Carmine Gallo. Five Stars: the communication secrets to get from good to great. St. Martins Press. New York: 2018.

  • Interview on Read to Lead podcast

  • "Complacency breeds failure"

  • "Communication is lubricant of execution"

  • Read. Adopt. Advocate. Leapfrog.

  • Presentations need:

    • brevity, language, pictures
    • 18 minutes maximum length
    • introduction, climax, conclusion
    • conversational tone
    • [some level of novelty]
  • R and C: reading, writing, arithmetic, creativity, collaboration, communication, coding

  • Convincing about what matters in fewer, simpler words

  • Distill complexity into simple words, directions, instructions

  • Know, feel, do

  • Tesla's best question for interviews: tell me the story of your life, the decisions you made along the way and why you made them

  • Duarte: if it takes longer than 3 seconds to understand the gist of your slide, it's too complicated

  • healthcare example, CICARE: connect, introduce, communicate, ask permission and anticipate, respond, end with excellence

  • inspiring leaders, SCARF: status, certainty, autonomy, relatedness, fairness

Method:

Persuasion needs Pathos, an appeal to the audience's emotion

  1. Replace bullet points with pictures

  2. Make the audience laugh

  3. Share personal stories

  4. Make presentations easy to follow

    • State one headline
    • Use the rule of three
  5. Promise your audience that they will learn something new

Kinds of stories worth telling

  • about personal experiences
  • about real customers or clients
  • about signature events in the history of a brand or company

Elements of signature stories

  1. It's a story: beginning, middle, end

  2. It's intriguing

  3. It's authentic

  4. It includes details

  5. It reveals a surprise

  6. It introduces emphathetic characters

  7. It has conflict and tension

Three-act storytelling structure

  1. The Set-Up - current state, overview, introduction

  2. The Confrontation - obstacles and solutions to overcome them

  3. The Resolution - the product, service, or strategy that solves the problem and helps the company or industry thrive

About your stories

  • Keep your audience in suspense and alert by including hurdles to overcome

  • Oxytocin can be stimulated from a dramatic arc with tension, struggle, and a happy ending

Great presentations have one theme and all else supports that message

  • treat your message like a "logline": encapsulate your idea in one sentence

  • introduce your one big idea within 15 seconds of starting your presentation

Keep to 10 minute maximum (to limit tuning out):

  • use simple words (eighth grade) and short sentences: edit, edit, edit

  • analogy is beauty in speech, learn homiletics?

Keeping original:

  1. Connect ideas from everywhere
  2. Find your theme song
  3. Read more books to become a better speaker

    • Very few problems are new
    • Reading builds ability to create powerful emotional rhetoric to galvanize a team
    • Reading good, crisp, well-written prose improves your writing
  4. Take a trip to the unfamiliar -- even a little change in environment

Put yourself in a creative space and think through the narrative elements before creating slides or documents.

Remember two ways to limit stress and boost confidence:

  1. Reappraisal: reframe the way you think about yourself and events in your life

  2. Repetition: practise your presentation

Logos. Ethos. Pathos.