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Welcome! Enhancing Your Communication Skills in All Kinds of Situations. May 20, 2013 Stephen D. Boyd Welcome!. The difference between the right word, and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and the lightning bug. ~ Mark Twain. Intrapersonal Communication:
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Welcome! Enhancing Your Communication Skills in All Kinds of Situations May 20, 2013 Stephen D. Boyd Welcome!
The difference between the right word, and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and the lightning bug. ~ Mark Twain
Intrapersonal Communication: communication with self
The greatest problem in communication is the illusion that it has been accomplished. ~ George Bernard Shaw
Get and hold attention • Have a “wow” factor • Use attention-getter in opening • Refer to recent events • Build suspense • Remember the magic number: three • Consider humor when appropriate
Enthusiasm! I Am Sold Myself
Special persuasive techniques • Tell a success story • Show how what you advocate works elsewhere • Use deductive method • Base your conclusions on clear evidence • Use your uniqueness • Use sources audience respects
Handling the Question and Answer Period • Let the audience know up front • Start with “What questions do you have?” • Consider repeating • Avoid “loaded” questions
Handling the Question and Answer Period (cont’d) • Don’t make the questioner look bad. • Make your answers concise • Perhaps limit discussion time • “I don’t know” may be a good response. • Make eye contact with all of your audience • Don’t evaluate questions • Let everyone have a chance
From Listening Comes Wisdom & From Speaking Repentance. Chinese Fortune Cookie
Fake attention • Interrupting the speaker • Respond to the wrong thing • Distractions • Avoid difficult material • Daydreaming • Superiority complex • Uninteresting subject matter
TORTOISE-HARE COMPLEX Tortoise talkers — Speak 150 WPM Hare listeners — Think 500 WPM
Use the thought/speech ratio to concentrate • Ask yourself, “What is the point?” • Review what has been said • Look for nonverbal cues • Don’t be doing other things as you listen • Pay attention
Empathy is a genuine concern for the other person attained by gaining a sense o his/her perspective and feelings. A nonjudgmental and nonevaluative response
The more we know about context, the better we can empathize.
A EF HI KLMN T VWXY BCD G J OPQRS U Which line would the “Z” go on?
Responding to difficult person • Do not take criticism personally • Center your thoughts on issue • Listen to entire message—don’t interrupt • Evaluate the criticism • Accept responsibility • Some “Don’ts” • Listen for areas of agreement
Potpourri • Small talk at the beginning is not really small talk • Less is sometimes more • Never tell all you know • Just because you can does not mean you should • Everything counts • Meaning is in people, not words