Casual Articles
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Workplace Communication > PowerTalk: 10 Timeless Tips for Becoming a More Powerful Communicator

Tags

  • society
  • point
  • themselves
  • always going
  • attention think

  • Links

  • Why Forcing Yourself To See The Bright Side Of life Is Impossible 
  • How to Write Informative and Powerful Articles
  • The Case For Market Timing Diversification
  • Casual Articles - PowerTalk: 10 Timeless Tips for Becoming a More Powerful Communicator

    Craigslist Censoring begs the Question - Is the Internet the last great Bastion of Free Speech?
    Free speech is one of the building blocks of any democratic society. Without free speech we, as citizens of the democratic society, would be subject to many forms of chastisement including personal attacks and even legal ramifications.This is why I for one like the Internet. You see, to me the Internet is one of the last great representations of true free speech. We are allowed to post as we see fit whether it is a comment in a forum or a blog post which gets syndicated around the world.In fact, many sites have made their livings from allowing the general public to freely post their viewpoints, both positive and negative.Apartmentratings.com has been sued before by angry landlords or building owners. This is a site which allows renters of apartments all over the US to post comments and
    ’re doing it because your responses to their speaking are usually inappropriate, and communication breaks down rapidly. No one listens back to someone who hasn’t listened to them. Instead of spouting off your opinions immediately after a person has spoken, ask them something about what they just said. Pay attention to their speaking and they will pay more attention to yours.

    4. Do you live up to your word? Did you ever know someone who was always going to do this and always promising to do that and never came through? Did you stop listening to that person after awhile

    Networking Your Way to Profit, Part 5: More Business Cards Advice for Start-Ups
    Don’t you just hate it when someone gives you some great advice about what to put on your business cards… just after you’ve had a batch printed!Here’s how you can get around that problem…In my article; “Networking Your Way to Profit: Part 3: Your Hidden Marketing Opportunity”, I explained how the back of your business card is your ideal place to include your marketing message. Of course if you’ve just had your cards printed – with nothing on the back – you have a dilemma.Do you throw your newly printed cards away and get some more done (expensive, perhaps?)Or do you keep the advice in mind for the next batch to be printed and hope that in the meantime you don’t lose any business opportunities when you hand your existing cards out?An alternative is to print y
    Part of our evolutionary process is learning how to communicate more effectively and efficiently. Few of us have had much training in the matter, and most of us have experienced the consequences of communication breakdowns. We all know what doesn’t work, and how badly it feels to be unheard and misunderstood.

    I learned how to speak from a man who didn’t know how to listen. I once worked for a CEO who had no space or time for my emotions or conversational process—so I wrote an article called “Who’s Listening?” for a newsletter I created every month. Since I had been so thrown off guard by his apparent disinterest in the “whole” me, I was led to question what it was about my own communication style that made it hard for us to talk.

    These are the questions I asked myself and ultimately included in the article. I hope they help.

    1. Are you being negative? Nobody enjoys being in the presence of negative energy. Try listening to yourself as you speak. Pay attention to your tone of voice. If you are whining, stop it. If you are being cynical or complaining, stop it. For one week, try turning your complaints into requests and see if you notice a difference in how your ideas are received.

    2. Do you share opinions, but not your inner self? When’s the last time you were in the presence of a powerful speaker? What do you remember about what the speaker said? Chances are, whoever was talking was sharing some personal story, illustrating a point with an anecdote. Listeners get enrolled in a conversation when the speaker actually shares something meaningful about his or her life. Rich communication never occurs by accident. It takes intention and attention. Think of the most engaging conversationalist you know. Next time you hear that person, listen for how much of themselves they really share. Try sharing something personal next time you’re in a conversation with someone who’s important to your life. Trust them enough to admit a fear of yours, to tell a story from your childhood, or to share a vision you have for the future. We are all waiting to have these conversations, but no one wants to go first. Try going first.

    3. Are you planning what you want to say while others speak, instead of listening? This one always backfires. It’s a dead giveaway. People know when you’re doing it because your responses to their speaking are usually inappropriate, and communication breaks down rapidly. No one listens back to someone who hasn’t listened to them. Instead of spouting off your opinions immediately after a person has spoken, ask them something about what they just said. Pay attention to their speaking and they will pay more attention to yours.

    4. Do you live up to your word? Did you ever know someone who was always going to do this and always promising to do that and never came through? Did you stop listening to that person after awhile?

    Commercial Debt Collection
    Commercial debt collection is required when a company fails to pay for goods or services supplied on credit. Although the process of commercial debt collection is a stressful experience for you and your company, you must still treat the debtor fairly and courteously.So Does this only apply to small companies? Not at all. The key is to find a commercial debt collection agency with whom you can develop a long term relationship, after all this will almost certainly not be the last time you need their services.You will need to find an agency who are professional and dependable. Responsive, courteous. Speak with the person who is intended to become your account manager - the person who will be in direct contact with your debtors. Do you trade internationally? This is a crucial factor when choosing a c
    n off guard by his apparent disinterest in the “whole” me, I was led to question what it was about my own communication style that made it hard for us to talk.

    These are the questions I asked myself and ultimately included in the article. I hope they help.

    1. Are you being negative? Nobody enjoys being in the presence of negative energy. Try listening to yourself as you speak. Pay attention to your tone of voice. If you are whining, stop it. If you are being cynical or complaining, stop it. For one week, try turning your complaints into requests and see if you notice a difference in how your ideas are received.

    2. Do you share opinions, but not your inner self? When’s the last time you were in the presence of a powerful speaker? What do you remember about what the speaker said? Chances are, whoever was talking was sharing some personal story, illustrating a point with an anecdote. Listeners get enrolled in a conversation when the speaker actually shares something meaningful about his or her life. Rich communication never occurs by accident. It takes intention and attention. Think of the most engaging conversationalist you know. Next time you hear that person, listen for how much of themselves they really share. Try sharing something personal next time you’re in a conversation with someone who’s important to your life. Trust them enough to admit a fear of yours, to tell a story from your childhood, or to share a vision you have for the future. We are all waiting to have these conversations, but no one wants to go first. Try going first.

    3. Are you planning what you want to say while others speak, instead of listening? This one always backfires. It’s a dead giveaway. People know when you’re doing it because your responses to their speaking are usually inappropriate, and communication breaks down rapidly. No one listens back to someone who hasn’t listened to them. Instead of spouting off your opinions immediately after a person has spoken, ask them something about what they just said. Pay attention to their speaking and they will pay more attention to yours.

    4. Do you live up to your word? Did you ever know someone who was always going to do this and always promising to do that and never came through? Did you stop listening to that person after awhile

    Small and Medium Sized Businesses – Developing Your Market Intelligence
    Nearly every industry is signifcantly more competitive today that it was only a few years ago. Many companies focus on doing their thing a little bit faster or better than they did last year. But in today’s hyper-competitive environment that may not always be enough. We believe that there are three pillars of Business Intelligence that are given short shrift by many companies, and by ignoring these options, they put their company’s future in peril. The three pillars of Market Intelligence are Competitive Intelligence, Secondary Market Intelligence (syndicated or research that can be found or purchased on an given industry) and Primary Market Research – which is conducting research that is specifically designed to answer the questions that your business is grappling with – and that your competitors should never
    otice a difference in how your ideas are received.

    2. Do you share opinions, but not your inner self? When’s the last time you were in the presence of a powerful speaker? What do you remember about what the speaker said? Chances are, whoever was talking was sharing some personal story, illustrating a point with an anecdote. Listeners get enrolled in a conversation when the speaker actually shares something meaningful about his or her life. Rich communication never occurs by accident. It takes intention and attention. Think of the most engaging conversationalist you know. Next time you hear that person, listen for how much of themselves they really share. Try sharing something personal next time you’re in a conversation with someone who’s important to your life. Trust them enough to admit a fear of yours, to tell a story from your childhood, or to share a vision you have for the future. We are all waiting to have these conversations, but no one wants to go first. Try going first.

    3. Are you planning what you want to say while others speak, instead of listening? This one always backfires. It’s a dead giveaway. People know when you’re doing it because your responses to their speaking are usually inappropriate, and communication breaks down rapidly. No one listens back to someone who hasn’t listened to them. Instead of spouting off your opinions immediately after a person has spoken, ask them something about what they just said. Pay attention to their speaking and they will pay more attention to yours.

    4. Do you live up to your word? Did you ever know someone who was always going to do this and always promising to do that and never came through? Did you stop listening to that person after awhile

    Identifying, Creating and Using Your USP?
    What's your USP? Don't know, or worse still, you've never heard of it.USP is an acronym for Unique Selling Proposition. It's vital for every business to identify its inherent USP or if it can't identify it, to create it.If yours is a firm that sells gold coated widgets and there are NO other firms selling the same product, then you need not worry about your USP - you have one by default. The default being that you have a market monopoly. Provided the product is in demand, you can charge just about any price you like and you have no worries with competition. Your product is unique - that's your USP.But say your business is installing airconditioners and there are six other firms doing the same thing in your region. What's your USP? This is where it gets difficult. You don't hav
    now. Next time you hear that person, listen for how much of themselves they really share. Try sharing something personal next time you’re in a conversation with someone who’s important to your life. Trust them enough to admit a fear of yours, to tell a story from your childhood, or to share a vision you have for the future. We are all waiting to have these conversations, but no one wants to go first. Try going first.

    3. Are you planning what you want to say while others speak, instead of listening? This one always backfires. It’s a dead giveaway. People know when you’re doing it because your responses to their speaking are usually inappropriate, and communication breaks down rapidly. No one listens back to someone who hasn’t listened to them. Instead of spouting off your opinions immediately after a person has spoken, ask them something about what they just said. Pay attention to their speaking and they will pay more attention to yours.

    4. Do you live up to your word? Did you ever know someone who was always going to do this and always promising to do that and never came through? Did you stop listening to that person after awhile

    Burn Your Brochures: 8 Better Alternatives for Creating Collateral
    If you work in marketing communications, you’ve probably seen this scenario a dozen times: A harried sales guy, shirts-sleeves rolled up to the elbow, storms into your cubicle. “I got a hot sales call in Toledo in three weeks. I got to have a brochure to leave behind,” he says, smacking his fist into his open palm.You sigh. So it begins -- yet another brochure. And you know how it’ll end: Thousands of dollars and multiple late-nights-against-deadlines later, he’ll have his brochure. But the company won’t have the sale. And you’ll have a coat closet stacked with bulging boxes of forgotten collateral.Is there a better way to support sales? Something you can leave with prospects that’s just a bit more memorable -- and more effective -- than the standard brochure with its forced march through company
    ’re doing it because your responses to their speaking are usually inappropriate, and communication breaks down rapidly. No one listens back to someone who hasn’t listened to them. Instead of spouting off your opinions immediately after a person has spoken, ask them something about what they just said. Pay attention to their speaking and they will pay more attention to yours.

    4. Do you live up to your word? Did you ever know someone who was always going to do this and always promising to do that and never came through? Did you stop listening to that person after awhile? The world is full of dreamers and planners, but it’s people’s actions, not their dreams, that inspire us. Open up and share something you’ve accomplished that you’re proud of. If you have something you want to accomplish, ask for support. People will not take us seriously if they see we do not take our own words and commitments seriously.

    5. Have you created an environment for listening? It is not easy to listen to someone in a room where TV’s and radios are in competition with humans. If real communication is important to you, try turning off the tube and finding a commercial-free FM station that plays music conducive to conversation. Classical music stimulates the alpha waves in our brains, and keep our creative juices flowing.

    6. Do you speak as a victim of circumstances or as a creator of possibilities? People who speak as if the world were out to get them have a difficult time finding listeners. No one wants to get pulled into the emotional quicksand that a “victim” seems to be buried in. Consider how you respond as a listener to other people’s tales of woe? Do you tire quickly in that context? Do you get depressed and feel burdened? Energy is contagious. If you speak as the one who’s designing your life, rather than as a victim of other peoples’ actions, you will empower yourself and others.

    7. Does your listener know the value of your relationship with her or him? Establishing a background of trust and relatedness is critical to communication. The better sense a person has of you and of your commitment to the relationship, the more open will they be to your speaking. If what needs to be communicated is difficult or risky, it often helps to begin by stating what’s at stake for you and how important honesty is to the relationship.

    8. Do you inquire about what may be important to your listener or do you mostly talk about yourself? One way to ensure that your listener is with you is to include her or his interests in your conversation. The next time you have coffee with your neighbor or sit next to your co-worker in the cafeteria, initiate a conversation about something you know that person is interested in. If she’s a ski enthusiast, ask her about her favorite places to ski. If he’s into computer games, strike up a conversation about an article you read

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.casualarticles.com/article/47419/casualarticles-PowerTalk-10-Timeless-Tips-for-Becoming-a-More-Powerful-Communicator.html">PowerTalk: 10 Timeless Tips for Becoming a More Powerful Communicator</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.casualarticles.com/article/47419/casualarticles-PowerTalk-10-Timeless-Tips-for-Becoming-a-More-Powerful-Communicator.html]PowerTalk: 10 Timeless Tips for Becoming a More Powerful Communicator[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Personal Image and Your Business

    Brands- Buzz- Brains

    Mail Order Catalogs

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com