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Speaker coaches play a crucial role in helping leaders succeed by refining their communication skills, enhancing their presence, and polishing their delivery. They provide personalized feedback, offer strategies to engage audiences effectively, and help leaders convey their messages with clarity and impact. Additionally, speaker coaches assist in overcoming stage fright, refining body language, and adapting communication styles to different audiences and settings. Ultimately, they empower leaders to inspire, persuade, and connect with others more effectively through their spoken words.
Welcome to Twice 5 Miles Radio. I'm your host, James Navé. My guest today is the director of TEDx Asheville, Barrie Barton. With a decade-long legacy, TEDx Asheville, under Barton's guidance, has blossomed into an inclusive community, shining a spotlight on diverse local talents through a meticulous selection process that ensures fairness and opportunity for all. If you've wondered what it takes to get on a TEDx stage, Barrie provides invaluable insights into crafting your TED talk and discusses why rehearsal is the secret sauce in making your TEDx speech "go viral." In addition to directing TEDx Asheville, Barrie is an educator, speech consultant, seasoned dancer, and producer. Her business, Stand and Deliver Asheville empowers you to make an impact, convey confidence, and command the room. Whether you're looking to capture the TEDx spotlight or want to elevate your public speaking skills, this episode of Twice 5 Miles Radio is your first step towards commanding the stage.
Welcome to a special mini-podcast from Twice 5 Miles Radio; I'm James Navé. Join me as I delve into a thoughtful discussion at the TEDxAsheville Red Rug Round Table Salon, hosted by Barrie Barton, director of TEDxAsheville. We explore the value of TEDxAsheville, and I share insights on my 2010 talk "From the Imaginative Storm to the Creative Form." I reflect on its reception and how my ego played a part in my interpretation of its success. I also delve into my current journey of exploring radical honesty, a concept more elusive to me than I first thought. Tune in and enjoy."
Twice 5 Miles Radio, hosted by James Navé, welcomes TEDxAsheville Director Barrie Barton to the microphone. This show is titled How to Make a Speech which is fitting since Barrie's successful business Stand and Deliver Asheville helps people worldwide learn how to make speeches. Barrie's teaching style combines highly developed and insightful perspectives of body language, presentation mastery, and adult learning methods with her talent and passion to motivate and encourage clients to reach their finest potential. As a lifelong educator, Barrie's finely tuned capacity to organize learning results in an embodied experience of success and lasting results. Barrie's approach is firm and honest, with a dash of humor, empowering you to make meaningful personal connections and challenging you to stand up and deliver in a more powerful and confident way. In addition to her groundbreaking Stand and Deliver Asheville training programs, Barrie is the Executive Director of TEDx Asheville and Artistic Director of Story Choreography Projects. She directed and produced 15 large-scale multi-media productions at the Diana Wortham Theatre and other venues. Barrie holds a BA in Dance from the University of California at Santa Barbara and a Masters of Arts Education from Vermont College. She taught for over 22 years in two High Schools as a Dance Educator in the Buncombe County School System. When you listen to this conversation, you'll discover that making a speech involves writing, rehearsal, and practice. Enjoy.
How You Message Is Bigger Than What You Say In this week's podcast, we're talking with Barrie Barton, Founder of Stand & Deliver, a public speaking and communications coaching company. Barrie will share the essential tools and knowledge for delivering impactful speeches and talks that land in the hearts and minds of the listener. Many of us have trepidation about public speaking. Barrie offers clear practices to help us use our fear as an ally and minimize its negative impact while cultivating meaning and fun in our message. And she reminds us of what is more important than the words we choose. Listen to learn. You can learn more about Barrie and her work at standanddeliverasheville.com. Follow her on Facebook or reach out to her directly at barrie@standanddeliverasheville.com.
The suburbs are no place to raise a child. Does it really take a village to raise a child? How about a city, or a suburb? On March 5, Right Angle Studio brought together some of Melbourne’s great minds to flesh these ideas out in front of a live audience. The inaugural Place Debate pits the city against the suburbs as two teams respond to the idea that ‘the suburbs are no place to raise a child’. The evening at MPavilion was moderated by the Strategy and Insights Director at Right Angle Studio, Barrie Barton, but we’ll mostly be listening to the voices of our clients, collaborators and the next generation of great urban thinkers. For over a decade, Right Angle Studio worked tirelessly to understand inner-city audiences and environments. The city was what we knew, and what we strove to improve. When we started getting asked to work on projects in the suburbs we were forced to question our intention as urban strategists. Was our singular focus actually just snobbery? What we decided was that creating the suburbs of the future will require learning lessons from our cities: adopting increased density, building in room for change and growth and creating clusters of culture, commerce and education. We’re also paying attention to what the suburbs do well and making sure that they don’t lose their character. In the last 12 months alone, we’ve worked on projects in the outer suburbs of Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra, Geelong and the Gold Coast. We haven’t started hosing down our driveways, but we like to think we are having the same impact on life in the ‘burbs as we have in the city.
ULI Australia's David McCracken interviews Barrie Barton, Group CEO at Right Angle Studio, Paramount Recreation, and Golden Age Cinema & Bar.
EP 1736 Here, I interview Barrie Barton of StandandDeliverAsheville.com about the final things you should do before walking in for an interview, giving a presentation, or running a meeting. ABOUT JEFF ALTMAN, THE BIG GAME HUNTER Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter is a career and leadership coach who worked as a recruiter for more than 40 years. He is the host of “No BS Job Search Advice Radio,” the #1 podcast in iTunes for job search with more than 1700 episodes and “No BS Coaching Advice.” He is a member of The Forbes Coaches Council. Are you interested in 1:1 coaching, interview coaching, advice about networking more effectively, how to negotiate your offer or leadership coaching? Use this link to schedule a free Discovery call with me. Connect with me on LinkedIn. JobSearchCoachingHQ.com offers great advice for job hunters PLUS a community for you to ask questions of PLUS the ability to ask me questions where I function as your ally with no conflict of interest answering your questions. Connect with me on LinkedIn. Join and attend my classes on Skillshare. Become a premium member and get 2 months free. Join Career Angles on Facebook and receive support, ideas and advice in your current career and job. Watch my videos on YouTube at JobSearchTV.com, the Job SearchTV app for FireTV or BingeNetworks.tv for AppleTV, Roku and 90 other devices
EP 1736 Here, I interview Barrie Barton of StandandDeliverAsheville.com about the final things you should do before walking in for an interview, giving a presentation, or running a meeting. ABOUT JEFF ALTMAN, THE BIG GAME HUNTER Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter is a career and leadership coach who worked as a recruiter for more than 40 years. He is the host of “No BS Job Search Advice Radio,” the #1 podcast in iTunes for job search with more than 1700 episodes and “No BS Coaching Advice.” He is a member of The Forbes Coaches Council. Are you interested in 1:1 coaching, interview coaching, advice about networking more effectively, how to negotiate your offer or leadership coaching? Use this link to schedule a free Discovery call with me. Connect with me on LinkedIn. JobSearchCoachingHQ.com offers great advice for job hunters PLUS a community for you to ask questions of PLUS the ability to ask me questions where I function as your ally with no conflict of interest answering your questions. Connect with me on LinkedIn. Join and attend my classes on Skillshare. Become a premium member and get 2 months free. Join Career Angles on Facebook and receive support, ideas and advice in your current career and job. Watch my videos on YouTube at JobSearchTV.com, the Job SearchTV app for FireTV or BingeNetworks.tv for AppleTV, Roku and 90 other devices
“The best investment on earth is earth.” Louis Glickman, an American real estate investor, and philanthropist Over the 230 years of European settlement, we have been dividing and conquering and subdividing this great southern land. As the engine room of our built environment, Australia’s construction industry comprises 8% of the GDP, contributing $134.2 billion to the country’s economy. The sector, spanning civil, commercial and residential projects, employing over 1.1 million people. Intrinsically related to the construction industry are the commercial and residential property markets. As of December 2012, the estimated Australian institutional-grade commercial property stock was AU$681 billion in 2012. The size of the core property investment market (office, retail and industrial) is AU$280 billion of which approximately AU$195 billion (70%) is owned by Australian Institutions. At its 2017 peak, Australia’s housing market was valued at $6.9 trillion (ABS 2018). Australians reportedly spend twice as much time researching property than exercising at the gym (1.08 hours) or speaking to their parents (0.88 hours). This month Insight looks at property from the lens of residential, commercial and construction sectors. Ivan Bresic started a real estate internship at age 17 and in 2003 partnered with Shannan Whitney to form Bresic Whitney from a two-man band to a team of around 100 staff within 4 offices located in Darlinghurst, Glebe, Balmain & Hunters Hill. Josephine Sukkar AM is Principal and Co-Owner of Buildcorp which employs over 300 staff and has revenue of $500 million. She Chairs Buildcorp’s charitable entity the Buildcorp Foundation and is President of Australian Women’s Rugby. Barrie Barton is the founder of Right Angle Studio, a company on a mission to understand and improve life in our cities. Their placemaking prowess is sought by commercial property developers and institutional landlords to create commercially and culturally successful urban environments. About Insight by The Office Space Now in its fifth year of production, Insight by The Office Space is a business talk series that brings together innovative entrepreneurs and business leaders to explore burgeoning topics and reveal the secrets of their success under a monthly theme. Traversing all aspects of business across the fields of design, film, innovation, technology, finance and marketing, the sell-out program has featured speakers such as actor, Susie Porter; dual Archibald-winning artist, Del Kathryn Barton: Qantas industrial designer, David Caon; producer, Jan Chapman; graphic designer, Vince Frost and City of Sydney Counsellor, Jess Scully. Insight continues to push the boundaries by asking the pertinent questions that impact all business decision-makers, be they from small, medium or even the larger organisations, as we face continuous change and new challenges For more information, please contact Naomi Tosic at naomi@theofficespace.com.au or 02 82182100. For program information or ticket sales, please go to www.theofficespace.com.au/blog or contact events@theofficespace.com.au
My guest today is Barrie Barton, a story Choreographer who offers presentation tips for every entrepreneur by inviting us all to acknowledge our past as we look to shape the future ahead of us...and do it with this knowledge in our bones!
Paramount House in Surry Hills was at the centre of Sydney’s early 20th Century cinema boom, constructed as in 1940 as the Australian HQ for Paramount Pictures. In this episode, Dene is joined by Barrie Barton from Right Angle Studio who has been at the centre of the building’s ongoing regeneration in recent years. It is not only home to Right Angle’s office, but also to two of his other projects: Golden Age Cinema & Bar and the new Paramount Recreation Club (along with a curated collection of other interesting tenants).
Optus plans for 5G fixed wireless internet that's 20 times faster than the NBN, legendary singer Michael Bolton stars in Audible's new Australian campaign, we chat with futurist Barrie Barton and ask if we can expect the same future presented in film Blade Runner 2049, we review the DJI Mavic Pro, the Salli Saddle Chair that combines sitting and standing, the retro mini Commodore 64 and we finish off with the Tech Guide Help Desk. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Optus plans for 5G fixed wireless internet that’s 20 times faster than the NBN, legendary singer Michael Bolton stars in Audible’s new Australian campaign, we chat with futurist Barrie Barton and ask if we can expect the same future presented in film Blade Runner 2049, we review the DJI Mavic Pro, the Salli Saddle Chair that combines sitting and standing, the retro mini Commodore 64 and we finish off with the Tech Guide Help Desk.
Start your day with a conversation about how we shape the city—and how the city shapes us—hosted by Barrie Barton, co-founder of Right Angle Studio, Rooftop Cinema and Three Thousand, Melbourne’s first independent online city guide. Reporting on new music, good books, independent fashion, food and drink in the city since 2005, Three Thousand is written by locals for locals, and reflects the changing cultural landscape of Melbourne. Pop down after work and listen to a line-up of local thinkers and doers join Barrie to talk about what goes on in Melbourne’s lived spaces—day and night, rain or shine—and why. Image: Lost and Found Hotel room, Melbourne, 2011. Photo by Right Angle Studio.