Speaking Your Brand: Public Speaking Tips and Strategies

Have you ever had an idea that tugged at you, asking to be brought to life? In this episode, I share why I believe so strongly that you are the exact messenger for your idea and your audience. Not someone else. You. Yes, your topic may be similar to...

Show Notes

Have you ever had an idea that tugged at you, asking to be brought to life?

In this episode, I share why I believe so strongly that you are the exact messenger for your idea and your audience. Not someone else. You.

Yes, your topic may be similar to what others are talking about. But ,your idea, your lens, your story, and your experiences are what make it yours.

And your audience? They’re waiting for you to say it in the way only you can.

We dig into:

  • The difference between having a topic versus having an idea (this is a game-changer for standing out!)

  • Why thought leadership is more than just expertise—it’s about the courage to show up with your unique take

  • The two ways ideas tend to come to us (and what stops us from activating them)

  • Why fear and perfectionism are such sneaky dream stealers (and how to move through them)

  • What Lin-Manuel Miranda, Elizabeth Gilbert, and Greta Gerwig can teach us about being the messenger for your idea

 

I even share a behind-the-scenes moment from preparing my 2016 TEDx talk when I realized I needed something more than a “good” talk - I needed to say something only I could say.

If you’re feeling that nudge that there’s an idea stirring inside you - or one that’s been sitting dormant - it’s time to give it voice.

Remmber: Your audience is waiting for you.

This episide originally aired as episode 343 on August 21, 2023.

 

Links:

Show notes at https://www.speakingyourbrand.com/343/

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

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

Connect on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/carolcox

Mentioned:

 

Related Podcast Episodes:

 


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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:
I believe you are the exact messenger for

your idea and your audience.

Hear why 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 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.

Hi and welcome to the Speaking Your Brand

podcast. I'm your host,

Carol Cox. If you haven't yet listened to

last week's episode, you'll definitely want

to after today's.

I've gotten such great feedback from

listeners. I talked about how I almost got

stuck in the Expert Trap,

but I managed to get myself out of it before

the presentation that I delivered at a

marketing conference in July.

So I talk about what my content and my slides

look like, and then I realize,

Oh my gosh, I'm stuck in the expert trap and

how I got myself out of it and the strategies

you can use as well.

Today we're talking about why you are the

messenger for your idea and your audience and

that your audience is waiting for you.

I know that you want to have a unique take on

your topic and not sound like everyone else,

but maybe you're worried that you see other

speakers or authors or entrepreneurs out

there who have similar topics to you.

And here's the thing that will always be the

case. There are always going to be lots of

people out there who do or say something in

the same umbrella, in the same topic area as

you. And that's why this is where having an

idea is key and it's different from my topic.

Let me give you an example.

Here's a presentation topic that you could

see at a at a conference or on a lunch and

learn that you're going to something like

five ways to improve your Social media

marketing or how to save for retirement.

Those are topics.

And yes, you will see those everywhere.

If you go to a marketing conference, you'll

see five ways to do your social media

marketing. If you're going to a business or a

finance conference or an event,

you'll hear about how to do financial

planning or how to save for retirement.

Those are topics.

And they the problem with just having a topic

like that is that you become

undifferentiated.

You're what I call a commodity speaker,

which means you're interchangeable with

everyone else. So you're not going to get

those higher profile or paid speaking

engagements that you want.

You're also less likely to generate leads and

clients from your presentations.

An idea is so much more.

And that's what makes your talk interesting

and memorable.

An idea is having a unique angle or twist on

your topic, an original way to frame it so

that it's not like what everyone else says

about your topic.

And this is exactly why your audience is

waiting for you.

I've talked in the past on this podcast about

four layers of thought leadership that I've

identified. The foundational layer is your

expertise, what it is you do in your business

and your career.

The next layer on top of that is your idea,

your big idea. So what is your take on your

expertise? But you don't stop there.

The third layer is your personal story,

your personal experience,

why you care about this idea,

why this idea came to you,

and then that top layer.

The fourth layer is the emotional courage to

dig deep and to put your idea out there,

even when it feels uncertain and scary.

So I'm going to share with you in this

episode why your ideas are so important.

The two different ways that ideas can come to

you, what oftentimes stops them from doing

so, and how to activate your idea.

Because ideas look for a messenger and it's

up to you to activate it.

If you're new to speaking your brand.

And welcome. I'm so glad that you're here.

We help women entrepreneurs and leaders

create their signature talks and develop

their thought leadership platforms.

We focus on advocating and champion for

women's visibility, voices and influence

because we know it's through women's stories

and challenging the status quo that we're

going to change existing systems for the

better. If you're interested in working with

us. Enrollment in our Thought Leader Academy

is open. We have two dates left for all of

2023 August 29th and October 24th.

Those are the two start dates we have left

August 29th and October 24th.

We work with you over eight weeks to

identify, validate and activate your idea and

turn it into a powerful thought leadership

message and signature talk.

We work with you over those eight weeks and

in group Zoom calls of small groups of women,

we have usually 6 to 8 women per group.

And then you also get a one on one virtual

VIP day with us to create your signature

talk. And clients say that that process is

magical. You literally say your idea and your

talk come to life.

If you would like to join us,

you can get all of the details,

including pricing as speaking your

brand.com/academy.

Again, that's speaking your

brand.com/academy.

You can enroll from there or you can schedule

a zoom call with us.

We are always happy to talk to you about your

goals and to make sure the thought Leader

Academy is the best fit for you.

Now let's get on with the show.

What do I mean by an idea?

Here's what the dictionary says.

An idea is a thought plan or suggestion about

what to do or an opinion or belief.

It's also defined as an entity such as a

thought concept, sensation or image,

actually, or potentially present to

consciousness. Now, that's kind of a weird

definition. That last one was from the

Merriam-Webster dictionary.

I like to think of an identity as something

that comes to you and that you then bring to

life that you actually activate into the

world. That's why I say that ideas look for a

messenger. Ideas are like floating around out

there in in the in the in the universe,

in the ether and Jung's collective

unconscious wherever they are.

And they're waiting for us to grab on to them

and to activate them, to bring them to life.

And I have been thinking about this quite a

bit from some different movies and experience

that I've had. And then I read Elizabeth

Gilbert's non-fiction book called Big Magic.

This was several years ago.

It is a fantastic book.

You may recognize the name Elizabeth Gilbert

from Eat, Pray, Love, of course,

her memoir that became a major film.

She has written so many other things since

then that I think actually are better than

the Eat, Pray, Love. Big Magic being one of

them. I highly recommend it.

I'm going to quote now from the book about

Elizabeth Gilbert's understanding of ideas,

because it very much aligns with the way that

I think about them. Here's what she said,

quote, I believe that our planet is inhabited

not only by animals and plants and bacteria

and viruses, but also by ideas.

Ideas are in disembodied,

energetic life form.

They are completely separate from us,

but capable of interacting with us,

albeit strangely.

Ideas have no material body,

but they do have consciousness and they most

certainly have will.

Ideas are driven by a single impulse to be

made manifest, and the only way an idea can

be made manifest in our world is through

collaboration with a human partner.

It is only through a human's efforts that an

idea can be escorted out of the ether and

into the realm of the actual end quote.

And that is your job to do that,

to escort the idea out of the ether and make

it actualized.

That is why you are the messenger for your

idea and for your audience.

Now, how do those ideas come to you?

This may seem a little vague and amorphous

right now, and I understand it. So let me

give you some examples.

I see two ways that ideas can come to you.

The first way is that the idea is thrust upon

you so you don't really have a choice.

It comes to you because of a personal

experience that has happened to you.

Sometimes it can come from a positive

experience. Oftentimes,

sadly, it comes from a negative experience or

a tragedy, something that happens in your

life that you then want to share with others

to prevent the same pain that you went

through. I think about a few of my clients,

most recently, Karen Keene.

She was on the podcast in July talking about

sharing her story as a transformational

experience for herself and for her audience,

very much coming out of a tragedy that she

experienced three years ago.

If you haven't listened to that episode,

definitely go back. It is incredibly

inspiring. Another client that comes to mind

is Tammy Lally, who did a Ted Talk in 2017

that I worked with her on and has since had

over 2 million views because of a sadly,

a family tragedy that occurred to her.

But just like with Karen,

she knew that she wanted to take the pain

that she had experienced and help others with

this. So, of course, we don't want something

like this to happen to us.

I would not wish a tragedy upon anyone in

order to to get an idea out of it,

to help others.

But if it does, we can decide what we want to

do with it. And here's what I will say.

There is no right or wrong answer.

You do not have to activate an idea from

something that has happened to you, but if

you are feeling compelled to do so,

then it can be of great benefit to your

audience. In this first case,

where ideas are thrust upon you,

that story, that singular personal experience

is what gives form to the idea.

Now the second way, which is is more common

in and I probably where you're sitting,

is that the way the idea comes to you is that

you're open to the idea and actively looking

for it, and the idea comes to you based on

your overall life experience,

your expertise, your background,

your interests. So you're kind of you're

you're constantly scanning your environment,

what you're reading, what you're.

Listening to what you're watching,

conversations that you have and we start

seeing threads or start or things start to

excite you, you start to get curious about a

certain topic or a certain thing and you

wonder, huh, is this something that I can

explore more?

So let me give you an example from one of my

favorite Broadway musicals.

Hamilton Lin-Manuel Miranda is the creator of

of Hamilton the Musical,

and he got that idea when he was reading a

biography about Alexander Hamilton.

He says he was on vacation with his wife.

He was sitting there under the beach umbrella

on the lounger, reading this biography,

and all of a sudden it's like that that

proverbial light bulb goes off in his head

and he realizes that he could create

something based on this material.

And then, of course, he took his unique angle

on it to make it into a hip hop musical,

not just the play, but actually creating a

musical, but a hip hop musical that had never

been done before on Broadway.

So he was open to the idea.

He was actively scanning the environment to

see. And then when he knew this one struck

him, this was the one for him.

But like Elizabeth Gilbert talked about,

if he decided not to activate that idea,

if it came to him and he just said,

Oh, this isn't for me,

or I feel a little uncertain about this,

or if this has never been done, how is this

going to work out?

Maybe I'll fail at it.

And he decided not to activate it.

Then the idea very likely could have gone and

found someone else instead because idea wants

to be made manifest and until it is,

it will keep looking for someone to do that.

If you think about all of the amazing

discoveries and art and creativity and

innovation that has happened,

a lot of times what happens is what's called

multiple or simultaneous discovery,

from calculus to the theory of evolution to

the discovery of oxygen,

to the invention of the telephone,

different people independent of each other.

There was no communication between them. They

had no idea that the other person was working

on this in different places at around the

same time, came up with the same idea.

And I believe this happens because of a

confluence of factors where it's like the

right time, it is the right time for that

idea to be made manifest.

So it's looking for the person to do that.

And sometimes it will find multiple people to

do that in Big Magic, Elizabeth Gilbert

shares a story where she talks about how she

had an idea for a new novel,

and she worked on it for a while,

maybe a year.

She was writing out the characters and the

plot. She she knew what it was going to be,

but then it kind of lost.

She lost interest in it,

that her curiosity wasn't going any further.

So she set it aside and she didn't look at it

for a while.

And then she happened to meet the other

novelist Ann Patchett at a book event that

they were both at. They had never met in

person before, and she describes in the book

how they kind of, you know,

when they when they met and then when they

said goodbye, they kind of gave each other a

kiss on the cheek.

And then they continued to correspond with

each other, actually through handwritten

letters. That's how they corresponded.

And it wasn't too long after that that

Elizabeth Gilbert decided that the original

novel that she had been working on with the

plot, the characters, everything she had

mapped out, she was just it was not for her.

Instead, she had an idea for a completely

different novel. She decided to work on that

new one instead.

And what happened, unbeknownst to Elizabeth

Gilbert, is that Ann Patchett all of a sudden

came up with an idea for a new novel of her

own that was almost the same plot location,

characters, even character names,

as an original novel that Elizabeth Gilbert

had had plotted out, but then had set aside

and eventually had abandoned.

And Elizabeth Gilbert says in the book that

she believes that that kiss that they shared

on the cheek literally passed the idea of

that novel from Elizabeth Gilbert to Ann

Patchett, because that idea wanted to be made

manifest and a realized with Elizabeth

Gilbert's permission that it wasn't going to

be her anymore that was going to make that

idea manifest.

Oh, I actually get goosebumps every time that

I think about that story.

And then when I read that story in Big Magic.

Let me give you a third example of how ideas

can come to you.

I recently saw the new Barbie movie.

Perhaps you have, too.

I loved it.

I had a feeling that I was going to like it,

but it was. It was funny,

It was witty, it was creative.

All the set design, the musical numbers,

the costumes, and of course,

the message that is embedded in it.

Greta Gerwig is the screenwriter and the

director, and she did an incredible job with

that movie. And the idea for the Barbie

movie, the way the Barbie movie would have to

be done in the year 2023.

Greta Gerwig was the messenger for that idea.

Mattel, the toy company,

had decided.

Back in the past decade or so that they

wanted to do more with their intellectual

property, with their IP,

like Barbie. Margot Robbie,

the actor who plays Barbie in the movie,

had been talking to Mattel about licensing it

to create a movie.

So that had been going. The conversations had

been going on for a little while. In the

meantime, Greta Gerwig had made the movie's

Lady Bird and the Little Women and had gotten

wide acclaim for them,

including Oscar nominations.

So now here is Greta Gerwig,

who was in the right place in her career

where she had done some,

quote unquote, smaller movies. And what

something like a Barbie summer blockbuster

would be. She had done smaller movies.

She had learned her craft.

She had honed her craft as a screenwriter and

director. She was now ready to be the perfect

messenger for the idea of the present day

Barbie movie.

And when Greta Gerwig met with Margot Robbie

to talk about it, originally Greta Gerwig was

going to write the screenplay with her

partner, Noah Baumbach,

but then she wasn't sure she was going to

direct it. But once they wrote the

screenplay, she realized that this was an

idea that she had to make manifest by also

being the director of it.

Again, it's an incredible movie. You haven't

seen it yet. I highly recommend going to see

it, but that's another example.

Sometimes ideas come to you because someone

comes to you and says,

I've seen this other this other work you've

done, and I think you'd be the perfect person

to do this. And you may have some self-doubt

or some uncertainty, but really think about

and sit with whether you are indeed the

perfect messenger for that idea,

for that audience at this time.

And that's why when an idea comes to you,

when you have an experience,

when you see something that's going on in

your industry and the area that you work in

and you think things could be better,

things could be different,

things could be there could be a change here

to make things better for people.

Once you start having that inclination,

then it's up to you to activate it because

you are the messenger for that idea and you

are the one that your audience is waiting

for. Now, sometimes this can be challenging.

What gets in the way of activating ideas that

come to us are fear and perfectionism.

The fear often times shows up as What if

other people don't like it?

What if I try it and it doesn't resonate?

What if I try it and it fails?

It doesn't get the reception that I want.

The other side of fear.

Is you do it.

And then what if it's not as good as you

imagine? What if the fantasy of acting,

the idea doesn't turn out to be the reality?

So that is one thing that gets in the way of

activating the ideas fear.

The other thing that gets in the way is

perfectionism.

And I'm going to quote again from Elizabeth

Gilbert and Big Magic,

because I think she says this so well.

And of course, she's a beautiful writer, so

I'm going to go with her words.

Here's what she says. Quote,

Perfectionism is a particularly evil lure for

women who I believe hold themselves to an

even higher standard of performance than do

men. There are many reasons why women's

voices and visions are not more widely

represented today in creative fields.

Some of that exclusion is due to regular old

misogyny. But it's also true that all too

often women are the ones holding themselves

back from participating in the first place,

holding back their ideas,

holding back their contributions,

holding back their leadership and their

talents. Too many women still seem to believe

that they're not allowed to put themselves

forward at all until both they and their work

are perfect and beyond criticism.

And I know for for so many of us,

we have this feeling like it's never going to

be good enough.

And guess what?

You're right. It's never going to feel good

enough. It's never going to feel 100%

perfect. It's never going to feel 100% ready.

The people don't want perfection.

Your audience doesn't want perfection from

you. They want creativity and authenticity

and effort.

I've been thinking a lot about this idea of

effort. I recently took a trip to New York

City to celebrate my birthday,

and we went to a Broadway musical,

which I always like to see a performance when

I'm there because I love performing.

I love watching performances and and watching

people do the best that they can in their

craft. And I believe as humans,

we like to see other humans doing things that

we know take effort.

And of course, when you have someone as high

caliber as a performance on Broadway,

what they're doing takes extraordinary

effort, but they make it look easy.

It's kind of like an Olympic gymnast,

you know that It's so what they do is so

hard, but they make it seem so easy.

And we like to see humans doing other things

that we know take effort.

And it's okay if it's not 100% perfect

because we like the authenticity and the

creativity that comes with it.

It's the effort that captivates us and

inspires us.

And this is why I believe that I created

content. And art will have its limits.

Yes, we will probably get to the point where

they will be. I created TV shows where it's

all digital actors and all of the scripts

were written by AI, and all of the visuals

were created by AI and the music was created

by AI, and there will definitely be a time

where that will be that will seem exciting

and novel. But then I think we're really

going to want to get back to watching humans

make the effort to be great actors and

singers and dancers and performers and

athletes as well as great speakers,

because activating ideas does take effort.

If you think about having a unique angle or

twist on your material,

that original way to frame it so that it's

not like what everyone else says about your

topic, that definitely does take thinking

about what what is it that you want to say?

You want to bring in your particular

background and experiences.

What unique set of circumstances led you to

this topic? You don't want to just

regurgitate what others have said. You want

to bring something new to the conversation.

Let me give you an example of a talk that I

gave back in October of 2016.

I was invited to a local TEDx women's event

as about 50 women who were going to be in the

audience. And I was asked to to give a talk

at that event. So I wanted to talk about,

since I'm a political analyst on TV news

during election seasons, and I've been doing

that since 2005.

So this was 2016.

Obviously a big year for politics at the

time. And, you know, we could see how much

sexism and misogyny was going on in that

election cycle.

So I wanted to talk about it in this talk.

And I remember it was an evening in August

2016, and I know sitting down working on the

talk that I knew I needed to deliver in about

six weeks from them.

And I sat staring at my computer and I was

working on that talk. And it was about women

in leadership in politics,

and I knew it was missing something.

My first draft was good.

It was about the benefits of having more

women in elected office,

the gender stereotypes that female candidates

face, and some statistics thrown in for good

measure. It was informative,

but it wasn't really all that interesting.

I can imagine the women in the audience

nodding their heads along with what I was

saying. But I wasn't sharing anything they

didn't already know.

I needed a hook, a twist,

something that sparked curiosity.

I needed to get to the core of my topic to

find that aha moment.

So as I sat at my computer,

I stopped researching and typing,

and instead I let my mind wander.

Sifting through all the years I spent

studying women's history and gender theory

and undergrad and graduate school,

the years I've spent working in politics and

business. So I was just open.

I was open to the ideas that were floating

out into the ether and wondering,

was there one that in particular was going to

be resonant to me?

And then I saw it.

And I not just saw it,

but I felt it.

And it became so clear that my hands could

barely keep up with my thoughts as I

hurriedly wrote it all down,

scribbled it down and then started typing it

out. Now, if you want to hear what that idea

was, you can listen to that talk in episode

92 of this podcast.

That was back. Oh gosh,

Episode 92 must have been in 2018 that I did

that. So you can there's a link in the show

notes, but you can also just go back and find

episode 92.

That is what it means to be open to ideas,

but not only being open to ideas,

but also be willing to activate them.

Now, I had some trepidation,

some uncertainty, some self-doubt about this

talk that I was putting together,

the content of it and the delivery of it,

and you'll hear more about that. Also an

episode 92.

But I also realized that I was the chosen

messenger for that idea and for that audience

because there was no one else that had the

unique set of circumstances that I had with

history, politics, business,

technology that could bring all of that

together in a unique and interesting way.

So it was up to me to activate it because my

audience was waiting for it and your audience

is waiting for you.

And this is exactly what we do when we work

with our clients. And the Thought Leader

Academy is we provide them that coaching and

that feedback and that guidance on the

development of their ideas and their

signature talks.

But along with the coaching and feedback,

it really is also validation of their ideas,

letting them know, yes,

you're on the right path,

keep going, keep digging in there,

providing that encouragement and that

support. Because like I said in the

beginning, those four layers of thought

leadership, your expertise,

your big idea, your personal story and

experience and that emotional courage,

all of those are necessary to put yourself

out there to become the thought leader that

you want to be and to make an impact on your

audience. Again, if you would like to join us

in the Thought Leader Academy, you can get

all the details at speaking your

brand.com/academy.

Until next time, thanks for listening.

And don't forget, your audience is waiting

for you.