbole or the use of great words that are kind of add a context of the sentence or of the narrative but make the audience kind of buy into the conversation. Winston Churchill, at the age of 23, apparently wrote that the scaffolding of rhetoric is a tendency to wild extravagance of language, to extravagance so wild that reason recoils and is evident in most pre orations. Now, it could say that something that Donald Trump would, would never say. So what Donald Trump said instead about this is that in the art of the deal, the final key to the way I promote is bravado. I play to people's fantasies People may not always think big of themselves, but they can still get very excited by those who do. That's why a little hyperbole never hurts anybody. So people and Trump carries on his his people want to believe that something is the biggest and the greatest and the most spectacular. I call it truthful hyperbole. Now, obviously, we've moved on and Trump has created this new term of fake news, which of course, in itself is hyperbole. So, as you are going for interviews, or if you're doing podcasts, what can you do to think about the tone of voice that you're delivering, in order to reassure or excite or placate the listeners? This is something when I was talking with a chap called Scott just yesterday about this podcast and say, Well, how is it is my pace okay? And he said, actually thought This was okay. Now for me when I listen back, I almost recognise myself. And I wonder if I sound too pedestrian to plodding. But if I look at the words I'm using, if it's anything like the words I'm using on my website, then I'm pitching at a level for grade seven. And if you're over 13, then obviously you can understand everything I'm saying, which is fantastic. But am I using enough excitement, enough engagement, enough hyperbole. So I think about my own correspondence, and what I'm sharing, and I being too British, am I being understated. And as you're thinking about your own articulation of your messages in your speaking of your messages, to your audiences, remember we have the three different ones we have the internal, we have the partners of the external, different audiences might need a different tone of voice. Some may need a disciplinary tone of voice. Some may need an exciting Engaging kind of voice. And some may need just a sales voice that really makes them want to reach out and put their arms around you give you all your money and say they want to be a customer for life. So the use of voice and the coaching of our voice is something that we should think about if we're giving interviews live. Now we have a client, which is a university Queen's University in Belfast. And their Vice Chancellor is going to be giving an interview with some Chinese media this week. So I'm on a call with him this week to talk about not only the messaging but also the expectations of the Chinese media. A large part of what I've done in my 25 years is to ensure that my clients who are by and large Westerners are able to communicate in a way that the Chinese media will be able to understand and I don't mean that because the Chinese media are not smart because they're very smart, but they are operating in a second language. So we have to be careful not to use jargon. We have to be careful to pace the delivery to ensure that what we're saying can be understood parcelled away, and then the next point is being made. So I often emphasise the use of pausing, for example. So, as you are preparing yourself for any interviews or any discussions with staff with partners or clients, can you think about the tone of voice you're using? The depth of your voice, the pace of your voice, your breathing technique, because these are all ways that we can communicate more about ourselves, because everybody has a judgement, whether you like it or not about what they're listening to, then it's important that we listen back to ourselves in preparation for the next outing. Now, George Bernard Shaw The playwright wrote that it's impossible for an Englishman to open his mouth without making some other Englishman hate or despise him. Now, that may be something that isn't just limited to the British condition. Think about it. We really want people not to hate or despise us, but when people to love us and to engage with us. And that, of course, is the essence of PR. And just before I go, I'd like to say that the speak PR programme that I've just finished recording the videos for on be launched next week is brilliant. It's a brilliant piece. I can't believe how brilliant it is. Not only is it brilliant, because I've written it, it's brilliant because he's going to help you to shine and to master all of these techniques. So thank you very much indeed. My name is Jim James, and I am here to help you. You can find out where I am at East West pr.com find the speak PR programme, download it, watch the videos, listen to the podcast. with that. I pray that you have a great business a tremendous business. Standing business, that you have super health, brilliant health, out lasting health, and that you keep communicating tremendously, brilliantly and wonderfully. Now, folks, wasn't that brilliant. I think that's brilliant. I'm so happy about that. Thank you so much for listening. That's brilliant.