Speaking Your Brand: Public Speaking Tips and Strategies

The Democratic National Convention is being held in Chicago this week and many Americans will be re-introduced to V.P. Kamala Harris when she delivers her speech on Thursday night. I have a background in local Democratic politics and have always been...

Show Notes

The Democratic National Convention is being held in Chicago this week and many Americans will be re-introduced to V.P. Kamala Harris when she delivers her speech on Thursday night.

I have a background in local Democratic politics and have always been a strong supporter of women running for office.

Earlier this summer, we held in-person workshops for women who are running in the Central Florida area where we helped them with their public speaking and storytelling.

It was a lot of fun and it showed me once again how powerful someone’s personal story is!

In this episode, I’m joined by two of those women, Jennifer Adams, who’s running for U.S. Congress in Florida’s District 7, and Sarah Henry, who’s running for Florida State House in District 38.

We talk about:

  • Why they decided to run for office and the importance of asking women to run
  • What it's like being a female candidate and having a public voice and presence
  • Their stump speeches and how they tailor them based on the audience
  • The surge of support and enthusiasm for V.P. Kamala Harris’s campaign for President and what that tells us about the importance of authenticity
  • The lessons they’ve learned about being themselves vs. trying to be someone they thought they should be
  • What they learned about storytelling, taking up space, and messaging from the workshops we did with then
  • The importance of donating to women candidates (find local women that you can donate to!)

 

 

Show notes at https://www.speakingyourbrand.com/406/ 

Jennifer Adams for U.S. Congress: https://www.jenniferadamsforcongress.com/

Sarah Henry for Florida State House: https://sarahforfl.com/ 

Discover your Speaker Archetype by taking our free quiz at https://www.speakingyourbrand.com/quiz/

Attend our 1-day Speaking for Impact in-person workshop in Orlando: https://www.speakingyourbrand.com/workshop/ 

Enroll in our Thought Leader Academy: https://www.speakingyourbrand.com/academy/ 

Connect on LinkedIn:

Related Podcast Episodes:


JOIN US: Our in-person Speaking Accelerator Workshop is coming up in Downtown Orlando on October 30, 2025. Create and practice your signature talk in one day using our proven framework, so you can confidently share your message and attract more opportunities. It's a fun, supportive environment where you get personalized feedback, professional photos, and more. Limited to 15 attendees. Get the details and secure your spot at https://www.speakingyourbrand.com/orlando/.

What is Speaking Your Brand: Public Speaking Tips and Strategies?

It's time to escape the expert trap and become an in-demand speaker and thought leader through compelling and memorable business presentations, keynotes, workshops, and TEDx talks. If you want to level up your public speaking to get more and better, including paid, speaking engagements, you've come to the right place! Thousands of entrepreneurs and leaders have learned from Speaking Your Brand and now you can too through our episodes that will help you with storytelling, audience engagement, building confidence, handling nerves, pitching to speak, getting paid, and more. Hosted by Carol Cox, entrepreneur, speaker, and TV political analyst. This is your place to learn how to persuasively communicate your message to your audience.

Carol Cox:
What is it like to be a woman running for

public office and how to authenticity and

storytelling fit into that?

That's what we're talking about with my

guests, Jennifer Adams and Sarah Henry, on

this episode of the Speaking Your Brand

podcast. More and more women are making an

impact by starting businesses, running for

office, and speaking up for what matters.

With my background as a TV political

analyst, entrepreneur, and speaker, I

interview and coach purpose driven women to

shape their brands, grow their companies,

and become recognized as influencers in

their field. This is speaking your brand,

your place to learn how to persuasively

communicate your message to your audience.

Before we get into today's episode, I want to

let you know about our brand new in-person

speaking workshop we're holding in Orlando,

Florida on October 10th, 2020 for early

bird. Pricing is on right now.

If you want to ten x your speaking skills,

both your storytelling and your delivery,

this event is exactly the one you've been

waiting for. If you want to learn how to

lessen those butterflies, those nerves that

sometimes get the best of you before a

speaking engagement.

If you want to learn how to speak

comfortably without notes and without a

script, if you want to develop your

storytelling skills so that you can tell

stories in a compelling way to your

audiences, as well as know how to activate

your storytelling with body movement,

strategic pausing, and vocal variation in

your delivery. And if you want to boost your

confidence and your stage presence, this is

what you're going to do. At our full day

in-person workshop, you'll get personalized

hands on coaching instruction and feedback.

You'll get to practice on our stage.

We're going to help you develop your key

stories and your talk segments and then, of

course give you feedback as you're

practicing them in a supportive environment

with other women entrepreneurs and leaders.

You also get professional photography of you

speaking that you can use on your website

and on your social media.

Get all of the details and register today as

speaking your brand.com/workshop.

Again, that's speaking your

brand.com/workshop. Now let's get on with

the show. Hi there and welcome to the

Speaking Your Brand podcast.

I'm your host Carol Cox.

Today I am thrilled to bring to you two

women who are running for office in the

Central Florida Orlando area.

We're going to dive into what it's like to

run for office, what it's like to run for

office as a woman, the newfound energy and

enthusiasm around Kamala Harris being the

presumptive Democratic nominee.

This episode is airing just as the

Democratic National Convention is kicking

off. So really, the entire country is going

to be Reintroduced to Kamala Harris this

week. And I know so many of us are excited

about that. So let me tell you about the two

women I have joining us today.

Jennifer Adams is running for the US

Congress in Florida's District seven.

She's a Florida native who grew up in

Central Florida. She's a mom and a small

business owner, and she has a very specific

story about what happened to her and her

family that really drove her decision to run

for Congress. And she'll share some of that

here today. Sarah Henry is running for the

state House in Florida's District 38, also

in the Central Florida Orlando area.

Sarah has worked in nonprofits throughout

her career and development, project

management, communications, compliance and

marketing, and her passion for political

advocacy was born at a young age.

I love this part. With an elementary school

assignment about the laws she would change

as the president of the United States.

I was also that girl who thought, sure, I

could grow up to be president one day.

Why not?

Welcome to the podcast, Jennifer and Sarah.

Thank you so much.

All right, so, Sarah, let's kick it off with

you. Why did you decide to run for office?

Sounds like the seed was planted at a very

young age. But what prompted you to run more

recently? First of all.

Sarah Henry:
Thank you so much for having us.

I know both Jennifer and I are really

excited about kind of the work we're doing

here in Central Florida, and in my case, in

Seminole County, to organize our

communities. I think for me, I grew up in a

very political and engaged family.

I was going to the ballot box with my

parents as soon as I could walk.

And I think that's a really critical piece

as far as being engaged early on in the

process of that kind of decision making

inside your family unit, but also, you know,

for your community and by extension, for

your country. And then when I moved to

Florida, I'm a transplant to the Sunshine

State, as are, of course, so many voters

across Central Florida.

I really was excited to continue that

engagement. I volunteered on campaigns

during undergrad, and then when I came to

Seminole County, joined the Young Democrats

of Seminole County, and eventually served as

the president of that group, which was just

a wonderful way to continue that advocacy

with folks that I shared a lot of

similarities with as far as being in the

same communities and really further develop

that advocacy and engagement.

But one of the most critical pieces of

making the decision to run for office was

actually just being asked.

I think that's something we talk a lot about

as women candidates, is that often women

have to be asked more times to to run, and I

think it is often that kind of abstract.

Oh, that's something I could do someday.

And in my case, that someday really quickly

turned into, oh, let's think about next

month, because it was an opportunity to

really develop a seat that needed investment

and a community that deserved representation

in Tallahassee that did care very deeply

about their neighbors and about their the

needs of folks, which is, unfortunately,

something that we don't really see in the

Florida legislature right now.

Carol Cox:
Sarah. I'd love to hear that someone asked

you and encouraged you to run and that you

said yes, because I always encourage women

to run. And what do they say?

Oh, no, it's not a good time.

I'm like, it's never a good time.

Sarah Henry:
That's right. It certainly there's always

something else going on.

I can tell you. I was brand, a brand new

newlywed and came home and told my husband

somebody called the state.

Someone at the state level had called, and

they're interested in me and think this seat

is a really good opportunity.

And I'm sure this is exactly what you plan

to be doing for the first two years of our

marriage. But you.

Carol Cox:
Survived this. You're good.

Right? Yes.

Sarah Henry:
Yes. Yeah.

Carol Cox:
All right, Jennifer, now, I know that you've

also been involved in advocacy work, and

your story and your experience very much led

you into the decision to run for Congress.

So can you tell us about that?

Jennifer Adams:
Absolutely. Thanks very much for having me.

I really appreciate it.

And it's always nice to be amongst other

women talking about things like this that

not a lot of women typically do.

So I appreciate it very much.

So I stepped up to run in Florida's seventh

Congressional District, which is actually

one of the most flippable congressional

seats in Florida.

And I come at this from a little bit of a

different space.

I never thought I'd be in politics.

That was not something that was on my radar.

I was a sports broadcaster, and then I went

into being a small business owner, owned my

own store with my sister and had kids.

And then the policies and the legal system,

though, impacted my life in a way that I

wasn't able to get equal protections like I

had learned about. I was doing laundry one

day. I went in and was looking, and my

husband at the times gym bag came across

pills that were in a envelope and went and

googled them on the computer to find out

what they were.

And when I saw that they were synthetic

heroin, OxyContin, that was the last straw,

had been going through abuse and domestic

violence and kept getting the gamut of

questions or statements from others will

either surely it can't be that bad?

Or why don't you just leave?

Or can you try to work it out and all of

these things? And that was my breaking

point. Knowing that I had young children and

wasn't going to subject them to be around

that or think that was a healthy

relationship.

And that's something that's not uncommon.

I later came to find out that nearly 1 in 3

women will experience domestic violence in

their lifetime, and so I knew that if it was

happening to me, it was happening to others.

And so I'm an action oriented person, I was.

I grew up being a competitive athlete, and

that was something that I always wanted to

turn pain or inactivity into something

purpose driven and having a greater goal.

And I ended up joining the League of Women

Voters and started doing advocacy work in

that space, went back to school and got

master's degrees in policy and another in

legal studies, became a Florida Supreme

Court certified circuit court mediator and

helped write and get passed a bill last year

in Florida with bipartisan support called

Grayson's Law, that stemmed out of the

unfortunate suicide and then death of a four

year old little boy whose mother tried to

get a protective order.

And by the time she did, it was too late.

And knowing that if we can get legislation

passed here in Florida, we can do it

anywhere, and looked at different things

that have been asked to run for a couple of

different seats. And then when I looked into

this congressional seat that used to be held

by Congresswoman Stephanie Murphy, I looked

at the data, looked at the person who was in

this seat and was like, this is a winnable

seat. And you have to have the right

candidate. You have to a lot of things have

to align. And when I took a look at that and

then the incumbent, who's this extremist who

is not representative of this community, as

somebody who's a native Floridian, somebody

who's grown up here, somebody that doesn't

live in our state, somebody who is very

extreme, not representing all of the people

in this district, somebody who sells arms to

foreign countries that he will not disclose.

I was like, this is my congressperson.

This is not okay. We deserve and can do so

much better. I stepped up and here we are

and I, we've done a lot of work.

We've been able to make a lot of progress.

Recent polling shows we're already within

the margin of error to to win and beat this

guy and take back this seat.

And with abortion and reproductive

healthcare and freedoms being on the ballot

in Florida, it's energized a lot of women

and a lot of men who support women and

believe in bodily autonomy and believe in

equality for everybody.

Just really, really thankful for the

opportunity to have the platform, to be able

to talk about things that are impacting all

of us, to then really put forward some

common sense, right.

Be collaborative and to champion issues and

solutions for the problems that that all of

us face every day.

Carol Cox:
Jennifer. Well done.

That was like your mini stump speech, which

I have heard before because we did a

workshop for you all and a debate prep

session here in person in Orlando, which was

a lot of fun. So let me dig into that a

little bit about creating your stump

speeches, because for the women who listen

to this podcast, they're not necessarily

running for office, although you should if

you're listening, this is your ass.

We have three. You have three women who are

now tapping you on the shoulder to do so.

But even if you're not running for office or

running for office yet, you still have to

work on your messaging, your storytelling,

putting together a cohesive idea, and

persuading your audience.

Now, obviously, Sarah and Jennifer have to

persuade them to vote for them and to donate

to them. So let me go back to you, Sarah.

When you think about creating your stump

speech, your message, you obviously have to

tailor it to different audiences and even in

a way that those of us who are, say, doing

business presentations, we don't have to

tailor them quite the way that you do.

So how do you approach that?

And tell me about the different audiences

that you have spoken to?

Sarah Henry:
Yeah, I think we had a fantastic opportunity

to work together and hone some of these

elements a little bit.

I think when it comes to political speaking,

there are so many unique audiences, even

just within the same kind of groups.

We could be speaking to donors more broadly,

but that looks very different when it's a

one on one conversation with a donor, as

opposed to when it's speaking to an entire

room of folks who could give versus with

voters. When we're speaking at a debate, as

opposed to showing up on someone's door.

I think really when we speak 1 to 1 with

folks, for me, it's important to tailor my

message to what they care most deeply about.

We know that there are so many issues facing

Floridians and folks here in Seminole County

every day, that it's sometimes hard to

narrow down what is going to be that number

one issue that someone is most concerned

about that day. And for me, I typically

start the conversation by asking, I feel

like there's no way to really know until

you've asked them. And certainly when you're

at someone's store or having that kind of

one on one phone call, being able to know

what keeps them up at night lets us hone our

message. And the reason giving or voting is

so critical now and this November,

respectively. It really allows us to build

that conversation, and that does require

keeping a lot of statistics in your head for

every issue that they might come up with.

And for me, often it's phone numbers, either

to our current representative or to the

school board, or folks who can take action

today to help resolve the issues that folks

are concerned about or start to address

them, as well as encouraging and showing

what we can do when we do bring new

leadership to Tallahassee in order to

address some of those issues.

So I think that really taking the time to

understand the specific driver that an

individual donor or voter has to either pull

out that checkbook or get to the polls, um,

really allows us to build a little bit of a

puzzle to get to what they're most most

going to be motivated by.

And that's something our standard we try to

keep. I try to keep a good understanding of

15 or 20 issues that my community is

concerned about, and what the next steps

could be if we had stronger leadership and

then build from there, especially in kind of

those larger group rooms.

We pulled the five issues that we think

folks in that space are going to be the most

concerned about and build our speech around

those, but it's definitely a lot of a lot of

understanding and working hard to understand

what folks are worried about.

Carol Cox:
And, Sarah, I remember that one of the

workshops you had either a printout or a

note cards where you had like different

parts of your speech and you would pick and

choose based on who the audience was, right?

Yes.

Sarah Henry:
Yeah. So the intro and the clothes are remain

very similar. Of course.

I've been running for office is the second

time I've run for this seat, and there are

some rooms that are about sick and tired of

my intro stories and sharing new stories

from doors or experiences we've had on the

campaign trail is is much appreciated, I

think, by some of my more frequent

attendees. But yeah, as far as some of the

policy issues. We do try to build from a

robust understanding down to a couple of

issues that are most critical that day.

And often that comes, you know, with what

the headlines are too great.

Carol Cox:
All right. And Jennifer, I remember that the

storytelling workshop that we did, we had

each of you deliver a mini version of your

stump speech. And you did that similar to

what you did for us here.

But then we had you say, okay, like, I want

to hear that one moment, that one day where

you realized that the situation with your

husband, where you had that breaking point

where you said, like, no more, and then that

eventually led you to run for office.

And I remember when you told us that story

of finding that envelope in his gym bag, and

you said it just very similar to how you

said it here today.

You could hear a pin drop in the room of us

as you shared that story.

And we're like, yes, that is it.

That's what you need to lead with, because

that pulls us in and makes us understand you

and relate to you and understand why this

matters so much, not just to you and to your

children, but to so many other women and

families out there. So how did it feel to

tell that story, and how does it feel now to

to make it front and center of when you do

go and deliver and talk to different

audiences?

Jennifer Adams:
Yeah. So it's liberating in the sense that

things that at a certain time and point

where especially if you experience abuse,

you feel ashamed, you feel like it was your

fault. These are things that you know, that

people that experienced it are told over and

over and over again, right?

Especially if you have a legal system that

really is enabling abuse, right, instead of

protecting individuals.

So it's liberating in that sense.

It's as a for somebody who's so used to

advocating for others or advocating for my

children, not advocating for myself, it that

has taken some time to get used to talking

about myself, but trying to connect it to

the bigger picture is something that is very

powerful when it happens.

But getting to that point for me at least,

wasn't very easy, right?

Because I am a self-professed policy nerd.

I love talking about like, the numbers, the

statistics, the research, all of that.

But it takes that human connection, right?

That part of it.

And that's something that is really

important. I would say, within connecting

with people, within developing that brand,

within getting people to want to listen to

you. And at the same time, it's for me

probably has been one of the most difficult

things.

Carol Cox:
Mhm. I am so grateful that you're doing it.

I really do think you're helping so many

people out there when they hear your story

and they, like you said, they know that

they're not alone and not to feel shame

about something like this.

Now, I want us to talk about the importance

of authenticity as a woman running for

office, which has not always been easy for

women. Like we think if you say the word

politician, what comes to mind in your head,

right? A guy, a white guy in a suit, running

for office, delivering his stump speech and

his booming low voice.

Right. That is the image that we have.

And obviously we're seeing more and more

women run for office, which I think is

changing that default image that we have.

And of course, as I mentioned in the

introduction, we have Vice President Kamala

Harris, who is the presumptive about to be,

I would assume, this week that this airs the

Democratic nominee for president.

And I number one, I feel like we've come a

long way, even since 2016, when Hillary

Clinton ran for office as the first woman to

run on a major party ticket as a nominee.

But really, what I have seen in since Kamala

Harris became the presumptive nominee is the

surge of energy enthusiasm over $200 million

donated from people, many of them first time

donors, in the first week that this

happened. Tens of thousands of people coming

out to volunteer to organize for her.

And then, of course, there's the memes,

right? The coconut tree story, the brat

song, all of those things.

Thinking about you, Sarah and Jennifer as a

woman running for office, having a very

public presence, having a very public voice.

What have you what have been maybe some of

the the advantages that you have had, and

have there been any challenges that you have

also faced? And, Sarah, I'll start with you.

Sarah Henry:
Yeah. I think for one, it's harder to raise

money as a woman. That's just like the way

the name of the game, unfortunately in

politics, is that running for office costs a

lot of money, and statistically it's harder

to raise that kind of money as a female

candidate. That doesn't mean we don't work

exceptionally hard to combat that statistic.

And certainly we do.

And I know Jennifer and I could regale you

with tales of miserable and never ending

call time hours to raise those dollars, but

we'll spare you the pain by association.

I think that when it comes to being

authentic, like I said, I have run for the

seat twice in 2022.

I ran and lost by just 3000 votes.

So very close in a year.

That was pretty rough for challengers in

Florida. And in that time, I feel like I

spent a lot of time on my last campaign

trying to build an image that I thought the

average Seminole County voter would resonate

with in terms of trying to appear a little

bit older. I'm very young to be a candidate

for public office in terms of trying to just

present in a way that that I thought more

people would resonate with.

And this time around, we've really stepped

that back and leaned into a lot more about

who I am. Right?

I am a young person.

I am a newlywed.

I am someone who has a fair number of

tattoos and a pierced nose.

We did move to Florida because I was 18 and

thought I was smarter than anybody else who

had ever walked the planet, and so I think

that has been really helpful in terms of not

just building those relationships with

voters, because voters are smart.

Folks understand they can see right through

you when you stand at their door and they

know if they're talking to the real you or a

sham. And so I think that has been one kind

of key piece of why our voter outreach

strategy this cycle has been so successful.

And that and hard work.

We've actually knocked on the doors of over

7500 voters already.

Um, so that is one key piece of that

conversation. But I also think even with

donors, it resonates.

People want to feel like they can trust you

with their money and trust that it's going

to be invested in a way that's meaningful

for the community, in a way that builds

power in Tallahassee and in Washington, DC.

And being able to be very authentic with

donors, I think, does help those

conversations.

And I think we're seeing it on the national

level too. Folks, even just like the

relationship between Vice President Harris

and Doug, the relationship she has with her

stepkids, I think like seeing that kind of

helps us build a full picture of who she is,

not just as a candidate, but as a woman and

a loved one, and someone who is that

fearless. And I think that we're seeing that

in it when it comes to voter and volunteer

mobilization. Of course, the money is

incredible, but I actually think the more

interesting statistics are the numbers of

new volunteers.

We saw 11,000 folks express interest in

volunteering here in the state of Florida

alone since since President Biden withdrew

from the nomination.

So I think that that is really exciting.

I know even just in our own races, we've had

a couple of new volunteers show up in the

last couple of weeks, and the Seminole

County Democratic Party is seeing the same

thing. Our office is like bursting at the

seams when it comes to folks looking to

phone, bank and get involved with the

campaign in some way, and I think that we're

just seeing that continued build of local

power, supported by that kind of national

shift in energy.

Carol Cox:
And what a valuable lesson, Sarah, because

you have the contrast between when you ran

in 2022 versus when you're running now, and

how you felt like you had to be a certain

type of person running for office versus who

you are now? And the difference that has

made?

Sarah Henry:
I think, yeah, it is a real difference.

And I think part of that is that I didn't

see folks who had that experience running

for office. So it was a lot of a lot of

older, retired, wealthy folks, especially in

Florida. Being in the legislature is a full

time job with a part time salary.

And so you end up with folks who have the

financial resources to do that, which is not

usually someone who's 26 years old.

And so I think that is part of it.

But definitely it was a mental shift to say,

okay, yeah, maybe there aren't people who

look like me in the legislature, but that

doesn't mean that there shouldn't be.

That doesn't mean that I need to change it.

It means that the landscape of the

legislature needs to change.

Carol Cox:
Yeah, I love that.

And I also I'll just do a plug now and I'm

going to do a plug again.

Is that how important it is to donate to

women who are running for office?

So for those of you listening.

Donate to Sarah and Jennifer.

You don't have to live in their district to

donate to them. Their links are in the show

notes, so go to their websites and donate to

them. But really find the women who are

running for office in your area, whether

it's Congress, state House and State Senate,

County Commission, school board, city

commission. I can imagine I've helped women

run for office before to just getting a $50

donation or a $100 donation, much less

maxing out. I can only imagine how

validating that feels as someone running for

office, that someone believes in you enough,

especially even a stranger who you've never

even heard of before comes to your website

and donates. So, Jennifer, let me ask you

first about raising money, And then let's go

to this question of authenticity as a woman

running for office.

Jennifer Adams:
Yes. So the money part is interesting.

And it's like you call a bunch of people,

you send out text emails, and I never know

who's going to give and who's not.

That's one thing I have pretty much as a

certainty is I don't know who is going to

give and who is not.

And people surprise me all the time, both

good and bad, honestly.

And people, it's usually the people who I

think that will give that don't and vice

versa. A lot of the times, and it's

interesting to see how women can be very

hard on other women.

They can really scrutinize and be some of

the more back on that, a little bit more

than than I would have thought initially.

It costs money to run.

It costs money to engage with people and to

do it in a way that you will win.

So that's what's so important because nobody

can do this alone and be successful.

It takes a team.

And whether people volunteer their time or

volunteer with a skill set that they have in

kind, their whatever their craft is,

whatever their area of expertise is, money

is another way. But also the social media is

another way that people are are gauging

candidates. So it's an interesting thing

because. So in Congress there's less than 7%

moms with school age children serving.

There's less than 25% women serving in

Congress. Right. And this is the farthest

we've come. Right. If we're going to get

equality, it's I'm going to be long gone.

We're all going to be long gone before that.

That ever happens if we continue at this

rate. Right. But the money part is really

important, and our system as a whole is

really not a very fair system in terms of

running for office, right?

Other countries do it differently.

Everybody gets seed money, they get a

certain amount. There's lots of different

ways that that some of the other countries

do it. Our system is set up like it still is

the same way. It's for typically white men

who whose jobs will help support them to run

and who have the connections to to do that.

I think social media and the internet and

things like that have changed that to a

certain degree. People can get their message

out, but donating to good women candidates

who empower other women is super, super

important, particularly now more than ever

in terms of the rights of women going

backwards. So I think it's super important.

And then on the branding piece, the

authenticity piece of being able to put that

out there, it's everything.

It it is everything, whether it's running

for office or developing a relationship or a

friendship or a client.

If people don't feel a connection, then

they're not going to want to really be

around that person, right?

And so the authenticity, meaning having a

deeper purpose, being okay, talking about

your failures, because that's what makes us

human, right. Having that empathy for others

and being willing to say sorry or I learned

this or that's not okay.

And then also being firm in the beliefs that

people have, right?

Instead of waffling or trying to say yes and

no at the same time or whatever kind of

thing. And so I think people really being

introspective again, I know as a mom and as

somebody who's always has always been

looking out for their my children's best

needs, mine, the majority of the time got

put to the wayside.

And so being able to like take the time to

be like, okay, what?

What is this about? What who am I and have

to reinvent myself?

It's so important.

And women don't do it enough.

And and it's okay.

And within that authenticity to talk about

what it's like to be a woman doing these

things, that's one thing that really bothers

me is when people are like, no, don't talk

about that being a woman, or you need to

include everybody.

And I'm like, I'm not everybody.

So. So I think that authentic piece and

pushing back in a way that makes people

maybe go like shift in a little bit in that

mentality. But at the same time, it's about

finding that common ground.

Um, and showing things from other people's

perspectives, I think is very important.

And being able to connect and find that

common ground is super important within a

campaign. It's super important for women to

do. And I think it's probably one of the

most critical components to a successful

candidacy.

Carol Cox:
Yeah. So Jennifer, thank you for all that.

Several nuggets that I'm taking away from

what you just explained is first, I did an

episode a couple of months ago on impromptu

speaking, and I know that so many of us are

scared to death of thinking about not having

everything prepared or written out, so I'll

include a link to that in the show notes.

But one of the things that I explained in

that episode was that when you're really

clear on your vision and your values, when

you know what those are and you know who you

are and what matters to you, and by

extension, what may matter to your audience,

you can do impromptu speaking.

Now, is it going to be as eloquent as

writing it down with those flowery phrases

that you want? No, your audience doesn't

care about that. They just want to hear

something real and authentic and relatable

from you. So I love that you said about

knowing your why, like knowing that.

So understanding your vision and your values

and your mission and then sharing that with

your audience, I think is key.

And you, clearly you and Sarah and Jennifer

have that. The second thing that you

mentioned about authenticity is about

building trust with others.

And I feel like we can as humans, we're very

good at having that kind of like we can

sense incongruence with someone pretty much

off the bat when we're having a conversation

with them. So I think that's really key as

well. And then the other thing is going back

to women donating to women candidates.

My belief is that as women, we don't have the

generational memory of our mothers, and the

women are in our lives growing up donating

to candidates, period, much less donating to

women. Whereas I feel like so many men in

their business circles, like they were used

to supporting each other, helping each other

out, donating to each other, running for

office. And of course, not as many women ran

when my parents were growing up, much less

my grandparents. So I am.

So I'm optimistic that as more women like

you run for office, and we see more women

donating to office and donating publicly and

supporting women publicly that we're like,

we're helping future generations build that

muscle memory and it will get better.

That's my hope. Yeah.

All right. So that's my plug again for all

of you listening to donate.

Go find some women candidates to donate to.

Emily's list is a national organization that

supports pro-choice women who are running

for office. I know they don't support

federal candidates like Jennifer, but they

do support state and local candidates like

Sarah. So go to Emily's list.

I'll include a link to that in the show

notes as well, because that can help you

define some candidates besides Sarah and

Jennifer, of course, to donate to.

All right. So Sarah, you are on the ballot

this November with your with the person who

currently is the incumbent who is in the

seat. What parting words do you have for

those who are listening here?

How can we most help you besides donating?

Sarah Henry:
Yeah, of course, that's financial support is

huge. You would never believe how much it

costs to keep every volunteer in water and

campaign T-shirts until you have to do it.

So. So that's key.

But I also think it's really about building

a culture that empowers women to run for

office. Women have to be asked seven times

to run, and we know that men not often even

need to be asked. They just believe that

folks need their opinions.

And really, what our communities need is

members and legislators at every level, from

county commission to even your city

comptroller or clerk of the courts, all the

way up to federal level in Congress and the

Senate, who understand what their

community's needs are.

And I think in many cases, the best people

who do are the women leaders among us.

So running for office is great.

But also, you know, volunteering in any

capacity you can, I think is really

critical. Jennifer made a great point about

giving kind of what you have and where, you

know, giving from where you are and taking

advantage of those skills.

First of all, we always need more folks to

knock on doors. Everybody always needs more

folks to knock on doors.

It is the most compelling way to bring a

voter to the polls.

And so finding a candidate that you believe

in and asking how you can join their mission

and really tap into that, why I think is

such a great way to engage, not just with my

campaign, but with so many others.

We have folks who have volunteered their

time to knock on doors, but also folks who

have volunteered their skills as graphic

designers or as event hosts who have a

connection to an events, down to folks who

are saying, I can't do much for the

campaign, but I know you're really busy.

Can I meal prep some lasagna for you to keep

in your freezer? There's so many needs on a

campaign that no matter what your skills

are, you will be able to engage with a

female candidate in your area who is really

working to bring that change.

Other than that, the most important thing

folks can do is vote.

Not just in November, but in all of their

elections. I know Jennifer is going to speak

to the importance of primary elections, but

a lot of times city races are decided in

that kind of primary time.

It is the general election for your school

board or your city council, and sometimes

it's not even in the fall.

A lot of folks have elections in March or

April or January.

And so plugging in to when every election is

happening in your community and making sure

that you vote up and down the entire ballot.

A lot of times those local races are decided

by just a couple of votes.

You and your friends and your neighborhood,

or your moms group, or your walking club or

your book club could really decide an

election. And so just being plugged in and

making sure that you're engaged on every

election is really how we continue to build

power for women in all of these spaces.

Carol Cox:
So well said Sarah.

And for and check also your local elections

office to see what is available for either

vote by mail, as well as early voting here

in Florida. We are very fortunate you can

request a vote by mail ballot.

There is no you don't have to supply a

reason like you used to have in the past.

I always do that.

I actually have my ballots over here on the

desk for the August primary, because it just

makes it easy. I can take my time.

I can do research on the amendments or on

the candidates and the judges, and I can

fill it all out. And then once in a while,

I'll even take it and go to the polls and

actually turn in the ballot, the absentee

ballot, and then actually vote in the booth

when I feel like it. But so do that.

Also early voting, a lot of states now also

have opportunities for you to vote in the

days leading up to Election Day.

So I know sometimes Election day you're

working, you have childcare, you have, well,

intentions to go and vote and then something

happens. So if you have an early voting

opportunity in your area, definitely go and

check that out. All right Jennifer, you are

on the primary ballot, which in Florida is

on August 20th.

And so tell us a little bit about what it's

like to run in a primary, because I know you

have to focus both on the primary, but also

on the general election at the same time.

Jennifer Adams:
Yeah. As somebody who has done a lot of work

in somebody who's like the only person who

is from here and who lives in the district

who's running, it's been that's been a plus

in terms of people.

If they don't know me, they can look and see

the other advisory boards or other spaces

that I have already given back in, and I'm

able to be somebody who's been in a lot of

spaces and has built relationships with

different organizations, with different

elected officials and, and have worked

through the process. Right.

I've led statewide advocacy and things like

that, and you have to engage with all of the

voters. But if you've already shown to be

competent and to already have been able to

accomplish a lot of the things that you

would as an elected official without having

been an elected official, That's obviously a

bonus and a plus as well.

And and I think being able to find

candidates who are especially in this

district because it's like a third in terms

of voter registration, to be able to find

somebody who is able to connect with and

speak with a lot of those different groups

is really important to be able to win.

And we've been messaging a lot of this as a

campaign for the general.

Right, in the sense that talking to all of

the voters, because that's what this

district has been lacking with the current

representative. Right.

And so people are tired of extremism on both

sides in this district.

And I think in the country, and I think it's

a breath of fresh air to find somebody who

has been able to help put together a

legislation that does get support and does

pass, and is able to navigate those

different lanes and provide common sense

solutions and be able to communicate those

because childcare and caregiving is a big

thing for me, and it's something that in our

country, we're like the only developed

nation that doesn't have a federal

infrastructure to support small businesses,

to support working families, to support the

elderly population, which is going to double

here right in the next 20 to 30 years.

And so being able to be thinking large down

the road, as well as short term to something

that we should have, there is no excuse for

us to not. But having looked at who the

people are that are in office, I'm like, you

know what? It's going to be easier for me to

run for Congress than it is to get a bill

passed. So that's like where I'm at in this.

And yeah, we have a primary election.

And a lot of times the way that that, that a

lot of these parties work, it's archaic in

the sense that, okay, there's a primary, we

stay out of it and wait Florida we have such

a late primary, we only have a couple of

months between the primary and the general.

So it's very difficult to get to gain and

keep up momentum in such a short period of

time. And so that's why there have been

things like ghost candidates in the past in

Florida and these other races.

Does it matter if it's a federal or state or

local? More so on the state and federal

sides, because they are usually more of the

party races.

But but I think it's really important for

people to engage as early as they can to get

the word out as early as they can, and to be

able to gain and continue to, to pick up

the, the momentum.

And, and it's nice that more women are doing

that and coming together and supporting one

another. And we have some amazing female

candidates right now who are like, so sick

and tired of just the draconian laws that

have been passed and are not helping our

communities. And like, I'm a mom on a

mission, like I'm like, I am so fed up with

these things that are really the majority of

our poverty. The biggest sector are single

moms and kids.

We have like almost 50% of the children in

America live in poverty.

That is so unacceptable.

That's our future generation.

And it just really ticks me off because

that's what we should all be about, right?

That's what makes us stronger.

That's what makes us have a brighter future.

And so we have to get like these

self-serving, performative politicians out.

And so I'll get off my soapbox now, but I am

like, so fired up about this aspect of it

that this is why I stepped up to run,

because it's because of my kids that I

stepped up to run. It's not because of my

kids that I don't run.

Carol Cox:
All right, Jennifer, preach it.

Get on your soapbox. I tell clients all the

time when I'm asking them questions, I'm

like, what gets you fired up?

What do you want to shout from your soapbox?

And so clearly, you know what that is

Jennifer and I love it.

And I couldn't agree with you more.

So for those of you listening, go to

Jennifer Adams for congress.com.

Also go to Sarah for FL as in Florida, Sarah

for FL. Com to find out more about Jennifer

and Sarah and to donate to their campaigns.

If you would like to work with us here at

Speaking Your Brand, we have our online

program called the Thought Leader Academy.

You can get all the details about that at

speaking your brand.com/academy.

We also have a one day in-person workshop

that we're holding here in Orlando, Florida,

coming up on October 10th, where we're going

to help you with your storytelling for your

presentations and your delivery on our

practice stage. It's going to be a lot of

fun. You can get all of those details as

speaking your brand.com/workshop.

Thank you Sarah and Jennifer, so much for

coming on the podcast.

It was such a pleasure to talk to you.

Jennifer Adams:
Thanks so much. Appreciate it.

Carol Cox:
Until next time.

Thanks for listening.