Podcasts about garr reynolds

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Best podcasts about garr reynolds

Latest podcast episodes about garr reynolds

Superintendent's Hangout
#92 Garr Reynolds, Presentation Zen

Superintendent's Hangout

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2025 70:18 Transcription Available


Send us a textJoin Dr. Sciarretta for a conversation with Garr Reynolds, the author of  Presentation Zen: Simple Ideas on Presentation Design and Delivery, for a compelling discussion about the fusion of Zen aesthetics with modern communication. Garr shares how his journey from Oregon to Japan has shaped his philosophy, emphasizing the power of simplicity and focus. Garr's insights extend beyond visuals, touching on the growing role of AI in both storytelling and education, while reminding us of the unyielding value of authenticity and creativity. Garr's YouTube channelGarr's website Keynote by Jensen Huang

GAINcast with Vern Gambetta
281: Presentation zen (with Garr Reynolds)

GAINcast with Vern Gambetta

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2024 34:19


Communication is the cornerstone of coaching. Garr Reynold's best-selling book Presentation Zen explains how to reach the audience through simplicity and storytelling. He joins us on this weeks' GAINcast to discuss how these lessons can be helpful for coaches as well, including insights on editing, simplicity, material, and methods. For more information on this topic, read the complete show notes at: https://www.hmmrmedia.com/2024/04/gaincast-episode-281-presentation-zen-with-garr-reynolds/ The following links were also referenced in the podcast or provide some additional reading material on the topic:  The GAINcast is sponsored by GAIN and by HMMR Media. Join HMMR Media to get access to a vast library of online training resources, video, articles, podcasts, and more. You can learn more from Reynolds on his website, including 10 presentation tips. His book Presentation Zen is also highly recommended. You can also follow him on X (@presentationzen). Some more insights on communication up on HMMR Media: Lessons in communication from Wade Gilbert, Training talk with Harry Marra on coaching cues, 4 ways to rethink how you give feedback, and GAINcast 191: Teaching better with teacher Doug Lemov. Communication was also our theme in December 2021.

Chef Educator
Preparing Engaging Presentations

Chef Educator

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2023 29:31


It is a fact that effective and engaging presentations are the result of proper preparation. They don't happen by accident or chance. So whether you are a culinary educator, business professional, or anyone else just looking to improve your presentation skills and get some help on how to convey your ideas effectively, then this episode is for you. Listen in as Dr. Colin Roche talks about presenting with purpose and creating change in your audience.In this episode, Chef Roche also mentions the book "The Naked Presenter: Delivering Powerful Presentations With or Without Slides" by Garr Reynolds (https://amzn.to/3YQZcRc), which is an invaluable resource that will help you discover how to get to the core of your message and deliver presentations that are as natural as they are memorable!CULINARY EDUCATORS' BOOK: To get even more information on a wide variety of teaching topics, be sure to check out the book Dr. Roche co-wrote titled "Culinary Educators' Teaching Tools and Tips", which is published by Kendall Hunt (https://he.kendallhunt.com/product/culinary-educators-teaching-tools-and-tips).SPONSORSHIP / SUPPORT: If you like the show, or this episode, why not show your support by buying us a cup or two of coffee to help defray some of the out-of-pocket expenses? You can do so easily by going to Buy Me A Coffee https://www.buymeacoffee.com/chefroche or through Patreon at: https://www.patreon.com/DrProfessorChef.We truly appreciate any help or support you provide! If you contribute just the price of a cup of coffee a week, you will be helping to support the hosting, purchasing, creation and production of our episodes and shows that we produce and give away for free.Companies & Businesses interested in advertising or sponsoring the podcast, please contact us at: FoodMediaNetwork@gmail.comABOUT THE SHOW: The Chef Educator podcast was created to be a comprehensive resource for new and "seasoned" culinary, baking & pastry, and hospitality teachers, instructors, and faculty at both secondary and post-secondary educational institutions.The show addresses the many issues related to student learning and instructor effectiveness and our hope is to offer a collection of practical and effective teaching tools, tips, and techniques that you can use in your classroom and/or labs.RATINGS / REVIEW: If you enjoy this episode or the podcast overall, please consider leaving a short review and rating. It takes less than 30 seconds, and it really makes a difference in spreading the word and helping us to get new listeners, guests, and sponsors!RESOURCES:Audience Response Hotline - (207) 835-1275 {Comments, Suggestions or Questions)LinkTree - https://linktr.ee/FoodMediaNetworkCulinary School Stories Podcast Website - http://www.culinaryschoolstories.comChef Educator Podcast Website - http://www.chefeducator.comKitchen Lingo Podcast Website - https://foodmedianetwork.com/kitchenlingo/Main Website - https://foodmedianetwork.comYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/user/DrChefColinFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/DrProfessorChefTwitter - https://twitter.com/ChefRocheInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/drprofessorchef/Email - FoodMediaNetwork@gmail.comSign up for our email list /newsletter - https://foodmedianetwork.com/contactMUSIC: "Atlanta" by Jingle Punks, YouTube Audio LibraryChef Educator is a proud member of the Food Media Network!Copyright 2023

Chef Educator
Naked & Natural Presenting

Chef Educator

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2023 15:56


We all know the struggle of enduring a monotonous presentation that leaves us counting down the seconds until it's over. But fear not, because in this episode we will be talking about some of the various ways that we can all become a more captivating and impactful presenter, by learning to deliver more powerful and engaging presentations. Listen in as Dr. Colin Roche talks about naturalness (the natural expression of ourselves) and presenting naked, which means putting your audience first, being transparent, and allowing yourself to be vulnerable and exposed. In this episode, Chef Roche also mentions the book "The Naked Presenter: Delivering Powerful Presentations With or Without Slides" by Garr Reynolds (https://amzn.to/3YQZcRc), which is an invaluable resource that will help you discover how to get to the core of your message and deliver presentations that are as natural as they are memorable!CULINARY EDUCATORS' BOOK: To get even more information on a wide variety of teaching topics, be sure to check out the book Dr. Roche co-wrote titled "Culinary Educators' Teaching Tools and Tips", which is published by Kendall Hunt (https://he.kendallhunt.com/product/culinary-educators-teaching-tools-and-tips).SPONSORSHIP / SUPPORT: If you like the show, or this episode, why not show your support by buying us a cup or two of coffee to help defray some of the out-of-pocket expenses? You can do so easily by going to Buy Me A Coffee https://www.buymeacoffee.com/chefroche or through Patreon at: https://www.patreon.com/DrProfessorChef.We truly appreciate any help or support you provide! If you contribute just the price of a cup of coffee a week, you will be helping to support the hosting, purchasing, creation and production of our episodes and shows that we produce and give away for free.Companies & Businesses interested in advertising or sponsoring the podcast, please contact us at: FoodMediaNetwork@gmail.comABOUT THE SHOW: The Chef Educator podcast was created to be a comprehensive resource for new and "seasoned" culinary, baking & pastry, and hospitality teachers, instructors, and faculty at both secondary and post-secondary educational institutions.The show addresses the many issues related to student learning and instructor effectiveness and our hope is to offer a collection of practical and effective teaching tools, tips, and techniques that you can use in your classroom and/or labs.RATINGS / REVIEW: If you enjoy this episode or the podcast overall, please consider leaving a short review and rating. It takes less than 30 seconds, and it really makes a difference in spreading the word and helping us to get new listeners, guests, and sponsors!RESOURCES:Audience Response Hotline - (207) 835-1275 {Comments, Suggestions or Questions)LinkTree - https://linktr.ee/FoodMediaNetworkCulinary School Stories Podcast Website - http://www.culinaryschoolstories.comChef Educator Podcast Website - http://www.chefeducator.comKitchen Lingo Podcast Website - https://foodmedianetwork.com/kitchenlingo/Main Website - https://foodmedianetwork.comYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/user/DrChefColinFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/DrProfessorChefTwitter - https://twitter.com/ChefRocheInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/drprofessorchef/Email - FoodMediaNetwork@gmail.comSign up for our email list /newsletter - https://foodmedianetwork.com/contactMUSIC: "Atlanta" by Jingle Punks, YouTube Audio LibraryChef Educator is a proud member of the Food Media Network!Copyright 2023

The Behavioral Observations Podcast with Matt Cicoria
Fifty Years in Behavior Analysis: Session 229 with Jose Rios

The Behavioral Observations Podcast with Matt Cicoria

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2023 97:50


This is a conversation I've really been looking forward to sharing with you. Jose Rios is a legend in our field, particularly if you're a behavior analyst in California, where he's based out of.  In this conversation, Jose recounts his more than 50 year career in providing ABA services to individuals with developmental disabilities. We cover the following: How he got started in the field at the tender age of 17. What the field of ABA was like in the early 70s. What it takes to provide amazing experiences for group home residents and staff. The founding of the Latino Association for Behavior Analysis. The evolution of behavior support plans over the years. Jose's intense mentoring program. What makes for good presentations. Jose is an avid reader, and we spent almost a half hour talking about our favorite fiction authors before hitting the record button. In the interview itself however, we do mention a few books and other resources that are more pertinent to the topic of Behavior Analysis, including: The various works of Dr. Gary LaVigna. The various works of Dr. John Lutzker. Teaching dating skills to individuals with disabilities (Cuvo et al., 1985). Vollmer et al. (1992). A content analysis of written behavior management programs.  Resonate, by Nancy Duarte. Presentation Zen: Simple Ideas on Presentation Design and Delivery (Voices That Matter) 3rd Edition, by Garr Reynolds. The Last Lecture, by Randy Pausch. The Supervisor's Guidebook: Evidence-Based Strategies for Promoting Work Quality and Enjoyment Among Human Service Staff, Reid & Parsons. This conversation is like a lesson in the history of Applied Behavior Analysis, and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.  This podcast is brought to you by: ACE Approved CEUs from .... Behavioral Observations. That's right, get your CEUs while driving, walking your dog, doing the dishes, or whatever else you might have going on, all while learning from your favorite podcast guests! HRIC Recruiting. Barb Voss has been placing BCBAs in permanent positions throughout the US for just about a decade, and has been in the business more generally for 30 years. When you work with HRIC, you work directly with Barb, thereby accessing highly personalized service. So if you're about to graduate, you're looking for a change of pace, or you just want to know if the grass really is greener on the other side, head over to HRIColorado.com to schedule a confidential chat right away.

TanadiSantosoBWI
204. Presentatiom Zen Design, review Tanadi Santoso

TanadiSantosoBWI

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2022 14:14


In his internationally acclaimed, best-selling book Presentation Zen: Simple Ideas on Presentation Design and Delivery, presentation master Garr Reynolds gave readers the framework for planning, putting together, and delivering successful presentations. Now, he takes us further into the design realm and shows how we can apply time-honored design principles to presentation layouts. Throughout Presentation Zen Design, Garr shares his lessons on designing effective presentations that contain text, graphs, color, images, and video. After establishing guidelines for each of the various elements, he explains how to achieve an overall harmony and balance using the tenets of Zen simplicity. Not only will you discover how to design your slides for more professional-looking presentations, you’ll learn to communicate more clearly and will accomplish the goal of making a stronger, more lasting connection with your audience.

The A&P Professor
Why Anatomy & Physiology Students Need Sectional Anatomy | TAPP 116

The A&P Professor

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 70:19


Host Kevin Patton talks about why our anatomy & physiology students need to experience and get comfortable with sectional anatomy, Terry Thompson shares some thoughts on deadline terminology—and she gives us a thoughtful book review and recommendation for The A&P Professor Book Club—and we review a few slide tricks. 0:00:00 | Introduction 0:00:50 | Expiration Dates 0:05:02 | Sponsored by AAA 0:06:19 | Slide Tricks (Again) 0:25:15 | Sponsored by HAPI 0:26:28 | Book Club: I Contain Multitudes 0:33:13 | Sponsored by HAPS 0:34:19 | Sectional Anatomy 0:53:45 | Finding Media 0:55:19 | More Sectional Anatomy 1:07:12 | Staying Connected   ★ If you cannot see or activate the audio player, go to: theAPprofessor.org/podcast-episode-116.html

Higher Ed Heroes
Higher Ed Heroes: The zen of presentation design and delivery (with Garr Reynolds)

Higher Ed Heroes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2022 17:43


In this episode, Al and Seb talk to Professor Garr Reynolds (University in Osaka) about how to design and deliver powerful presentations, how to avoid death by powerpoint, and how the best learning comes through doing. 

Man in the Arena
Man in the Arena #001​ - Parte 1

Man in the Arena

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2021 7:58


O Man in the Arena é um vídeo podcast sobre empreendedorismo e cultura digital, apresentado por Leo Kuba e Miguel Cavalcanti. Neste episódio: Dicas de conteúdo na internet: #Blog Mixergy.com, de Andrew Warner #Entrevista de Michael Robertson (mp3.com), para Jason Calacanis no ThisWeekinStartups.com - bit.ly/twist-mr #Post Makers' Schedule de Paul Graham. - bit.ly/graham-ms #Entrevista de David H. Hansson (37Signals), para Jason Calacanis. - bit.ly/twist-dhh Dicas de livros: #Get Seen, de Steve Garfield. #Presentation Zen, de Garr Reynolds. Dicas de produtos web: #Google Docs #Dropbox e Sugarsync #Preview do Google Apps Marketplace

Man in the Arena
Man in the Arena #001​ - Parte 1

Man in the Arena

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2021 7:58


O Man in the Arena é um vídeo podcast sobre empreendedorismo e cultura digital, apresentado por Leo Kuba e Miguel Cavalcanti. Neste episódio: Dicas de conteúdo na internet: #Blog Mixergy.com, de Andrew Warner #Entrevista de Michael Robertson (mp3.com), para Jason Calacanis no ThisWeekinStartups.com - bit.ly/twist-mr #Post Makers' Schedule de Paul Graham. - bit.ly/graham-ms #Entrevista de David H. Hansson (37Signals), para Jason Calacanis. - bit.ly/twist-dhh Dicas de livros: #Get Seen, de Steve Garfield. #Presentation Zen, de Garr Reynolds. Dicas de produtos web: #Google Docs #Dropbox e Sugarsync #Preview do Google Apps Marketplace

Man in the Arena
Man in the Arena #001​ - Parte 2

Man in the Arena

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2021 10:06


O Man in the Arena é um vídeo podcast sobre empreendedorismo e cultura digital, apresentado por Leo Kuba e Miguel Cavalcanti. Neste episódio: Dicas de conteúdo na internet: #Blog Mixergy.com, de Andrew Warner #Entrevista de Michael Robertson (mp3.com), para Jason Calacanis no ThisWeekinStartups.com - bit.ly/twist-mr #Post Makers' Schedule de Paul Graham. - bit.ly/graham-ms #Entrevista de David H. Hansson (37Signals), para Jason Calacanis. - bit.ly/twist-dhh Dicas de livros: #Get Seen, de Steve Garfield. #Presentation Zen, de Garr Reynolds. Dicas de produtos web: #Google Docs #Dropbox e Sugarsync #Preview do Google Apps Marketplace

Man in the Arena
Man in the Arena #001​ - Parte 3

Man in the Arena

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2021 6:42


O Man in the Arena é um vídeo podcast sobre empreendedorismo e cultura digital, apresentado por Leo Kuba e Miguel Cavalcanti. Neste episódio: Dicas de conteúdo na internet: #Blog Mixergy.com, de Andrew Warner #Entrevista de Michael Robertson (mp3.com), para Jason Calacanis no ThisWeekinStartups.com - bit.ly/twist-mr #Post Makers' Schedule de Paul Graham. - bit.ly/graham-ms #Entrevista de David H. Hansson (37Signals), para Jason Calacanis. - bit.ly/twist-dhh Dicas de livros: Get Seen, de Steve Garfield. #Presentation Zen, de Garr Reynolds. Dicas de produtos web: #Google Docs #Dropbox e Sugarsync #Preview do Google Apps Marketplace

Man in the Arena
Man in the Arena #001​ - Parte 3

Man in the Arena

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2021 6:42


O Man in the Arena é um vídeo podcast sobre empreendedorismo e cultura digital, apresentado por Leo Kuba e Miguel Cavalcanti. Neste episódio: Dicas de conteúdo na internet: #Blog Mixergy.com, de Andrew Warner #Entrevista de Michael Robertson (mp3.com), para Jason Calacanis no ThisWeekinStartups.com - bit.ly/twist-mr #Post Makers' Schedule de Paul Graham. - bit.ly/graham-ms #Entrevista de David H. Hansson (37Signals), para Jason Calacanis. - bit.ly/twist-dhh Dicas de livros: Get Seen, de Steve Garfield. #Presentation Zen, de Garr Reynolds. Dicas de produtos web: #Google Docs #Dropbox e Sugarsync #Preview do Google Apps Marketplace

Man in the Arena
Man in the Arena #001​ - Parte 2

Man in the Arena

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2021 10:06


O Man in the Arena é um vídeo podcast sobre empreendedorismo e cultura digital, apresentado por Leo Kuba e Miguel Cavalcanti. Neste episódio: Dicas de conteúdo na internet: #Blog Mixergy.com, de Andrew Warner #Entrevista de Michael Robertson (mp3.com), para Jason Calacanis no ThisWeekinStartups.com - bit.ly/twist-mr #Post Makers' Schedule de Paul Graham. - bit.ly/graham-ms #Entrevista de David H. Hansson (37Signals), para Jason Calacanis. - bit.ly/twist-dhh Dicas de livros: #Get Seen, de Steve Garfield. #Presentation Zen, de Garr Reynolds. Dicas de produtos web: #Google Docs #Dropbox e Sugarsync #Preview do Google Apps Marketplace

Chef Educator
Presenting Naked

Chef Educator

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 39:03


The ability to stand and deliver a powerful presentation that engages the whole minds of our audience is more important today than ever before, partly because of the fantastic reach that out talks can have!In this episode, Dr. Colin Roche shares information from two books on presenting, titled "I Can See You Naked" by Ron Huff, and "The Naked Presenter" by Garr Reynolds.Presenting Naked basically means connecting and engaging with an audience in a way that is direct, honest and clear. It means putting your audience first and being transparent, while allowing yourself to be vulnerable and exposed. Presenting Naked embraces, the idea of simplicity, integrity, and passion and is far more satisfying for both the presenter and the audience. ABOUT THE SHOW: The Chef Educator podcast was created to be a comprehensive resource for new and "seasoned" culinary, baking & pastry, and hospitality teachers, instructors, and faculty at both secondary and post-secondary educational institutions.The show addresses the many issues related to student learning and instructor effectiveness and our hope is to offer a collection of practical and effective teaching tools, tips, and techniques that you can use in your classroom and/or labs.CULINARY EDUCATORS' BOOK: To get more information on this topic, as well as many others, including charts, templates and examples, be sure to check out the book titled "Culinary Educators' Teaching Tools and Tips" which is published by Kendall Hunt (https://he.kendallhunt.com/product/culinary-educators-teaching-tools-and-tips)CULINARY MEDIA TRAINING COURSES: To get more information on the courses that teach you how to be a better food presenter on TV, video and in person, click this link - Courses Archive - Food Media NetworkAFFORDABLE COLLEGE PREP: If you would like more information on the non-profit organization Affordable College Prep that was mentioned in this episode, which offers free college support, click this link - https://affordablecollegeprep.com/PINEAPPLE ACADEMY: If you would like more information on the front and back-of-the-house online courses offered by the Pineapple Academy for you, your students, employees, or other you know, click this link and you will be given a free 14-day trial - https://my.pineappleacademy.com/signup/business/?referral_id=H6UQTHIBPL6KT68FSPONSORSHIP/ SUPPORT: If you like the show, or this episode, why not show your support by buying us a cup or two of coffee to help defray some of the out-of-pocket expenses? You can do so easily by going to: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/chefroche or through Patreon at: https://www.patreon.com/DrProfessorChefWe truly appreciate any help or support you provide! If you contribute just the price of a cup of coffee a week, you will be helping to support the hosting, purchasing, creation and production of our episodes and shows that we produce and give away for free.Companies & Businesses interested in advertising or sponsoring the podcast, please contact us at: FoodMediaNetwork@gmail.comRATINGS / REVIEW: If you enjoy this episode or the podcast overall, please consider leaving a short review and ratings on Apple Podcasts if you have an iPhone or iPad. It takes less than 30 seconds, and it really makes a difference in spreading the word and helping us to get new listeners, guests, and sponsors!RESOURCES:Audience Response Hotline - (207) 835-1275 {Comments, Suggestions or Questions)Link Tree - https://linktr.ee/FoodMediaNetworkCulinary School Stories Podcast Website - http://www.culinaryschoolstories.comChef Educator Podcast Website - http://www.chefeducator.comKitchen Lingo Podcast Website - https://foodmedianetwork.com/kitchenlingo/Main Website - https://foodmedianetwork.comYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/user/DrChefColinFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/DrProfessorChefTwitter - https://twitter.com/ChefRocheInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/drprofessorchef/Email - FoodMediaNetwork@gmail.comSign up for our email list / newsletter - https://foodmedianetwork.com/contactMUSIC: "Atlanta" by Jingle Punks, YouTube Audio LibraryChef Educator is a proud member of the Food Media Network!Copyright 2022

Mile High FI Podcast
Rebel Finance with Katie and Alan | MHFi 022

Mile High FI Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2021 126:53


Carl met Alan and Katie Donegan in Ecuador at one of JL Collins’s Chautauquas in 2016. They’ve been friends ever since. In this interview, we discuss: Alan’s childhood struggles How to build confidence Family trauma Rebel Business School Discovering FIRE Real estate Becoming digital nomads The Donegans’ perfect day Meet Alan and Katie  Katie and Alan are an accomplished, fun-loving couple who have taken the world by storm with their radical approach to starting a business. Alan was someone who yearned to start his own business but was vehemently opposed to the idea of taking on debt to do it. Thus, The Rebel Business School was born. Through the courses taught at Rebel Business School, Alan began teaching people how to launch businesses without taking on any debt. To Alan, the phrase “you’ve got to spend money to make money” is sheer bunk. Both his own successful businesses and the many businesses started by students of The Rebel Business School are proof of it. Katie is a former consultant who left behind the corporate world after achieving Financial Independence. She and Alan now work on The Rebel Business School together. They also put out a podcast, write a blog, and run the Rebel Finance School, which helps teach people both the basics and the advanced aspects of attaining financial success. This couple is ambitious about teaching, helping others, and loving life. They are now full-time digital nomads – a feat they managed successfully even during COVID-19! Our Discussion  We kicked things off with something that felt pretty basic – we asked Alan and Katie to introduce themselves. But Alan reminded us that this can actually be quite tricky when you’re “retired” early and can’t simply rattle off your name and a one-word description of what you do all day. We then took a dive into the deep end and talked about overcoming bullies in childhood. Although Katie’s wit and penchant for sports kept her from being bullied, Alan faced some difficult hurdles in his youth – but the wisdom he now takes away from those early challenges is nothing short of inspiring. Alan told us about how he has learned to build confidence over the years and how helpful it is to go into any situation thinking about how things could go right, instead of getting stuck in a negative feedback loop of fearing how things could go wrong. Alan now thinks to himself: “What if I went into this room full of people and found an amazing friend or an exciting new opportunity”? We also went in depth about public speaking. Carl, Doug, and Alan have all had very positive experiences with Toastmasters and view it as an incredibly powerful confidence-building tool. Alan also highly recommends Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds and Craig Valentine’s 52 Speaking Tips for fine-tuning your presentation and PowerPoint skills. We then talked in depth about the Rebel Business School. Alan is passionate about debunking the myth that starting a business requires debt, and that passion shines through. We discussed some of the success stories from his business and how the school got started. Alan also told us about th

Mile High FI Podcast
Rebel Finance with Katie and Alan | MHFi 022

Mile High FI Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2021 126:53


Carl met Alan and Katie Donegan in Ecuador at one of JL Collins's Chautauquas in 2016. They've been friends ever since. In this interview, we discuss: Alan's childhood struggles How to build confidence Family trauma Rebel Business School Discovering FIRE Real estate Becoming digital nomads The Donegans' perfect day Meet Alan and Katie  Katie and Alan are an accomplished, fun-loving couple who have taken the world by storm with their radical approach to starting a business. Alan was someone who yearned to start his own business but was vehemently opposed to the idea of taking on debt to do it. Thus, The Rebel Business School was born. Through the courses taught at Rebel Business School, Alan began teaching people how to launch businesses without taking on any debt. To Alan, the phrase "you've got to spend money to make money" is sheer bunk. Both his own successful businesses and the many businesses started by students of The Rebel Business School are proof of it. Katie is a former consultant who left behind the corporate world after achieving Financial Independence. She and Alan now work on The Rebel Business School together. They also put out a podcast, write a blog, and run the Rebel Finance School, which helps teach people both the basics and the advanced aspects of attaining financial success. This couple is ambitious about teaching, helping others, and loving life. They are now full-time digital nomads - a feat they managed successfully even during COVID-19! Our Discussion  We kicked things off with something that felt pretty basic - we asked Alan and Katie to introduce themselves. But Alan reminded us that this can actually be quite tricky when you're "retired" early and can't simply rattle off your name and a one-word description of what you do all day. We then took a dive into the deep end and talked about overcoming bullies in childhood. Although Katie's wit and penchant for sports kept her from being bullied, Alan faced some difficult hurdles in his youth - but the wisdom he now takes away from those early challenges is nothing short of inspiring. Alan told us about how he has learned to build confidence over the years and how helpful it is to go into any situation thinking about how things could go right, instead of getting stuck in a negative feedback loop of fearing how things could go wrong. Alan now thinks to himself: "What if I went into this room full of people and found an amazing friend or an exciting new opportunity"? We also went in depth about public speaking. Carl, Doug, and Alan have all had very positive experiences with Toastmasters and view it as an incredibly powerful confidence-building tool. Alan also highly recommends Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds and Craig Valentine's 52 Speaking Tips for fine-tuning your presentation and PowerPoint skills. We then talked in depth about the Rebel Business School. Alan is passionate about debunking the myth that starting a business requires debt, and that passion shines through. We discussed some of the success stories from his business and how the school got started. Alan also told us about the power of taking action - right now! He's seen so many of his students in the school who want results but hesitate in making the critical moves that would get them there. Katie and Alan then told us how they discovered the FIRE movement. Like many people, their introduction came through blogs. But Alan was also inspired by Tony Robbins' book Notes From a Friend, which set him on a path towards better financial decision-making. After becoming enamored of the concept of financial independence, Katie and Alan began looking at others all around them and wishing they could help them make better financial choices. So they took action! They started the Rebel Finance School to help people get to full financial literacy and hopefully pursue a path towards financial independence themselves. We wrapped things up by going full circle - back to Alan's story of his childhood bullies. When asked what he'd say to that bully today, Alan had the best possible answer: he'd simply move on. He no longer has any need to impress anyone or live life on anyone's terms but his and Katie's. That's a pretty powerful way to live your life! Alan and Katie were excellent guests, and we highly recommend you check out their courses, their blog, and their podcast! You'll walk away with an armload of wisdom, and an earful of their delightful English accents! Join the Mile High FI Club – It's our email list! ____ ★ Let's hang out at the EconoMe Conference! ★ Carl is speaking at EconoMe and Doug is attending. You can save 10% by using this coupon code: 1500 *Affiliate link so we get a commission if you buy something. **Disclaimer: The podcast is for informational purposes. Maybe entertainment but we won't even make such a claim. You shouldn't take the info as financial, legal, or tax advice. We aren't certified financial planners or advisors. We're not qualified for much. So get advice from professionals.**

Bookey App 30 mins Book Summaries Knowledge Notes and More
The Naked Presenter: Delivering Powerful Presentations With or Without Slides by Garr Reynolds

Bookey App 30 mins Book Summaries Knowledge Notes and More

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2021 9:07


Once, Reynolds and his colleagues went to a large outdoor Japanese hot spring. Since everyone was naked, they were feeling very relaxed both physically and mentally. When naked, hierarchical differences between people subside, interpersonal communication and connection becomes smoother, devoid of barriers and formalities. People get closer and their thoughts connect. ‘Naked presentation' refers to the establishment of communication and connection with the audience in a direct, sincere, and simple way.The speaker's true and natural personality is thoroughly exposed. Naked presentation requires the speaker to show his or her true self, and put the audience first to achieve a natural and conversational style of speech. In this book, the author uses vivid examples and descriptive metaphors to tackle questions like how to understand the audience, how to prepare a speech, how to grasp the audience's attention, how to use stories and more.

Ideas on Stage - The Leadership Communication Podcast
Garr Reynolds and Phil Waknell launch the Business Presentation Revolution

Ideas on Stage - The Leadership Communication Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2021 20:22


On July 14th, 2021 – a very revolutionary date – Business Presentation Revolution hits the shelves. Author Phil Waknell, co-founder and Chief Inspiration Officer at Ideas on Stage, is joined by world-renowned presentation specialist and author of Presentation Zen, Garr Reynolds, to discuss why we need a revolution, what's in the book, and why business leaders need to join this revolution. Find out more about Business Presentation Revolution at http://book.businesspresentationrevolution.com Follow Garr's blog and discover his books at https://www.presentationzen.com Also available as a video podcast on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/ideasonstage Please subscribe for regular insights into leadership and communication from renowned experts around the world.

The Inside Japan Podcast
Presentation Zen and the Art of Cutting Out Distractions with Garr Reynolds

The Inside Japan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2021 41:11


Garr Reynolds is a fascinating guest, who tells us all about his principles for dynamic and engaging presentations, whether you're talking on the TED stage or teaching a Zoom class. Find out more about Garr on his website: https://www.garrreynolds.com/ Video Version of this podcast: https://youtu.be/rFUNrFNIE9U

Brand Design Masters Podcast
Brigette Callahan - Powerpoint Specialist: The Power of Slide Presentations

Brand Design Masters Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2021 44:50


While it’s true that some struggle to make ends meet, others are actually making great money. Brigette Callahan, a slide-presentation designer, turned her expertise in PowerPoint into a 6-figure business..Brigette creates engaging slides to help speakers present with more confidence and inspire their audience. She has worked with some of the biggest names in the business like Xerox, Acura, Samsung, and Paypal.The sought-after presentation designer and I discuss:• How she made a viable career out of her creativity• Marketing before the digital age and the power of word-of-mouth• A life-changing experience that got her hooked in the slide-presentation industry• Loads of tips and advice to effectively promote your personal brand and style as an artist• The predecessor of PowerPoint• Her favorite quote from Picasso that liberated her creativity from the limiting cage of originality• Understanding how different formats work with different apps for Android and iOS• Who her top mentor is• The important role of scriptwriting in slide-presentation design• How she's worked remotely since 1999• Closing 4 out of 5 deals - sales skills she got from her top-salesman stepfather• A powerful mantra that she lives her life byMentioned in this episode:Nancy Duarte: https://www.duarte.com/nancy-duarte/Garr Reynolds: https://www.presentationzen.com/To connect with Brigette, head on over to her channels:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theperfectpitchthatsells/ orhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/ExpertPLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/babilonarts/YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/c/BrigetteCallahanMembership site with over 375 members and counting: https://createslidesthatconvert.com/Affiliate link if you want to become an affiliate: https://createslidesthatconvert.com/affiliate-love/Thanks for listening! If you enjoyed this episode of the podcast, head on over to the following links for more of my work and some valuable resources to get you started on your own branding initiatives. Until the next episode!VISIT MY WEBSITE:http://www.philipvandusen.com JOIN THE BRAND•MUSE NEWSLETTER:  http://www.philipvandusen.com/muse JOIN THE BRAND DESIGN MASTERS FACEBOOK GROUP:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/branddesignmasters/SUBSCRIBE TO MY YOUTUBE CHANNEL:http://www.youtube.com/c/PhilipVanDusen FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER:https://twitter.com/philipvandusen FOLLOW ME ON PINTEREST:https://www.pinterest.com/philipvandusen LIKE MY AGENCY ON FACEBOOK:https://www.facebook.com/verhaalbranddesignBring Your Own Laptop - Adobe Training with Daniel Scotthttps://www.byol.me/philip InVideohttps://bdmpodcast.com/invideoDiscount Code: “PHILIP50”Tubebuddyhttps://wwwtubebuddy.com/philipvandusen ____________________________The Brand Design Masters Podcast is targeted to entrepreneurs, designers, creative professionals, and anyone interested in brand strategy, business planning, graphic design, personal branding, trends, and marketing.Philip VanDusen is the owner of Verhaal Brand Design, a brand strategy, and design agency based in New Jersey. Philip is a highly accomplished creative executive and expert in brand strategy, graphic design, marketing, and creative management. Philip provides design, branding, marketing, career, and business advice to creative professionals, entrepreneurs, and companies on how to build successful brands for themselves and for the clients and customers they serve.

Man in the Arena (Audio)
Man in the Arena #001​ - Parte 1

Man in the Arena (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2021 7:58


O Man in the Arena é um vídeo podcast sobre empreendedorismo e cultura digital, apresentado por Leo Kuba e Miguel Cavalcanti. Neste episódio: Dicas de conteúdo na internet: #Blog Mixergy.com, de Andrew Warner #Entrevista de Michael Robertson (mp3.com), para Jason Calacanis no ThisWeekinStartups.com - bit.ly/twist-mr #Post Makers' Schedule de Paul Graham. - bit.ly/graham-ms #Entrevista de David H. Hansson (37Signals), para Jason Calacanis. - bit.ly/twist-dhh Dicas de livros: #Get Seen, de Steve Garfield. #Presentation Zen, de Garr Reynolds. Dicas de produtos web: #Google Docs #Dropbox e Sugarsync #Preview do Google Apps Marketplace

Man in the Arena (Audio)
Man in the Arena #001​ - Parte 2

Man in the Arena (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2021 10:06


O Man in the Arena é um vídeo podcast sobre empreendedorismo e cultura digital, apresentado por Leo Kuba e Miguel Cavalcanti. Neste episódio: Dicas de conteúdo na internet: #Blog Mixergy.com, de Andrew Warner #Entrevista de Michael Robertson (mp3.com), para Jason Calacanis no ThisWeekinStartups.com - bit.ly/twist-mr #Post Makers' Schedule de Paul Graham. - bit.ly/graham-ms #Entrevista de David H. Hansson (37Signals), para Jason Calacanis. - bit.ly/twist-dhh Dicas de livros: #Get Seen, de Steve Garfield.  #Presentation Zen, de Garr Reynolds. Dicas de produtos web: #Google Docs #Dropbox e Sugarsync #Preview do Google Apps Marketplace

Man in the Arena (Audio)
Man in the Arena #001​ - Parte 3

Man in the Arena (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2021 6:42


O Man in the Arena é um vídeo podcast sobre empreendedorismo e cultura digital, apresentado por Leo Kuba e Miguel Cavalcanti. Neste episódio:  Dicas de conteúdo na internet: #Blog Mixergy.com, de Andrew Warner #Entrevista de Michael Robertson (mp3.com), para Jason Calacanis no ThisWeekinStartups.com - bit.ly/twist-mr #Post Makers' Schedule de Paul Graham. - bit.ly/graham-ms #Entrevista de David H. Hansson (37Signals), para Jason Calacanis. - bit.ly/twist-dhh Dicas de livros: Get Seen, de Steve Garfield. #Presentation Zen, de Garr Reynolds. Dicas de produtos web: #Google Docs #Dropbox e Sugarsync #Preview do Google Apps Marketplace

Presento: Aprende a Hablar en Público e Impacta cuando Importa
60. Carles Caño: Historias, humor y libros, los mejores aliados de la comunicación

Presento: Aprende a Hablar en Público e Impacta cuando Importa

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2021 68:34


Hay muchos aliados de la comunicación pero quizás los más potentes son las historias, el humor y los libros que nos descubre Carles Caño, creador de Presentastico. Formador, divulgador y podcaster, si alguna vez has buscado contenido sobre comunicación en internet, es casi imposible no haberte topado con alguna pieza de contenido creada por este fanático del arte de hacer presentaciones utilizando las historias. En este episodio nos cuenta cuál ha sido su evolución y te ayudará a utilizar recursos para usar las historias y el humor en tus próximas presentaciones. Para colmo, tiene viene con un regalo

Presento: Aprende a Hablar en Público e Impacta cuando Importa
60. Carles Caño: Historias, humor y libros, los mejores aliados de la comunicación

Presento: Aprende a Hablar en Público e Impacta cuando Importa

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2021 68:34


Hay muchos aliados de la comunicación pero quizás los más potentes son las historias, el humor y los libros que nos descubre Carles Caño, creador de Presentastico. Formador, divulgador y podcaster, si alguna vez has buscado contenido sobre comunicación en internet, es casi imposible no haberte topado con alguna pieza de contenido creada por este fanático del arte de hacer presentaciones utilizando las historias. En este episodio nos cuenta cuál ha sido su evolución y te ayudará a utilizar recursos para usar las historias y el humor en tus próximas presentaciones. Para colmo, tiene viene con un regalo

TheJamesCast
Public Speaking Part #6 - the Informative speech

TheJamesCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2020 56:41


This was the 6th class and the 1st speech, sorry it is not in the podcast. But there was a nice banter about expectations, practice and time. I then really quickly asked the class to think about the visual aids, with Garr Reynolds. Finally, the informative speech was teased. Check out the notes for the videos, readings and more. https://spark.adobe.com/page/CCfyaGHJxxyix/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thejamescast/message

Young Leaders In Technology
Ep1 - Storytelling in Tech

Young Leaders In Technology

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2020 40:52


On the first of our series of individual topic-based podcasts, Céiteach Mac Stiofán & Karen Henry from Accenture joined me to demystify the art of storytelling so that you can apply the best of stories to business challenges.   “Trying to perfect your PowerPoint of a presentation first is like trying to perfect the icing before you have the recipe of the cake” “The presenter is the story, so much of it is how much we convey it, the passion that we feel and the emotions that we can evoke when we communicate”   Some of the topics covered on this episode:   Tips and tricks to keep people engaged during presentations How to avoid “death by PowerPoint” Combating nerves when speaking The importance of an opening statement to catch attention How to gauge your audience Why the first two minutes of a presentation are the “cognitive hallowed ground” Examples of major industries and worldwide companies already using storytelling Words and phrases that can be used to have a bigger impact when speaking How to use anecdotes to add credibility to your messages The importance of using visual methods of telling stories Why “Imagine” is such a powerful word to use “So what, who cares?” https://youngleaders.tech/storytelling-in-tech/   Referenced Reading and Speaker Links:   Céiteach Mac Stiofán https://www.linkedin.com/in/keithstephensaccenture/   Karen Henry https://www.linkedin.com/in/karenhenryie/   Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die – Chip & Dan Heath https://heathbrothers.com/books/made-to-stick/   Weekend Language: Presenting with More Stories and Less PowerPoint - Andy Craig, Dave Yewman https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/19505722-weekend-language   Garr Reynolds https://www.presentationzen.com/

Herrasmieshakkerit
Kuinka päästä tietoturva-alalle töihin? | 0x06

Herrasmieshakkerit

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2020 41:18


Tässä erikoisjaksossa Suomen tietoturvakentän wiralliset wanhukset kertovat kuinka päästä tietoturva-alalle töihin. Keskustelemme takkatulen ääressä siitä minkälaisia tehtäviä tietoturva-alalta löytyy, mitä kannattaa opiskella, miten voi tukea omaa osaamistaan alan harrastamisella ja mitä työhaastattelussa voidaan kysyä.  Äänijulkaisun lähdeluettelo: T:n muotoinen ihminen https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-shaped_skills Lego Mindstorms https://www.lego.com/fi-fi/themes/mindstorms/about Spoofy - lapsille suunnattu mobiilipeli, jossa ratkotaan erilaisia kyberpulmia: https://spoofy.fi/ Røøtz Asylum / DEF CON https://r00tz.org/ Catharina Candolinin tiivistys https://twitter.com/candolin2/status/1245807155590115330 Kirjoja: Silence on the Wire, Michal Zalewski https://nostarch.com/silence.htm Presentation Zen, Garr Reynolds https://www.amazon.com/Presentation-Zen-Simple-Design-Delivery/dp/0321811984 The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, Edward Dufte https://www.amazon.com/Visual-Display-Quantitative-Information/dp/1930824130 Guide to Persuasive Presentations, Nancy Duarte https://www.amazon.com/HBR-Guide-Persuasive-Presentations-ebook/dp/B009G1W9JO Resonate, Nancy Duarte https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0470632011

The A&P Professor
Episode 66 Intro | TAPP Radio Preview

The A&P Professor

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2020 15:59


A brief preview of the upcoming full episode, featuring upcoming topics—plus word dissections (virus, coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, pandemic, epidemic), a book club recommendation (Presentation Zen), and more! 00:19 | ADInstruments Free Offer 01:16 | Topics 02:56 | Sponsored by HAPI Online Graduate Program 03:29 | Word Dissection 10:59 | Sponsored by HAPS 11:30 | Book Club 14:15 | Sponsored by AAA 15:21 | Staying Connected   If you cannot see or activate the audio player click here. Please take the anonymous survey: theAPprofessor.org/survey Questions & Feedback: 1-833-LION-DEN (1-833-546-6336) Follow The A&P Professor on Twitter, Facebook, Blogger, Nuzzel, Tumblr, or Instagram!   Offer from ADInstruments 1 minute Episode sponsor ADInstruments is offering their  Lt online learning platform with content for laboratory solutions in physiology, anatomy, and biology free at this time to help professors get ready-to-go, quality online lab experiences quickly. 

Ideas on Stage - The Leadership Communication Podcast
Garr Reynolds - Presentation Zen, 3rd Edition - The Ideas on Stage Podcast

Ideas on Stage - The Leadership Communication Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2020 35:29


Garr Reynolds kick-started the presentation revolution in 2005 with his popular ground-breaking blog at https://www.presentationzen.com, which led him to publish Presentation Zen in 2007. The most popular presentation book of all time is now in its 3rd edition, with many updates, so Rose Bloomfield caught up with Garr to find out what's new, and why you need a copy of this new version. With special guest appearances from Queen, Steve Jobs and Yoda - and Garr's cat! If you enjoyed this episode of the Ideas on Stage Podcast, subscribe for more interesting chats on leadership communication and presentations, and please leave us a review and share with your colleagues. Also available in video format on YouTube. And you can find more videos, articles and ideas on business communication and presentations at https://www.ideasonstage.com.

Leadership communications with Rob Cottingham
Ep. 11. Use slides well... if at all

Leadership communications with Rob Cottingham

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2019 8:24


The world is full of speeches weighed down with terrible slide decks. Don't let yours be one of them. This episode, we look at how to make PowerPoint work well for you and your audience — and I make the case for not using slides at all. Links: Here are the books I mentioned at the end: slide:ology by Nancy Duarte, Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds, and Beyond Bullet Points by Cliff Atkinson. And here's an article about why people retain less information when it's projected onto a screen and read out loud to them. Music: "Upbeat" by John Luc Hefferman and "The 49th Street Galleria" by Chris Zabriskie. Used under a Creative Commons license. Photo: Arūnas Naujokas on Unsplash

Andrea Pacini - Podcast
Slides and documents are not the same thing and should be separated

Andrea Pacini - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2019 5:43


“Slides are slides. Documents are documents. They aren't the same thing […] Much death-by-PowerPoint suffering could be eliminated if presenters clearly separated the two in their own minds before they even started planning their talks.”—Garr Reynolds

Mastering Intensive Care
Episode 35: Paul Wischmeyer - Never underestimate the simple things we do to our patients

Mastering Intensive Care

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2018 68:12


How did your patient feel that time you took several attempts to place a CVC? What might happen after a dose of haloperidol for delirium?   In this compelling episode, Professor Paul Wischmeyer, shares some of his experiences as a patient in the ICU. Since he was 15 he has endured multiple hospitalizations and ICU stays for his inflammatory bowel disease. This has given him an excellent vantage point to notice what we as ICU professionals do and say to our patients. And from Paul’s perspective we could do much better. Some of the procedures we might think are simple (like placing intravenous or intra-arterial cannulae) can cause significant suffering. And if we treat these procedures as something just to tick off on our list we may diminish the person-centred care we should all be attempting to deliver. Paul’s passion for helping patients recover from illness and surgery arises from his personal experiences as both a doctor and patient in the ICU. As a trained intensivist, anaesthetist, clinical pharmacologist and research scientist, he works predominantly as a Perioperative physician who specializes in enhancing preparation and recovery from surgery and critical care at Duke University. He practices on the Critical Care and Nutrition clinical teams, serves as the Director of Perioperative Research for the Duke Clinical Research Institute, as Associate Vice Chair for Clinical Research in the Department of Anesthesiology and as Director of the Nutrition Support Team. Paul has been awarded significant amounts of funding, won many awards, published over 135 papers and given hundreds of invited presentations. Five days ago Paul tweeted he was back in hospital so I thought it was a good time to bring this interview we did a few months ago. I’m hoping he is much better today and that he’ll be out of hospital and back home very soon. Paul has a lot of valuable things to say in this interview. We also spoke about: How in the early part of his career he loved the physiology and pharmacology but now he loves the family interactions and teaching Learning from people all around the world makes him a better doctor How his personal experiences have helped him to use more sedation in his practice Our need to get away from the concept of keeping a patient quiet with sedatives so we can have a peaceful night in the ICU The effects on his mother of a child psychiatrist asking her about her parenting in the work up of Paul’s illness His reflections on the difference in ward rounds between his current and previous institutions His views on having a close partnership between intensivists and the palliative care team, especially in family meetings The importance of body position and body language in communication How he feels less healthy in a system of 12 hour shifts for intensivists because scheduling self-care can be difficult The anxiety he notices when he doesn’t exercise His views on a good diet and the supplements he takes His need to feel ready to be hospitalised at any time due to his illness The benefit of having a good department chair who helps him say no to too many responsibilities How he deals with feeling overwhelmed The importance of staying well-hydrated during our work His main points about giving a great lecture, including the use of images and developing the skill of inspiring or convincing the audience with emotion Some tips for younger clinicians, including being open minded, keeping up with the literature and focusing on connection to patients My genuine hope with the Mastering Intensive Care podcast is to inspire and empower you to bring your best self to the ICU by listening to the perspectives of such thought-provoking guests as Paul Wischmeyer. I genuinely believe we can all improve, as both professionals and as human beings, so that we can do the absolute best for the people we are privileged to care for as patients. Please help me to spread the message by simply emailing your colleagues, posting on social media or subscribing, rating and reviewing the podcast. To connect, leave a comment on the Facebook “mastering intensive care” page, on the LITFL episode page, on twitter using #masteringintensivecare, or by sending me an email at andrew@masteringintensivecare.com. Thanks for listening. Andrew Davies   -------------------- Show notes (people, organisations, resources and links mentioned in the episode): Paul Wischmeyer profile: https://scholars.duke.edu/person/paul.wischmeyer Paul’s webpage on Duke Clinical Research Institute website: https://dcri.org/our-work/therapeutic-expertise/perioperative-nutrition/ Twitter handle for Paul Wischmeyer: @Paul_Wischmeyer Book: “Presentation Zen Design” (by Garr Reynolds): http://www.presentationzen.com/presentationzen/2010/02/presentation-zen-design-the-book.html Book “In Shock” (by Dr Rana Awdish): https://www.ranaawdishmd.com/book TARGET study: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02306746?term=TARGET+nutrition&type=Intr&cntry=AU&city=Adelaide&rank=1 Mastering Intensive Care podcast: http://masteringintensivecare.libsyn.com Mastering Intensive Care page on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/masteringintensivecare Mastering Intensive Care at Life In The Fast lane: https://lifeinthefastlane.com/litfl/mastering-intensive-care Twitter handle for Andrew Davies: @andrewdavies66 Instagram handle for Andrew Davies: @andrewdavies66 Email Andrew Davies: andrew@masteringintensivecare.com

Learning Legendario | Formación para formadores extraordinarios
Comunicar y formar con Carles Caño de Presentástico.com

Learning Legendario | Formación para formadores extraordinarios

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2018 97:47


Visita https://learninglegendario.com/14 para encontrar las notas completas de este programa.Esta semana he tenido el enorme placer y honor de poder entrevistar al multipotencial Carlos Caño, informático, formador y podcaster en Presentastico.com , Zetatesters.com y HumorEnPublico.com. No te pierdas todos los recursos y herramientas interesantes que Carles comparte con nosotros (vamos, he sudado escribiendo las notas de este episodio).Suscríbete al podcast de Learning Legendario en:• Apple Podcasts https://itunes.apple.com/es/podcast/learning-legendario-formación-para-formadores-extraordinarios/id1312691115• Ivoox http://www.ivoox.com/podcast-juan-daniel-sobrado-rubio_sq_f1475009_1.html• YouTube https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXlk1lvkyu9PWA8rcIaTh84qSUVJDE2JH## Temas tratados en este episodio.• [4:25] Quién es Carles Caño• [5:15] Que es una persona multipotencial• [7:00] Los inicios de Carles en el mundo del blogging.• [9:40] El consejo clave de Carles a la hora de preparar una presentación. La importancia de adaptarse a la audiencia (retos, necesidades, inquietudes).• [12:40] Respetar o no la agenda. El valor de la improvisación y de las cosas que no están en el guión.• [18:00] Cómo prepara Carles un taller o sesión de formación. Importancia de introducir contenidos variados.• [20:40] Cómo empezar una presentación. La importancia de sorprender.• [23:30] Ejemplo de dinámica participativa. El trabajo por grupos. Presentaciones express• [26:00] El reto de las nubes y los espaguetis. The marsmallow Challenge.• [29:00] La importancia de estar presente, escuchar y estar presente.• [30:12] Qué soluciones tecnológicas utiliza Carles en sus formaciones. Importancia de las preguntas y la interacción. • [34:00] Efectos en PowerPoint.• [39:40] Análisis de los participantes. • [40:30] Rompiendo el hielo con los participantes. • [42:40] Metodo Beyond bullet points. Estructura de una presentación. • [46:00] Usando el storytelling. Creando momentos de atención máxima. Guardando las historias.• [51:00] Dar o no dar apuntes a los alumnos. Esa es la cuestión.• [57:00] Interés de Carles por el humor y su aplicación en la comunicación.• [1:00:00] El podcast de Humor en público de Carles Caño y Roger Pratt.• [1:07:00] Cómo la improvisación teatral ha ayudado a Juanda en el ámbito profesional.• [1:12:00] Cuál es el recurso humorístico preferido de Carles.• [1:19:00] Pagina de facebook de memes• [1:20:00] Curso Humor en público.• [1:26:00] Qué le ha aportado Zetatesters a Carles.• [1:29:50] Una anécdota con moraleja.## Recursos mencionados.• Crea tu Escape Room Educativo paso a paso con el curso online https://EduEscapeRoom.com• Presentástico: blog y podcast - http://presentastico.com/• Zetasters: blog y podcast - https://zetatesters.com/• Humor en público: blog y podcast - https://humorenpublico.com/• Entrevista a Carol Chan en Presentástico. http://presentastico.com/2018/03/14/ep-24-confesiones-de-una-espectadora-de-presentaciones-y-eventos-caro-chan/• Charla Ted de Emilie Wapnick, ¿Por qué algunos no tenemos una vocación verdadera? (Explicación de las personas multipotenciales) https://www.ted.com/talks/emilie_wapnick_why_some_of_us_don_t_have_one_true_calling• Libro "How to Be Everything: A Guide for Those Who (Still) Don't Know What They Want to Be When They Grow Up" por Emilie Wapnick https://amzn.to/2sjk4l6• Blog PresentArte - http://present-arte.blogspot.com.es/• Video Sushi por Carles - https://vimeo.com/20760109 • Serie de Netflix: Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee - https://www.netflix.com/title/80171362• Articulo: Sí, el desorden estimula la creatividad https://verne.elpais.com/verne/2015/02/25/articulo/1424874025_474045.html• Los inicios de Juanda haciendo improvisación en El Club de la Impro - https://vimeo.com/12702875• Serie de Netflix Bob & David - https://www.netflix.com/es/title/80049065• Programa improvisación "Who's line is this anyway" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWA7DONUG8Q• Formato de presentaciones Pechacucha - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9DezG93d70• Charla Ted Tom Wujec, "Construye una torre, construye un equipo" https://www.ted.com/talks/tom_wujec_build_a_tower?language=es• Aplicación Socrative, para fomentar la participación en las formaciones https://www.socrative.com/• Ascii Rec, grabando los comandos en el terminal https://asciinema.org/ • Aplicación Kahoot https://kahoot.com/ • Kahoot smasher - https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/kahoot-smasher-beta/jegbdfehmmeclcliadfdjbbpmhcjgclk• Libro "Slide:ology: The Art and Science of Creating Great Presentations: The Art and Science of Presentation Design" de Nancy Duarte https://amzn.to/2xl6yDl• Video Carles haciendo efectos chulos con PowerPoint - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nzy-3nQZ1P4• Nueva función morphing de PowerPoint - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b39MCA_fBgg• Libro "Presentación zen: Ideas sencillas para el diseño de presentaciones" de Garr Reynolds - https://amzn.to/2IVDeVf• Joan Boluda, instagram - unboxing Guía del emprendedor Juanda https://www.instagram.com/p/Bh_Iu_WHa6b/• Video original guía emprendedor en LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6394421668906962945 • Programa de edición de video iMovie - iMovie - Apple (ES)• Programa de edición video Final Cut - Final Cut Pro X - Apple (ES)• Libro "Beyond Bullet Points: Using PowerPoint to tell a compelling story that gets results" de Cliff Atkinson - https://amzn.to/2skXski• Artículo de Carles para Emprendaralia - https://www.emprenderalia.com/estructura-tus-presentaciones-con-beyond-bullet-points-para-mejorar-la-atencion-de-tu-audiencia/• Blog el Arte de Presentar - https://www.elartedepresentar.com/blog/• Entrevista a Gonzalo Alvaro Marañon de Elartedepresentar.com por Carles - http://presentastico.com/2017/03/22/ep-03-historias-participacion-y-necesidades-de-la-audiencia-con-gonzalo-alvarez/• Aplicación Google Keep - https://www.google.com/keep/• Web de Jacobo Feijooo Gamisolutions, herramientas para crear historias - https://gamisolution.es/ • Masterclass de Jacobo Feijo - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-beMg4Whgc3MrHPuFkDxwZMlvM_Aa6RT• Bot generador de historias locas creado por Juanda - https://t.me/AbsurdStoriesBot• LMS Moodle - https://moodle.org/• Entrevista con Noa Orizales por Juan Daniel Sobrado - https://learninglegendario.com/episodio-3-crear-cursos-online-irrepetibles-noa-orizales/• Grupo de improvisación Jamming - http://www.jammingweb.com/8-jamming-show• Wit comedy (impro) - http://www.witcomedy.com/• Transmitetumensaje.com (comunicación) por Diego Ibañez - https://transmitetumensaje.com/• Libro "Manual Del Cómico Novato" por Miguel Lago - https://amzn.to/2xvaba3• Libro "Cómo orquestar una comedia (Fuera de campo)" de John Vorhaus y Jessica J. Lockhart - https://amzn.to/2xov5HG• Pagina de Facebook Malos padres - https://www.facebook.com/Malos-Padres-1466612640229815/• Entrevista a Patricia Guerrero por Carles en Presentastico "EP 26 Dinamizar cursos online con Patricia Guerrero" - http://presentastico.com/2018/04/18/ep-26-dinamizar-cursos-online-con-patricia-guerrero/• Entrevista a Abel Aubone de Vidroop por Juanda en LearningLegendario "Episodio 5 – Vivir de la formación online con Abel Aubone" https://learninglegendario.com/episodio-5-vivir-la-formacion-online-abel-aubone/• Episodio 102 de Zetatesters - ZT 102 Qué nos aporta zetatesters - https://zetatesters.com/2018/04/zt-102-que-nos-aporta-zetatesters/• Reproductor de audio y video VLC - https://www.videolan.org/ • Plugin para Wordpress que crea automáticamente los enlaces de tiempo en el texto del post SimplePodcastPress - https://simplepodcastpress.com/Puedes contactar con Carles Caño en twitter en https://twitter.com/carlescvMe encantará recibir también tus comentarios sobre el podcast. Te agradeceré muchísimo que te suscribas y que dejes una reseña positiva con tus 5 estrellas. Así conseguiremos salvar a la humanidad de las formaciones ineficaces y aburridas.Conecta con Juanda en:• https://learninglegendario.com • En el grupo VIP supersecreto de Telegram https://t.me/chatlearninglegendario• En Linkedin https://es.linkedin.com/in/juansobrado• En Twitter (@juanda_learning) https://twitter.com/juanda_learning• En Facebook https://www.facebook.com/LearningLegendario/• En YouTube https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXlk1lvkyu9PWA8rcIaTh84qSUVJDE2JH

Learning Legendario | Formación para formadores extraordinarios
Comunicar y formar con Carles Caño de Presentástico.com

Learning Legendario | Formación para formadores extraordinarios

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2018 97:47


Visita https://learninglegendario.com/14 para encontrar las notas completas de este programa.Esta semana he tenido el enorme placer y honor de poder entrevistar al multipotencial Carlos Caño, informático, formador y podcaster en Presentastico.com , Zetatesters.com y HumorEnPublico.com. No te pierdas todos los recursos y herramientas interesantes que Carles comparte con nosotros (vamos, he sudado escribiendo las notas de este episodio).Suscríbete al podcast de Learning Legendario en:• Apple Podcasts https://itunes.apple.com/es/podcast/learning-legendario-formación-para-formadores-extraordinarios/id1312691115• Ivoox http://www.ivoox.com/podcast-juan-daniel-sobrado-rubio_sq_f1475009_1.html• YouTube https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXlk1lvkyu9PWA8rcIaTh84qSUVJDE2JH## Temas tratados en este episodio.• [4:25] Quién es Carles Caño• [5:15] Que es una persona multipotencial• [7:00] Los inicios de Carles en el mundo del blogging.• [9:40] El consejo clave de Carles a la hora de preparar una presentación. La importancia de adaptarse a la audiencia (retos, necesidades, inquietudes).• [12:40] Respetar o no la agenda. El valor de la improvisación y de las cosas que no están en el guión.• [18:00] Cómo prepara Carles un taller o sesión de formación. Importancia de introducir contenidos variados.• [20:40] Cómo empezar una presentación. La importancia de sorprender.• [23:30] Ejemplo de dinámica participativa. El trabajo por grupos. Presentaciones express• [26:00] El reto de las nubes y los espaguetis. The marsmallow Challenge.• [29:00] La importancia de estar presente, escuchar y estar presente.• [30:12] Qué soluciones tecnológicas utiliza Carles en sus formaciones. Importancia de las preguntas y la interacción. • [34:00] Efectos en PowerPoint.• [39:40] Análisis de los participantes. • [40:30] Rompiendo el hielo con los participantes. • [42:40] Metodo Beyond bullet points. Estructura de una presentación. • [46:00] Usando el storytelling. Creando momentos de atención máxima. Guardando las historias.• [51:00] Dar o no dar apuntes a los alumnos. Esa es la cuestión.• [57:00] Interés de Carles por el humor y su aplicación en la comunicación.• [1:00:00] El podcast de Humor en público de Carles Caño y Roger Pratt.• [1:07:00] Cómo la improvisación teatral ha ayudado a Juanda en el ámbito profesional.• [1:12:00] Cuál es el recurso humorístico preferido de Carles.• [1:19:00] Pagina de facebook de memes• [1:20:00] Curso Humor en público.• [1:26:00] Qué le ha aportado Zetatesters a Carles.• [1:29:50] Una anécdota con moraleja.## Recursos mencionados.• Crea tu Escape Room Educativo paso a paso con el curso online https://EduEscapeRoom.com• Presentástico: blog y podcast - http://presentastico.com/• Zetasters: blog y podcast - https://zetatesters.com/• Humor en público: blog y podcast - https://humorenpublico.com/• Entrevista a Carol Chan en Presentástico. http://presentastico.com/2018/03/14/ep-24-confesiones-de-una-espectadora-de-presentaciones-y-eventos-caro-chan/• Charla Ted de Emilie Wapnick, ¿Por qué algunos no tenemos una vocación verdadera? (Explicación de las personas multipotenciales) https://www.ted.com/talks/emilie_wapnick_why_some_of_us_don_t_have_one_true_calling• Libro "How to Be Everything: A Guide for Those Who (Still) Don't Know What They Want to Be When They Grow Up" por Emilie Wapnick https://amzn.to/2sjk4l6• Blog PresentArte - http://present-arte.blogspot.com.es/• Video Sushi por Carles - https://vimeo.com/20760109 • Serie de Netflix: Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee - https://www.netflix.com/title/80171362• Articulo: Sí, el desorden estimula la creatividad https://verne.elpais.com/verne/2015/02/25/articulo/1424874025_474045.html• Los inicios de Juanda haciendo improvisación en El Club de la Impro - https://vimeo.com/12702875• Serie de Netflix Bob & David - https://www.netflix.com/es/title/80049065• Programa improvisación "Who's line is this anyway" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWA7DONUG8Q• Formato de presentaciones Pechacucha - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9DezG93d70• Charla Ted Tom Wujec, "Construye una torre, construye un equipo" https://www.ted.com/talks/tom_wujec_build_a_tower?language=es• Aplicación Socrative, para fomentar la participación en las formaciones https://www.socrative.com/• Ascii Rec, grabando los comandos en el terminal https://asciinema.org/ • Aplicación Kahoot https://kahoot.com/ • Kahoot smasher - https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/kahoot-smasher-beta/jegbdfehmmeclcliadfdjbbpmhcjgclk• Libro "Slide:ology: The Art and Science of Creating Great Presentations: The Art and Science of Presentation Design" de Nancy Duarte https://amzn.to/2xl6yDl• Video Carles haciendo efectos chulos con PowerPoint - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nzy-3nQZ1P4• Nueva función morphing de PowerPoint - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b39MCA_fBgg• Libro "Presentación zen: Ideas sencillas para el diseño de presentaciones" de Garr Reynolds - https://amzn.to/2IVDeVf• Joan Boluda, instagram - unboxing Guía del emprendedor Juanda https://www.instagram.com/p/Bh_Iu_WHa6b/• Video original guía emprendedor en LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6394421668906962945 • Programa de edición de video iMovie - iMovie - Apple (ES)• Programa de edición video Final Cut - Final Cut Pro X - Apple (ES)• Libro "Beyond Bullet Points: Using PowerPoint to tell a compelling story that gets results" de Cliff Atkinson - https://amzn.to/2skXski• Artículo de Carles para Emprendaralia - https://www.emprenderalia.com/estructura-tus-presentaciones-con-beyond-bullet-points-para-mejorar-la-atencion-de-tu-audiencia/• Blog el Arte de Presentar - https://www.elartedepresentar.com/blog/• Entrevista a Gonzalo Alvaro Marañon de Elartedepresentar.com por Carles - http://presentastico.com/2017/03/22/ep-03-historias-participacion-y-necesidades-de-la-audiencia-con-gonzalo-alvarez/• Aplicación Google Keep - https://www.google.com/keep/• Web de Jacobo Feijooo Gamisolutions, herramientas para crear historias - https://gamisolution.es/ • Masterclass de Jacobo Feijo - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-beMg4Whgc3MrHPuFkDxwZMlvM_Aa6RT• Bot generador de historias locas creado por Juanda - https://t.me/AbsurdStoriesBot• LMS Moodle - https://moodle.org/• Entrevista con Noa Orizales por Juan Daniel Sobrado - https://learninglegendario.com/episodio-3-crear-cursos-online-irrepetibles-noa-orizales/• Grupo de improvisación Jamming - http://www.jammingweb.com/8-jamming-show• Wit comedy (impro) - http://www.witcomedy.com/• Transmitetumensaje.com (comunicación) por Diego Ibañez - https://transmitetumensaje.com/• Libro "Manual Del Cómico Novato" por Miguel Lago - https://amzn.to/2xvaba3• Libro "Cómo orquestar una comedia (Fuera de campo)" de John Vorhaus y Jessica J. Lockhart - https://amzn.to/2xov5HG• Pagina de Facebook Malos padres - https://www.facebook.com/Malos-Padres-1466612640229815/• Entrevista a Patricia Guerrero por Carles en Presentastico "EP 26 Dinamizar cursos online con Patricia Guerrero" - http://presentastico.com/2018/04/18/ep-26-dinamizar-cursos-online-con-patricia-guerrero/• Entrevista a Abel Aubone de Vidroop por Juanda en LearningLegendario "Episodio 5 – Vivir de la formación online con Abel Aubone" https://learninglegendario.com/episodio-5-vivir-la-formacion-online-abel-aubone/• Episodio 102 de Zetatesters - ZT 102 Qué nos aporta zetatesters - https://zetatesters.com/2018/04/zt-102-que-nos-aporta-zetatesters/• Reproductor de audio y video VLC - https://www.videolan.org/ • Plugin para Wordpress que crea automáticamente los enlaces de tiempo en el texto del post SimplePodcastPress - https://simplepodcastpress.com/Puedes contactar con Carles Caño en twitter en https://twitter.com/carlescvMe encantará recibir también tus comentarios sobre el podcast. Te agradeceré muchísimo que te suscribas y que dejes una reseña positiva con tus 5 estrellas. Así conseguiremos salvar a la humanidad de las formaciones ineficaces y aburridas.Conecta con Juanda en:• https://learninglegendario.com • En el grupo VIP supersecreto de Telegram https://t.me/chatlearninglegendario• En Linkedin https://es.linkedin.com/in/juansobrado• En Twitter (@juanda_learning) https://twitter.com/juanda_learning• En Facebook https://www.facebook.com/LearningLegendario/• En YouTube https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXlk1lvkyu9PWA8rcIaTh84qSUVJDE2JH

El Derecho mercantil... sin clases
¿Qué puedo hacer para mejorar mis presentaciones?

El Derecho mercantil... sin clases

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2018 19:56


Hablar bien en público se ha convertido en una habilidad imprescindible en cualquier sector o actividad profesional. Pero frecuentemente cuando tenemos que hacer una exposición (ante un cliente, compañeros o en un seminario) la cocinamos con ingredientes de poca calidad: un inicio y un final improvisados, diapositivas llenas de texto que te sirven de chuleta, un contenido puramente informativo (datos) sin apelar a la emoción del oyente (historia), falta de ensayo, exceso sobre el tiempo asignado, etc., etc.El episodio de hoy se titula ¿Qué puedo hacer para mejorar mis presentaciones? Y en él quiero darte algunos consejos prácticos que puedes utilizar HOY para que tus presentaciones pasen al siguiente nivel. Y si quieres profundizar más, aquí tienes mis recomendaciones:Hace tiempo publiqué algunas reflexiones en el blog del profesor Jesús Alfaro, con el título «Dejar atrás la muerte por el power point jurídico», puedes leerlas aquí: http://almacendederecho.org/dejando-atras-la-muerte-por-el-power-point-juridico/Entre los libros, te recomiendo los de Reynolds y Duarte como punto de partida:Libros de Garr Reynolds: https://www.amazon.es/Garr-Reynolds/e/B001I9TU1W/ref=dp_byline_cont_pop_book_1Libros de Nancy Duarte: https://www.amazon.es/Nancy-Duarte/e/B002BMAA0K/ref=dp_byline_cont_book_1En nuestro idioma es una auténtica referencia Gonzalo Álvarez Marañón. Su web «El arte de presentar» incluye numerosa información (https://www.elartedepresentar.com) y un podcast altamente recomendable: https://www.elartedepresentar.com/podcast/

Better PR Now with Mark Phillips
013 - Jason Anderson explains why emotional stories hook customers

Better PR Now with Mark Phillips

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2018 31:17


I have a conversation with Jason Anderson, Senior Director of Marketing and Communications at Capital Impact Partners in Washington, DC. This is the first podcast ever recorded in a Wholefoods Supermarket, and I know it's the first podcast recorded in the Wholefoods Supermarket in Pentagon City, Virginia. The reason we're here today is there's a tap takeover by breweries from Richmond, Virginia, and I'm joined by Jason Anderson, somebody I've known for a long time who is a really fantastic communicator. Jason, welcome to the show. Thank you, Mark. So your current position? I am the Senior Director of Communications and Marketing at Capital Impact Partners. Fantastic. Now you've had a really fascinating career. We'll talk about your education, and then you worked for CNN. So tell me about how you got into communications and what drove you towards a communications career to begin with? Yeah. So I grew up in Southern California, and went to Claremont McKenna College where I actually majored in Government and Literature. I actually had an opportunity to attend USC for a broadcasting degree but decided that I wanted to really get the fundamentals of a hardcore political background. Because really my goal at that time was to get into political journalism. And that ultimately fulfilled itself by joining CNN for about 10 years where I literally started as what they called a video journalist, a VJ, at that time. Making roughly $15,000 a year. Killing it. Killing it. And there we did everything from running the camera to running the teleprompter with paper scripts. Which is something in this day of digital age if you think about it. And even robotic cameras, which we didn't have back then. But there I saw a number of fascinating things, really cut my teeth on what journalism was. Learned how to edit videotape, learned how to produce a segment and did a whole number of things with them, but ultimately decided after a number of events, ultimately concluding with the Monica Lewinsky episode in Washington DC, that I decided it was time for me to move on and pursue some of my more personal goals along with journalism. Which was at that point thinking about the environment. That's wonderful. And so after a decade or so at CNN where you focused on political and other reporting, you moved over to the non-profit world. Tell me about that transition. Yeah. So I saw an opportunity at an organization called Conservation International, which does international, non-profit environmental work in communities all across the world, and the opportunity was to take my journalism skills and apply them to public relations. How do we take the things that we do as an environmental non-profit and translate them into actually what news is, and serious news not just marketing, and talk to reporters about covering that news? So I did that actually for a division of Conservation International which was called the Center for Environmental Leadership in Business, and it was really thinking about, how do we work with corporations to reduce their environmental footprint, to contribute to the things that we were doing at Conservation International and translate that all into good. You know ultimately, the public relations part in a sense was marketing, in a sense was how do we drive fundraising, how do we drive other corporations to do good things?  How do we put pressure on the organizations that we're working with to do more good things? But ultimately, it was a really fascinating experience. And then after Conservation International, you stayed in the non-profit world? I did. At that point after 10 years of working at the global sphere and working with Fortune 500 companies like McDonald's, like Starbucks, like Walmart to change their footprint and actually do some interesting marketing things with them. I really wanted to focus more in on local communities. And I found a small organization doing really fascinating things called Rare. And they would actually run marketing campaigns in local communities and these are hyper-local communities. Places you've never heard about or can't even find on the map in Indonesia, in Africa, throughout Asia. And what they would do is, they had the ability to take over the radio, take over the newspaper, create mascots around essential message because you have that hyper-local opportunity to not talk about a product, but to talk about environmental conservation. And perhaps it's water, perhaps it's a species, perhaps it's pollution. And you get folks really thinking about ways they can change their practices locally and using mass-media to do that. It was fascinating to watch how that would happen. Now again my job wasn't to do that work. We had specialists with a whole theory of change and the use of psychology, but my job was to get people interested in what we were doing. So again ... Were they trying to change behavior? Behaviour change, exactly. That was at the core of it, which you can do in a place like that. Much harder where we are in Pentagon City to get people to recycle the cups that they were drinking from these fine, Virginia breweries. But you can do it in these awful places and getting donors interested in thinking about that was part of my job. So give me an example of one of the projects that you worked on. Sure, so we worked in a village in The Philippines where they essentially had no fish, which is a problem when fish is what you rely on to eat. So we had to really go in ... Was this because of over-fishing? It's over-fishing. So ... So you really needed to change that behavior or you'll never fix the problem. We needed to change the behavior of over-fishing. So we created a mascot called Malloy. And Malloy was sort of central to this media campaign. He appeared in billboards. He appeared in local restaurants. He appeared in the newspaper. He appeared in local parades that you might see down our main streets. And eventually people got the message. I need to think about the fact that I can't go out every day, 24-hour days, and fish. I need to think about okay, how do I fish responsibly with everyone else who needs to feed their families and also maybe some of the companies who are coming in and using us to buy fish to sell to distributors? And eventually, the metrics showed an uptick in that particular region in terms of number of fish available but of course fish take a couple of years to spawn and reproduce and create a viable colony. But we are starting to show that halfways to guess that was happening. Then you move [inaudible] to Capital Impact Partners. Different mission, but also in a nonprofit world. Tell me about their missions. Capital Impact was sort of my way to come back home. This is after the great depression, after the big financial crises that we all faced. And I thought to my self, certainly, there's a great [inaudible] outside of our boundaries, but then, in the United States, we have a lot of communities that are suffering, and how can we help them recoup from what has happened to them. And so I joined what's called Capital Impact Partners, it's what's called the community development financial institution, which is a long-winded way of saying, "Where are the good guy bankers?" We are a bank with the mission behind us. So we make loans to other nonprofits essentially, hospitals, healthy hood ventures, education, or people and organizations that are really trying to change the paradigm in their communities. But because they're operating in low-income areas, big banks won't finance them. So you can't build that house center, you can't build that grocery store that'll sell healthy food, you can't build the apartment that'll have affordable housing. Big just won't support it. We will, that's our mission. That's the risk we take, and in fact, we don't measure our end of the year success by our profit, we measure it by how many desks are being built for students, how many more affordable housing units have been built. That's really tangible good in the community. Yeah. What drew me to it is, they were interested as more than just a lender because they [saw all of it?], just bringing money into a community wasn't going to do it. So we had to be [inaudible] so we had to bring research, we had to bring a team that would develop programs that addressed this systemic issues being faced and think about how to do it differently, how can we do it this way and instead of the old way. A classic example that we use is around the nursing homes system. You put people into institutional nursing homes, nothing changes, people grow old, they get sick, they eventually pass away. What we've decided was, there's got to be a better way. So how do you go in, and develop a different type of nursing home that's as a community where you'll have your own room, where you go to a kitchen that feels like your home, where you communicate with the outside world? It's called the greenhouse model. We were able to deploy it in multiple states across the country, and it's become a real success. But it really shows that money is one thing, creating systemic change is a whole different paradigm, and that's what really drove me to the organization. So how do you tell that story in a way that's going to [inaudible] and engaging to people who either might be in a position to support it or might be a potential customer or beneficiary? Right. No. It's something I struggle with each and every day because we don't just working agent, we work across seven sectors. And how do I tell that one story to people in seven sectors, whether they want to borrow money from us, or change a program, and then how do I elevate that story to ... [inaudible] to interruption. Is it possible to tell a story that reaches different audiences and is equally compelling across different sectors, and people who have maybe different motivations, and [inaudible] paying attention, or do you have to tailor the story based on your audience? So I approach it from literally story telling. What is good storytelling? And that begins with someone who really has to overcome a barrier and how do they overcome that barrier, which is, if you think about any Hollywood movie, and I just took my kids last week to see Black Panther. Yeah. Me too. Yay. Good movie [laughter]. How do they overcome that barrier of the mineral that they are trying to mine and save the world? Are we saving the world? Maybe. So one of the things I did was when I came into the organization about three years ago was to create a story section to the website. It doesn't market our learning activities, it doesn't market any of the other kind of programmatic activities we do, what it does do is tell the stories of the people it was serving. So in the greenhouse model, we literally sending a photographer, journalist. He spent a couple of weeks with these residences, and he told their stories to a series of photo captions. And it's sort of that heart versus brain effects. How do I [inaudible] in your heartstrings to really get you understand this is what you're doing at this kind of visceral level. And we know. I mean, we know from theory that we also know from the experience that you can make a really, really good logical argument that makes perfect sense to the brain, but if doesn't have that emotional impact, it doesn't matter, people might not even pay attention to it. So if you don't make that emotional connection, you need to be able to follow it up with a logic. But sales are made through emotions. Donations are made through emotions. People care about emotions. They want to follow it up with logic to prove to themselves there's nothing else that their emotions were sound if that makes sense. So [inaudible] make an example of that. We could talk about the greenhouse model as here are 10, 12 group homes with individual rooms, it serves maybe 30 to 50 percent of the residence around Medicare. That's great. I mean, honestly, that's a fact that's excellent. Again, there was a guy named Ervin who we talked to. His wife, basically, she didn't have the capabilities of living in the same room because she could become violent. So what he would do is he would go while she was sleeping and literally cuddle up with her at night, and sleep with her, and then wake up in the morning, get up, and go back to his own bed. And she wouldn't know but now we have this opportunity to show this individual who is still able to be with his wife in their old age at a time when they went to the traditional nursing home. She actually might be institutionalized, but this was not the case. [inaudible] able to let them empower them to keep their relationship alive for months or years harder than they're normally would have. And I was so proud as a person in marketing to tell a story that value that relationship. That's wonderful. Which I don't often get to do. Okay. So, all right, you just got my heart strains, right? Yeah [laughter]. All right. So now I'm ready to make a donation which is sort of [inaudible], right? I mean, you want to make that emotional connection, and want to get somebody walk into your want to understand it and feel it, maybe feel it first. Then understand it, then get involved, and support it. So, thinking about when you were going to school, when you were starting your career, what do you know now that you wish you had known then? I think it is the personal aspects of what I do. Drilling down into emotion and storytelling. I went to a school that valued-- I went to Claremont McKenna College, which was mostly an economics school. I was sort of an outlier as someone who wanted to do nonprofit work. And so there it was research, it was analytics, it was data. Which was great, because it got me thinking about those things, because I never really thought about those things. But somewhere I knew deep inside me that there was still emotion and story that drives us. Maybe that was I was drawn to USC, because of their film elements and all of their production elements. Toss up whether I should've gone there or not, but ultimately I think that now is what makes me a successful marketer, is driving story versus data. Because I could easily talk about, we're a lending institution at our heart. Before I came, we talked about, oh we financed this building. Oh, it's 26,000 square feet. It's in this area that has a 200% under the certain net worth for individuals. Government data, and I can't remember. I can't think of it, because it doesn't drive me. I wanted to [inaudible] that building. And that's your proof right there. Right. Who goes to school there? Who now has a home there? Who's getting health care in that building? That's what I care about. And one person's personal story can negate reams and reams and reams of paper of statistics and facts. Absolutely, yeah. And I do think that you need to back it up, with the ultimate, we have the great story of Irwin, but I could tell you any number of stories. There's a woman who was once homeless. She went to a health care center that we helped finance in San Francisco. [inaudible] San Fransisco, does that mean health care? Well, there are huge amounts of homeless people in San Francisco who have no access to equitable health care. Now it's part of the mission of this-- now she got off drugs, she got off alcohol, and she has now literally a board member of this hospital because they want a certain amount of their patients to be on the board. That's not data, that's a story, that's a person's life who has changed. But the data ulitmately, we still need to talk about. This hospital went from an alleyway to a building that serves 20,000 patients, who are uninsured possibly, and so they now have healthcare. That saves X amount of health care dollars. Yeah, so you need that data to back up the story. So for somebody who's an aspiring storyteller, regardless of the medium that they're interested in, what are the things that they need to know, what are the skills that they need to develop? You need to be emotionally involved in your projects. One, the word I always give to people when they think about communications and all of the things and the tactics and all of that is what is your authenticity? You can have your strategy, you can have your tactics down, you can have everything to a T, but if you're not authentic, it's not going to resonate with people. And ultimately, that's going to  you may get a-- the phrase is, "Fool me once it's on you. Fool me twice it's on me." Authenticity is the same way. You may fool a donor or funder or an investor a couple of times but ultimately they're going to get it. So make sure you have an authentic story to tell. And then don't be afraid to tell it from the rooftops. Just yell it, scream it, promote it, put it on video, put it on social media. Don't be afraid to be hyperbolic. If it's authentic, it's real. Right. I think that's really wise council. What tools do you use that you absolutely can't do without? Well, I'm old school, so I use a lot of pen and paper. We've been experimenting with a tool called Trello which is a kind of electronic tool for project management. I think you do need an editorial calendar of sorts because it allows you to be proactive versus reactive, especially for someone like me where I have multiple sectors to promote. And all those sectors need to ramp up into corporate objectives around social and racial justice. I need to think ahead about, "All right. We've got this day coming up. We've got this conference coming up. We've got this project coming up." How does that react with everything else that we're doing? So that the messaging can be funneled up to, kind of ultimately, what we're trying to talk about. What advice would you give for somebody, who is either starting school or starting their careers right now, who's interested in following a path similar to yours? So I may be antithetical to most people. I did not get a background in marketing. I did not get a background in communications or any of this stuff. I'm not saying that's not valuable. I got an education in what I loved and what I believed in. At that point it was government and literature. Now if you think about it,  I know work in finance so-- and with a stop over, a 15 year stop over, in the environment. So I was just say be passionate. Explore. Which also comes with a lot of self learning reading everybody else's e-newsletters, websites, understanding what they do. And there was some self learning about what does the consumer journey look like. What is the donor persona look like? All of those things so that I could apply kind of what I had  hints of in my brain and make them very [tactical?]. That's wonderful, so these last two questions are sort of fun ones. What's the dumbest thing you've ever seen somebody do in communications and marketing? All right. So off the top of my head I can't think of the dumbest thing I've seen. But I will say that it's funny watching an organization I left, and I will not name them, reuse a tactic that we used. And used to sort of minimal effect. It felt like an organazation that was out of ideas and was just trying to think about, "All right, we'll just reuse that in a different way," Without really undersanding what can be we actually achieve with this. It was a social media campaign about investing in a certain project and who knows in terms of the actual tangible value of it? And I'll pick another which is another organization that I work with, do a multi-million dollar campaign. Hollywood superstars, literally Hollywood superstars - I can't name them because they would give me away - using cutting edge multimedia techniques, putting this out on every communication channel possible, but ultimately almost no [inaudible]. I've heard my superstar say this. I'm interested, because I've heard it in three or four different ways. Now what do I do? Well, what I do was give 10 bucks. Yeah, we're not going to have anybody. But I take your point that you need to craft your strategy and your tactics based on the existing situation, which means whoever is working in communications marketing needs to be acutely attuned to strategy and organization. They need to understand the situation, and they need to bring something fresh and creative. It's not sufficient to continue to rehash what might have been a great idea before, but's already played out. Yeah. And I'll also add to that. The idea that you're going to run into a CEO who thinks that they can create a movement-- and God bless you, if you can create a movement, do it. And don't not try. Definitely try it. But go in with what is what the market research of what the general public says. And I'll take the environment for example. So I did that for 15 years. And creating a movement for the environment was always top of mind of CEO for marketing. You can affect any environmental space, 5% of the population, with what we call the dark greens. And they will give a ton of money. You cannot affect the 95% of the population to give their $10, which will equate to billions if they did it. And if you said, "Oh, hogwash," think about yourself. I'm an environmentalist, and I do all the right things. I compost, I recycle, I drive a Prius ... Yeah. Me too. We might actually be parked next to each other [laughter]. But are all of these people going to give their 10 bucks? It's been proven time and time again that that's not going to happen. And that's for children's charities, it's for multiple charities. I would say the one example would be the Bucket Challenge. I have the Ice Water Bucket Challenge ... Ice Bucket Challenge. Okay. Let's talk about that for a minute. I know we're doing my last questions, but let's talk about that for a minute. I heard the woman who was on-- I can't remember the organization, which there in itself, right, should tell you something-- talk about the Ice Bucket Challenge, made millions for that in a short amount of time. We don't talk about them anymore. It was actually not self-constructed. It was an anomaly of a guy-- I think it was multiple sclerosis? Yeah. I think so. Or ALS, maybe. ALS -- who did it. No affiliation to the organization. He sent that video to three or four people, and it literally went viral. The organization literally had no idea how to harness that or what to do with it. They just rode the wave. And year one, they made X number of dollars. Year two, they tried to recreate it, were unable. Of course, because the underlying dynamic was not theirs, and it's since morphed into the cinnamon challenge and the Dadbod challenge and something else that somebody's going to come up with. But there was an authenticity in the original Ice Bucket Challenge that people loved. Which made it powerful. Which made it powerful. And you can't create that. Sometimes you just have to ride it. Well, right. And you can't program or [inaudible] morality. If you're lucky enough to do something that goes viral, awesome. But don't count on it. That should not be your main strategy, because it's so unpredictable and so unlikely. Try. Try. But try with caveats to your CEO or your chief marketing offer or whomever that you're not getting a ding for that if it doesn't happen. Yeah. Absolutely. Okay. So the last question I asked you was, without outing anybody individually [laughter]-- no. The dumbest movie you've ever seen in communications-- what got around? What's something that's remarkable, that's memorable, that you think is particularly powerful and well-done in the way of marketing, communications, public relations? I had a boss who stressed ad nauseum about the power of visuals. And to me back then, I was like, why are we agonizing over one photo over another? And I think the best example I think to give of that is if you watch the movie about Steve Job, where he talks about the 57 shark that he used in his powerpoint. Now I mean that's sort of an example, but what it shows is - and it goes back to storytelling - people are very visual. Iconography goes way back to when we lived in caves. That tells you something. So something about visuals and thinking about your powerpoint presentation with 100 lines of text per slide. No. Stop it. Steve Jobs did presentations. It might not have any text. Changed my life. And now we're gold. Yeah. In fact, have you ever read Presentation Zen that Garr Reynolds does? Phenomenal book. Read that. Yeah. Read it. Yeah. A piece of advice that I give to people who work for me is, you're going to get a lot of information about a particular project. And they're going to want data, they're going to want analysis, and they're going to want all this stuff in their communications. But what do we all do? I call it the finger-up analogy. You flip your Facebook, and you just finger up through your phone. You're swiping up, or you're scrolling up and down, or you're swiping left and right. Maybe you're swiping right, if that's how your thing is. But you're swiping. You're swiping. And you're reading quick and fast. What catches your eye? If you're reading at all. You're looking. Right. You're looking at visuals, and you're getting maybe 50 characters of text. You got to boil down your message to that to really communicate well. Yeah. I think you're absolutely right. So Jason, thank you so much for being on this episode of Better PR Now. Yeah. Thank you so much. Appreciate it. And that wraps up another episode of Better PR Now. Really want to hear from you. Let me know what you think about the podcast overall or about this particular conversation. Like to know what you think about recording on location. I know there was a lot of noise. But let me know. Was it too distracting? Was it okay? I want to hear from you. And also if you have any questions about public relations, marketing, or corporate communications, let me know, and I'd love to address those in a future episode. Also I want to remind you about a special offer that we have from the official transcription partner from the podcast, TranscribeMe. You can get up to 25% off their transcription services. Just go to https://TranscribeMe.com/BetterPRNow. That's it for this episode. Look forward to visiting with you again on the next episode of Better PR Now.

zetatesters
ZT 76 Multipotenciales

zetatesters

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2017


Este episodio se lo dedicamos a Caro Chan. Hemos hablado de... ¿Qué son los multipotenciales? Los cinco superpoderes de los multipotenciales. Los cuatro tipos de trabajos multipotenciales. Y muchas más cosas... :-) Podcast: mossegalapoma Libro: Pan Sin Gluten: Principios, técnicas y trucos para hacer pan, pizza, bizcochos, cupcakes y otras recetas sin gluten de Marc Alier y María José Casañ. Libro: Descafeínate: mejora la productividad sin cafeína de Daniel Amo. Web: Automatizalo.com - Automatiza tus procesos de Marketing & Productividad Blog/Podcast: Presentástico. Podcast: Humor en público. Libro: Chromecasteando: Guía para exprimir Chromecast y Chromecast Audio de Carles Caño. Charla TED: Por qué algunos no tenemos una verdadera vocación - Emilie Wapnick. https://www.ted.com/talks/emilie_wapnick_why_some_of_us_don_t_have_one_true_calling?utm_campaign=tedspread--b&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedcomshare Blog: puttylike.com - A home for multipotentials (Blog de Emilie Wapnick). [Libro] Sapiens. De animales a dioses: Una breve historia de la humanidad de Yuval Noah Harari. Libro: Homo Deus – Breve historia del mañana de Yuval Noah Harari. Libro: How to Be Everything: A Guide for Those Who (Still) Don't Know What They Want to Be When They Grow Up de Emilie Wapnick. Libro: The 4-Hour Chef: The Simple Path to Cooking Like a Pro, Learning Anything, and Living the Good Life de Timothy Ferriss. Libro: Presentación zen: Ideas sencillas para el diseño de presentaciones de Garr Reynolds. Episodio: ZT 07 Especialistas, generalistas y “¿Eres imprescindible?” de Seth Godin Libro: The Internet of Money de Andreas M. Antonopoulos. Libro: Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy de Cathy O'Neil. Canal YouTube de Carles Caño YouTube: Que es el RSS ? RSS hablando en plata https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BnZlct8_-MI&t=1s YouTube: ¿Qué es un wiki? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIgk8v74IZg Blog: eduliticas.com - Analítica del Aprendizaje. Libro: Learning analytics. La narración del aprendizaje a través de los datos de Daniel Amo y Raúl Santiago. Somos zetatesters Muchísimas gracias a Tere (@carraublau) y a Miquel Gabarró por organizar el primer ZetaEvento en el Cloud Co-Working en Barcelona el pasado viernes 29 de septiembre de 2017. Podcast: BeSuricata Episodio: #01 De la idea al producto con Victor Correal de GUIDEDOC.TV Episodio: #03 Accionar nuestra

Jellybean Podcast with Doug Lynch
Jellybean #59 with Ross Fisher

Jellybean Podcast with Doug Lynch

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2017 17:44


You probably have something like a Wednesday afternoon education session at your place of work. You probably have to present at it sometimes. You probably do it pretty well. You may not feel that. You may be your own worst critic and see all the areas that need improvement. That is an important insight which you can use for constructive good rather than destructive evil. Just by being a #FOAMed consumer you are already in a subset of your profession that is motivated to learn and improve you clinical work. It follows that you may well already be developing your teaching skills. In fact I am willing to bet that almost anyone reading this is above average in terms of their presentation skills. Here’s the bad news; the average is poor. You want to be way above that average. You don't get to be way above average without working at it. But how? I mean we don't get our own personal Mr Miyagi to get us to “wax on’ and ‘wax off’ until our presentations are optimally polished. Heres the good news. There is a FOAMed version of Mr Miyagi to help you with the wax. It is Ross Fisher, the presentation guy, @ffolliet, inventor of the P cubed concept and one of the nicest humans you may ever meet. Ross talked at SMACC dub and will be at dasSMACC in Berlin. He is softly spoken, calm and collected. Unlike most people I like there would be little concern introducing him to my mum. In fact he is the sort of person you could trust to do surgery on your children! Ross has his own Mr Miyagi; Prof Garr Reynolds. Garr Reynolds is big time. You can buy his books and attend his workshops but it will cost you. Ross is sharing what he has learned for free at www.prezentationskills.blogspot.com or www.ffolliet.com I certainly can learn from Ross. When you listen to the two of us speak it is like chalk and cheese. If theres any waxing with me its “waxing lyrical”; barely contained enthusiasm coupled with pressure of speech. Apparently my desire to improve this is a very important step. If you want to be better at the next departmental education session, or if you have your eye on an educational role in the future, I recommend you have a look at what Ross has been doing. You will find all sorts of goodies over there including the TEDX talk (in videos), his own podcast (slicker than this one of course) and much more.

The Present Beyond Measure Show: Data Storytelling, Presentation & Visualization for Data Practitioners
Grand Master Garr Reynolds Brings Presentation Zen to Your Boardroom

The Present Beyond Measure Show: Data Storytelling, Presentation & Visualization for Data Practitioners

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2016 52:35


This episode's guest is a global household name for bringing a touch of zen to your presentations. Garr Reynolds is the Elvis Presley of the presentation world, a wildly popular speaker, and the author of the award-winning and best-selling presentation book, Presentation Zen, which is considered by many to be the bible of stellar presenting. Garr’s contribution has been a pivotal force in my entire presentation career and philosophy and it was an honor and privilege to interview him.Garr is the expert in teaching that there is a better way to reach your audience through simplicity and storytelling, and provides the tools to confidently design and deliver successful presentations.And in this episode, Garr hashes it out with me on how to take a dry presentation and reinvigorate the material in totally fresh ways that will make it memorable and resonate with the audience.To view the show notes & resources for this episode, visit LeaPica.com/025.How to Follow Garr:Presentation Zen BlogLinkedInTwitter

Transformative Principal
The Power of Storytelling in Flipped Classrooms with James Sturtevant Transformative Principal 149

Transformative Principal

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2016 20:35


James Sturtevant (Twitter @jamessturtevant Website) is an obscure social studies teacher from Central Ohio who is in his 32nd year. Storytelling, A Whole New Mind by Daniel Pink. Empower the kids to find the stories. Fireplace app Chromebooks iOS. Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds. Delivering content in a flipped manner. The benefits of flipping your classroom. How to be a transformative leader? Check your ego. Take the Fall Listener Survey Loading… Please take a moment to rate this podcast in iTunes or on Stitcher.  Please follow me on Twitter: @jethrojones for the host and @TrnFrmPrincipal for the show. Buy Communication Cards Show notes on TransformativePrincipal.com Download Paperless Principal.   Sponsor: Sanebox Web Site Transformative Principal on Stitcher Refer A Principal Best Tools for Busy Administrators Survey  

The PolicyViz Podcast
Episode #62: Garr Reynolds

The PolicyViz Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2016 29:58


Welcome back to the PolicyViz Podcast! With my book on presentations about to launch, I'm very excited to talk with one of the authors who inspired my work in this area, Garr Reynolds. If you've ever thought carefully about how... The post Episode #62: Garr Reynolds appeared first on PolicyViz.

The PolicyViz Podcast
Episode #62: Garr Reynolds

The PolicyViz Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2016 29:58


Welcome back to the PolicyViz Podcast! With my book on presentations about to launch, I'm very excited to talk with one of the authors who inspired my work in this area, Garr Reynolds. If you've ever thought carefully about how... The post Episode #62: Garr Reynolds appeared first on PolicyViz.

Breakthrough Success
Episode 12: Landing More Public Speaking Gigs With Jen Grisanti

Breakthrough Success

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2016 32:59


  On today’s episode, Marc is joined by former studio executive, and writing instructor at NBC: Jen Grisanti. Having spent years working in the entertainment industry under some of the best names in the business, Jen transitioned to running her own consultancy to pass her knowledge on to others. Jen chats to Marc about how it all happened.   Listen in to hear Jen discuss why it wasn’t as straight forward as just being able to deliver knowledge to a new audience, and the fear that came along with the new territory. Learning valuable lessons every step of the way, including having to reinvent her methods of delivery, Jen talks us through her journey to successful public speaking and instruction.    Jen quickly saw the void that her skills could fill, and worked hard to provide her unique services to those who could benefit from them the most. We are fortunate to hear valuable advice and tips, from everything including why mental preparation is key, to tips for getting more speaking gigs and even how to find your breakthrough.    Join us in Marc’s latest episode.   Important links from the show: www.jengrisanti.com - Jen’s Personal Site https://www.amazon.co.uk/Jerry-Weissman/e/B001H6N238/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1476706517&sr=8-1 - Jerry Weissman Books https://www.amazon.co.uk/Brian-Solis/e/B001KD2V1C/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_3?qid=1476706587&sr=8-3 - Brian Solis Books https://www.amazon.co.uk/Garr-Reynolds/e/B001I9TU1W/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1476706607&sr=8-1 - Garr Reynolds - Presentation Zen Books   Learn: - 3 tips for getting more speaking gigs - Advice for breaking through - Jen’s favorite inspirational quote - Why preparation is so important  

Legendary Life | Transform Your Body, Upgrade Your Health & Live Your Best Life
Ask Ted 92: How To Become A Successful Speaker Part 2

Legendary Life | Transform Your Body, Upgrade Your Health & Live Your Best Life

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2016 25:25


Ted Ryce: How To Become A Successful Public Speaker Part 2 I’m back with a part 2 of how to become a successful speaker. Alan had some follow up questions so of course I obliged! Hey Ted,   Thanks for getting back to me. That is an awesome idea! So the questions I have include:   What skills do you need to work on daily to become a great public speaker? Do you have any courses or books you recommend?   How do you land your first public speaking gig? What should you charge, how do you charge as you get better?  How do you calculate speaking prices?   How do you prepare for a talk?    How can you create a public speaking conference or workshop with other speakers who can compliment your services and value you offer? How do you sell a conference to get a good turnout at your event?   How do you make yourself memorable to the audience you are speaking to? How do you convert public speaking audiences to your programs or services?    These are some of the questions I had off the top of my head with respect to become a speaker. I look forward to the podcast on this. Will you let me know when it will be released? I am looking to start speaking soon for free as leverage to promote my business and add value.    Keep up the great work!!   Thank You!   Question: What skills do you need to work on daily to become a great public speaker? Do you have any courses or books you recommend? Answer: I’ve already talked about Thomas Plummer’s Public Speaking Course, Toastmasters, and Improv Acting Classes. You should do a Google search for public speaking seminars in your area as well. Dale Carnegie has courses all around the country. I’ve also heard great things about Michael Port’s speaking seminar. Here are some resources to get you started: - You may not have heard of Roger but he’s helped the who’s who of celebrities. I watched the Tony Robbins Netflix documentary I Am Not Your Guru and he was doing the vocal warm ups found in this CD. - by Garr Reynolds - by Garr Reynolds - Nancy Duarte’s Ted Talk:   Question: How do you land your first public speaking gig? What should you charge, how do you charge as you get better?  How do you calculate speaking prices? Answer: I’ve done a few seminars and talks before but I’ll tell you how I landed my first speaking gig since I’ve been serious about speaking. I interviewed Aaron Marino of I Am Alpha M and after the talk I said I liked his message and thought he was a good guy. We continued talking and he told me about StyleCon and asked me to speak at it. The way I landed my first keynote was a bit different. I connected with a person who had been listening to my podcast. We ended up talking and I offered her some assistance on a problem she had. I never expected anything back. Then she said there was an event that she was a part of and they needed a speaker. She had been listening to the podcast and remembered that I wanted to do more public speaking. She connected me with the event planner and we spoke on the phone…and boom! I had my first paid keynote speech! Question: How do you prepare for a talk?  Answer: Great question! First, I ask the event planner a LOT of questions about the attendees and what their ideal outcome would be from my talk. Then, Gisele and I work to create a flow of the talk and she helps design a slide show to supplement the presentation. (A quick note about slides…the slides should augment your presentation. But it’s about you and the way to communicate with the audience. NOT the slides!) After we have the rough draft, I run through the talk over and over refining the flow of the talk as well as the slide presentation. I practice one or two times a day EVERY day leading up to my talk. And I do what it takes to be prepared. Practice, practice, practice! That’s the key! Lastly, I memorize the flow of the talk but I don’t memorize the talk. If you’re trying to remember the exact words then it will take you out of flow. And your audience can feel that. At the end of the day, it’s about creating an authentic connection. Not regurgitating content. I do my best to tell stories and entertain while delivering the best information I have. Question: How can you create a public speaking conference or workshop with other speakers who can compliment your services and value you offer? How do you sell a conference to get a good turnout at your event? That’s outside of my experience so far. I recommend that you connect with other speakers and on put something together locally. Promote it on social media and through your content beforehand to see if anyone is interested. Question: How do you make yourself memorable to the audience you are speaking to? How do you convert public speaking audiences to your programs or services?  The answer to your first question is to strive to master the art of public speaking. Be a student of the art and read all the books and articles you can. And attend all the seminars and courses you can. Most importantly: get out there and speak! The answer to your seconds question is a little different. I know what you’re asking but I want to tell you this. You cannot “convert” anyone. Marketing is becoming less and less effective. I know you didn’t mean it like that but I wanted to say it out loud. People are smart and you can’t convert them or change their mind. THEY change their minds based on what you have to offer. What you CAN do is to deliver the best information you have in the most powerful way possible. After that, you offer the opportunity to work with you. Ask them to come and see you at the back of the room if they’d like to talk more. Then you offer what you have. And the best “sales” advice I’ve ever received is from Zig Ziglar in his Secrets of Closing the Sale. You can listen to it for free on Youtube: Conclusion At the end of the day, becoming a successful public speaker is like anything else. It requires drive, discipline, developing the skills, time and hard work! I hope this serves you well and puts you on the right path towards speaking success!

James Sturtevant Hacking Engagement
10-Present to Students Like a Zen Master

James Sturtevant Hacking Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2016 14:26


Presenting to kids in the 21st Century ain't easy! It's hard to engage them...then maintain their interest. When I presented in the past, I was always hypersensitive about my student's engagement level. I'd worry...Did I lose him? Is she listening? He looks like he's nodding off! How can I cover what I need to in the next 5 minutes? I consider myself an engaging presenter, but I was struggling! I needed a new way to do things.My fascinating educator Voxer group made a remarkable book recommendation last summer. I was guided toward Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds. Occasionally, I've run across books that alter my paradigm fundamentally. That was certainly the case with Garr's!Please listen to this episode and learn how I transformed my presentations. Problem solved!

zetatesters
ZT 33 Improvisación y «Do you talk funny?» de David Nihill

zetatesters

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2016


¿Se puede improvisar un episodio entero de un podcast? ¿Pueden las restricciones avivar la creatividad? ¿Huelen los pedos de los peces? Estos son algunos de los aspectos tratados en este episodio sobre Improvisación. En Delicatessen recomendamos un libro para hacer nuestras presentaciones más divertidas: Do You Talk Funny?: 7 Comedy Habits to Become a Better (and Funnier) Public Speaker de David Nihill. [Podcast] El método - Luis Quevedo. [Libro] 2001: Una odisea espacial de Arthur C. Clarke. Improvisación [Vídeo] Fun with a few 9V batteries. (244 of them) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8hwLHdBTQ7s [Libro] Improv Wisdom: Don't Prepare, Just Show Up de Patricia Ryan Madson. [Escena] Indiana Jones vs Swordsman https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3I_Ds2ytz4o [Libro] Presentación Zen: Ideas sencillas para el diseño de presentaciones de Garr Reynolds. [LIBRO] “The Tipping Point” de  Malcolm Gladwell Somos zetatesters Miquel Gabarró ha creado la cuenta en Twitter @BeSuricata que se define como: Grupo de gente inquieta que organiza charlas sobre ingresos pasivos, life hacking, productividad, ética, libros de flipados y tecnología. #zetatesters Benjamí Villoslada nos dice que muchos escritores ponen demasiado paja en los libros y nos pasa el artículo: George Orwell's Six Rules for Writing Clear and Tight Prose Madrillano nos dice que pidamos reseñas en su directorio de podcasts en español: LosPodkas. http://www.podkas.com/directorio/zetatesters-por-zetatesters [Libro] La Guía del autoestopista galáctico de Douglas Adams. @LosPodKas nos envió un GIF animado en el que salen dos personajes de los Simpson preparándose unas rayas de… cacao que se ponen en un vaso con leche y se lo beben con pajita :-) Os dejamos aquí su tuit: LosPodKas @zetatesters https://t.co/iGlFlRnfQG 15/6/16 23:23 Zombies, Run! Aplicación gamificada para correr. [Podcast] Coffee Break: Señal y Ruido [Vídeo] Indefensión aprendida (subtitulado) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OtB6RTJVqPM [Artículo]

NBN Radio New Business Networking Radio with Dave Delaney
NBN28 How Can I Help You? with Zvi Band

NBN Radio New Business Networking Radio with Dave Delaney

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2014 36:33


Zvi Band is CEO & Co-founder of Contactually, a web-based CRM tool that will help maximize your network ROI, get more referrals and gain more repeat business. Zvi also runs DC Tech Meetup and Proudly Made In DC. Talking about networking for introverts, entrepreneurship, and organizing local events. NBN28 Show Notes Join the NBN Club today. Listen to episode 28 in iTunes or Stitcher. Launch your WordPress blog with my quick tutorial. Sign up for Bluehost and support the show. Thanks. Thanks to Sean Carpenter for leaving a networking tip. Record your audio comment or networking tip here. Pick up a copy of New Business Networking: How to Effectively Grow Your Business Network Using Online and Offline Methods. What is Contactually and how does it work? Zvi began as a consultant for high-end start-ups, government and VC firms. He had a good reputation, but he was terrible at business development. The concept of staying in touch is not something new. They are just providing a better tool to do this. Zvi said, "The number one reason people fail to network is the simple fact that they don't do it. If you make a consistent effort, even something as simple as sending an email a day, it's a game changer.” from Frank Gruber's Startup Mixology event in DC. (Video) He was so introverted, he wanted to go home on weekends during college. Zvi wanted to get involved in a start-up, so he had to start meeting people. He did so over coffee. He was offered a job as a CTO. It wouldn't have happened if he didn't build the relationships first. He grew a strong business without advertising. “Forget the name of the company, it was me they wanted to talk to.” People do business with those they know, like and trust. Instead of walking out with ten business cards, walk out with one really good relationship. The biggest differentiator between a good networker and a bad networker is whether you do it at all. His DC Tech Meetup draws 1,000 people each month! "A rising tide lifts all boats." -  John F Kennedy. The number one most important thing in networking is to just do it. “Give more than you receive.” The simple phrase, "How can I help you?" is one of the most powerful things he has learned over the years. Tips for hiring staff for your start-up. Twitter is probably the best way to network online (in his industry). Use Twitter lists like a pro. FollowerWonk to search Twitter bios. You can almost participate at SXSW Interactive without even being in Austin. Hashtag Twitter Lists. Use Contactually Buckets for contacts you meet at a conference. Tips for networking as an introvert. There's no danger in attending a networking event. It's like skydiving, at some point you just have to jump off. Plan to attend events with one or two friends. Never walk in alone. App Recommendation: RunKeeper and Dark Sky. Book Recommendation: Pitch Perfect: How to Say It Right the First Time, Every Time by Bill McGowan. I mentioned Presentation Zen: Simple Ideas on Presentation Design and Delivery by Garr Reynolds. Contact Zvi: @skeevis on Twitter or visit Contactually.com Please leave a review and subscribe to the show in iTunes or Stitcher Radio. Every review is sincerely appreciated. Affiliate links used. Theme music, Urbana-Metronica (wooh-yeah mix) by spinningmerkaba. Thanks for listening. You rock!

Coaching for Leaders
38: How to Build a Good Presentation

Coaching for Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2012 33:57


Some people have heard that myth that how you look is more important than what you say. In this episode, I address this myth, describe in detail why what you say is the most important part of your presentation, and give practical advice for how to assemble presentation content. You can build a good presentation, even if you don't feel that you have professional delivery skills. I begin this episode by speaking about the often misunderstood study from Dr. Albert Mehrabian that is often cited as evidence by those who claim that how you say something is more important that what you say. Olivia Mitchell from Speaking About Presenting has an excellent article that addresses this issue head on. In addition, this video provides great perspective: The bottom line? What you say is far more important than how you say it. "Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." -Leonardo da Vinci Article I published last week: How One Key Question Gets Audience Results "...I would rather a really plain PowerPoint, and an authentic, passionate speaker that was engaging, regardless of how many "umms and ahhs". I've been completely bored with some of the fancy presentations, because the speaker wasn't fired up about his or her topic..." -Comment from Jenn Swanson Build your presentation around the answer to the question: What do I want people walking out of the room doing differently? Here are some key content components: Opening - Tell a story or get the audience involved in some way Storytelling / examples - Tell it like you were already there. The best advice I ever received on this was to tell a story like we were watching the video of it happening. Evidence - It's not enough that just you say it...who else provides support for your conclusions? Call to action - What do you want us to do? Closing - Finish strong so the audience remembers you in a positive mindset Don't memorize your talk - and have more available than you can use! Resources Presentation Zen (2nd edition) by Garr Reynolds (affiliate link) Discover More Activate your free membership for full access to the entire library of interviews since 2011, searchable by topic.

Coaching For Leaders
38: How to Build a Good Presentation

Coaching For Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2012 33:57


Some people have heard that myth that how you look is more important than what you say. In this episode, I address this myth, describe in detail why what you say is the most important part of your presentation, and give practical advice for how to assemble presentation content. You can build a good presentation, even if you don't feel that you have professional delivery skills. I begin this episode by speaking about the often misunderstood study from Dr. Albert Mehrabian that is often cited as evidence by those who claim that how you say something is more important that what you say. Olivia Mitchell from Speaking About Presenting has an excellent article that addresses this issue head on. In addition, this video provides great perspective: The bottom line? What you say is far more important than how you say it. "Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." -Leonardo da Vinci Article I published last week: How One Key Question Gets Audience Results "...I would rather a really plain PowerPoint, and an authentic, passionate speaker that was engaging, regardless of how many "umms and ahhs". I've been completely bored with some of the fancy presentations, because the speaker wasn't fired up about his or her topic..." -Comment from Jenn Swanson Build your presentation around the answer to the question: What do I want people walking out of the room doing differently? Here are some key content components: Opening - Tell a story or get the audience involved in some way Storytelling / examples - Tell it like you were already there. The best advice I ever received on this was to tell a story like we were watching the video of it happening. Evidence - It's not enough that just you say it...who else provides support for your conclusions? Call to action - What do you want us to do? Closing - Finish strong so the audience remembers you in a positive mindset Don't memorize your talk - and have more available than you can use! Resources Presentation Zen (2nd edition) by Garr Reynolds (affiliate link) Discover More Activate your free membership for full access to the entire library of interviews since 2011, searchable by topic.

Mertxe Pasamontes Podcast
El instante es lo eterno

Mertxe Pasamontes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2011 7:19


Cómo vivir el momento presente intensamente Desde que leí el libro de Presentación Zen de Garr Reynolds sigo su Blog, Presentation Zen en donde encontramos una mezcla de consejos para realizar presentaciones zen y cultura y filosofía japonesa (él reside en Japón desde hace muchos años). Hoy me he encontrado con un post que habla sobre el momento en que florecen los cerezos en Japón, momento que los japoneses denominan con la palabra sakura. Es un momento de gran belleza pero a la vez muy efímero. Por eso, desde siglos atrás la palabra sakura no sólo sirve para denominar el florecer del cerezo, sino también como metáfora de la naturaleza transitoria y efímera de la vida. seguir leyendo Escuchar podcast

Interviews with Oxonians
Garr Reynolds on Presentations

Interviews with Oxonians

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2011 20:10


Conversation with Garr Reynolds, author of Presentation Zen.

Presentation Gravity with Kristin Thompson: Authentically attract more business & shine a light on your expertise by stepping

Find out about why you need to have Garr Reynolds and Nancy Duarte in your library and how they can help you avoid Death by Powerpoint. Then we'll discuss the top 3 things you need to know before you start speaking. What are event organizers looking for in speakers, and how you can deliver your first time out! Get inspired to add speaking to your business in the new year and enjoy the rush of new leads, new clients, referrals, and testimonials galore! Visit us at http://www.ThompsonProfessionals.com Email us at Kristin@ThompsonProfessionals.com

Professionally Speaking » Podcast Feed
Launch Party: Resonate by Nancy Duarte

Professionally Speaking » Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2010 5:29


Thursday evening at the Silicon Valley Computer History Museum saw the launch of Nancy Duarte's new book Resonate: Present Visual Stories that Transform Audiences. A couple of hundred guests celebrated a book that author Garr Reynolds says "takes you on a beautiful journey illustrating how to construct and deliver the kind of presentations that are truly remarkable, memorable ... and may even change the world." Hear what some of the guests had to say by clicking on the podcast icon below.

Brian in a Jar
Brian in a Jar - Episode 3

Brian in a Jar

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2009


http://shadowfoot.com/podcasts/BJar_090712_Episode_3.mp3My third podcast episode. Show Notes Espressoholic Supermarket shoppers Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds at Webstock

Brian in a Jar
Brian in a Jar - Episode 1

Brian in a Jar

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2009


http://shadowfoot.com/podcasts/BJar_090627_Episode_1.mp3This is the first episode of, hopefully, an ongoing podcast series. Show Notes Playing for Keeps by Mur Lafferty. Murder at Avadon Hill by PG Holyfield. Fig Tree Cafe, Upper Hutt, and the review that encouraged us to go there. Note that I had not read the review before making my comments. Presentation Zen Master Class by Garr Reynolds. His book is available at Amazon.

Six Pixels of Separation Podcast - By Mitch Joel
SPOS #102 - Presentation Zen With Garr Reynolds

Six Pixels of Separation Podcast - By Mitch Joel

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2008 51:07


Welcome to episode #102 of Six Pixels Of Separation - The Twist Image Podcast. This is an entire episode with Garr Reynolds who has the most-awesome Blog (and book of the same name), Presentation Zen. We discuss the power of understanding how great presentations come together, what it takes to make them successful, and how powerful of a Marketing tool a great presentation is (and can be) - think about Steve Jobs from Apple. Garr was even kind enough to lead a very special Six Points of Separation. If you (or someone you know) has to present (and who doesn't?), please make sure to get them to listen. Garr is a total treat, and a very powerful and insightful guy - check it out. Enjoy the conversation... Here it is: Six Pixels Of Separation - The Twist Image Podcast - Episode #102 - Host: Mitch Joel. Running time: 51:07. Audio comment line - please send in a comment and add your voice to the audio community: +1 206-666-6056. Please send in questions, comments, suggestions - mitch@twistimage.com. Hello from Beautiful Montreal. Subscribe over at iTunes. Please visit and leave comments on the Blog - Six Pixels of Separation. Feel free to connect to me directly on Facebook here: Mitch Joel on Facebook. or you can connect on LinkedIn. ...or on twitter. Facebook Group - Six Pixels of Separation Podcast Society. Check out my other Podcast, Foreword Thinking - The Business And Motivational Book Review Podcast - sponsored by HarperCollins Canada. Foreword Thinking - Episode #9 featuring Beth Lisick. Beth's new book is: Helping Me Help Myself - One Skeptic, 10 Self-Help Gurus, and a Year on the Brink of the Comfort Zone. CMA – Canadian Marketing Association – National Convention and Trade Show – May 12th – 14th. Seth Godin - Meatball Sundae - Purple Cow. Dan Ariely - Predictably Irrational. W. Mitchell. Penelope Trunk – Brazen Careerist. Avinash Kaushik - Occam's Razor - Web Analytics - An Hour A Day - Analytics Evangelist, Google. Power Within - Wednesday, October 15th, 2008 - Winnipeg Convention Centre. Anthony Robbins. Loretta LaRoche. Mike Lipkin. Phil Town. Special ticket price - $149 - call the Power Within at 1-866-POWER04 - ask for Joseph (extension 229). In Conversation with Garr Reynolds – Presentation Zen. Six Points of Separation – Six Ways To Presentation Zen: 1. Turn off the computer. 2. Find the core. 3. Remove the superfluous. 4. Make it visual. 5. No slide-uments or docu-points. 6. Passion and conversational. Please join the conversation by sending in questions, feedback and ways to improve Six Pixels Of Separation. Please let me know what you think or leave an audio comment at: +1 206-666-6056. Download the Podcast here: Six Pixels Of Separation - The Twist Image Podcast - Episode #102 - Host: Mitch Joel. Tags: advertising anthony robbins avinash kaushik beth lisick blog blogging brazen careerist business canadian marketing association cma dan ariely digital marketing digital marketing conference facebook foreword thinking garr reynolds google harpercollins canada itunes loretta laroch marketing mike lipkin motivational books occams razor online social network penelope trunk phil town podcast podcasting power within presentation zen presenting public speaking seth godin six pixels of separation social media marketing speaking twist image w mitchell web 20 web analytics winnipeg