Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - Learn the Language of Success Today with Michael Maslansky Episode 311
Episode Date: April 11, 2023Have you been wanting to work with Heather? Her annual elite mastermind is open NOW!  She is only accepting 20 participants this year! Click the link below to learn more and apply now if you are ...ready to go to the next level! https://bit.ly/hm-cc-mastermind In This Episode You Will Learn About: The KEY to building trust in your relationships  Why embracing your flaws and mistakes will make you stronger  How to use language that will resonate with EVERYONE Resources: Website: maslansky.com Read The Language of Trust Email: info@maslansky.com LinkedIn: @Michael Maslansky Instagram: @maslanskyandpartners Facebook: @maslansky+partners Twitter: @maslansky Overcome Your Villains is Available NOW! Order here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com If you haven't yet, get my first book Confidence Creator Show Notes: How do you want people to view you and the message you’re trying to communicate? Michael Maslansky, a leader in market research, is here to help us challenge conventional wisdom and learn the language of SUCCESS! With the right techniques you can transform the way you are communicating with your audiences and build trust that will last. You’ll learn the MOST important steps for communicating effectively, and how stories are essential in getting your point across! Tune in to discover Michael’s unique approach to solving communication problems that will change how you communicate FOREVER. About The Guest: I’m so excited to introduce you to Michael Maslansky! Michael advises fortune 500 corporations, industry associations, major litigation practices, and nonprofit organizations on what to say, how to say it, and most importantly, why it matters. With clients ranging from Pfizer, Bank of America, Microsoft to Starbucks, Michael works CEOs, companies and entire industries to help them effectively communicate–whether during a crisis like we've seen many recently in advertising, public relations campaigns, or with investors, congress or the American people! He's the author of Language of Trust, and he’s here to help us understand the power of our words and how to better trust and understand the public mood.     If You Liked This episode You Might Also Like These Episodes: How To WIN When They Say You Won’t, With Daphne Jones CEO & Founder Of The Board Curators & Fortune 50 Technology & Business Leader TAP Into Your True Self With Wylie McGraw Founder Of Radical Performance Acceleration Top Hacks of Breakthrough Thinkers, With Jeremy Utley The Director Of Executive Education At Stanford Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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As a leader, as anyone who wants to build trust with a partner in a relationship, whether
it's a business relationship or a personal relationship, but a customer with really any
stakeholder, if you want to build trust, I believe in the power of flaws, I believe in the
power of vulnerability.
I believe that those leaders in the world that we operate in today who can never acknowledge
any imperfection, that their strategy may not be perfect, that they don't know the answers to every question, that they lack credibility.
I'm on this journey with me.
Each week when you join me, we are going to chase down our goals.
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Hi, and welcome back.
I'm so excited for you to meet our guest today.
Michael Mislansky, he invites
us Fortune 500 corporations,
industry associations,
major litigation practices,
and nonprofit organizations
on what to say, how to say it, and most importantly, why it matters, how CEOs, companies, and entire
industries communicate, whether during a crisis, like we've seen many recently, in advertising
public relations campaigns, or with investors, Congress, or the American people, often means the
difference between success
and failure. Clients from Pfizer to Bank of America, Microsoft to Starbucks, oh my gosh,
we've got a great case study from Starbucks. Michael works with all of these people to understand
the public mood, challenge conventional wisdom, and transform not just what they say to key
audiences, but how they say it. He's the author of Language of Trust. Michael, thank you so much
for being here today.
Thanks for having me, Heather.
When I went to your website initially, the one case study or business example that jumped
out to me in such a big way, it was so simplistic yet so profound, was the Starbucks instant coffee
example. We talked us through a little bit about how that small tweak and language made such an impact?
True, I think so every time we open our mouths, we're making a choice about how we communicate and
you can make good choices or you can make bad choices and that often impacts how you're perceived and
how successful you are in communicating what it is that you're trying to convey. And so Starbucks
is getting ready to launch their first instant coffee. And they thought it was great. But every time we went out and we talked to
people about instant coffee, what we heard was they don't really, it's not high quality,
they don't like it. They think about those granules floating at the top of the coffee. And so if we
called it instant coffee from Starbucks, People had no interest in it.
But instead, by simply flipping the order of the message, by saying it was Starbucks coffee
in an instant, all of a sudden the emphasis and the focus was first on how people might
think of Starbucks, which is a positive association.
And that halo then made the instant coffee seem better.
And so really this very simple flip in the order of language
turned something from being almost dead on arrival to an incredibly successful launch for the brand
just by understanding that insight that you have to know how people are going to perceive
you and your brand and then adjust accordingly. So what I mean, again, it's so simple yet
incredibly powerful translates to huge revenue
differences if somebody is thoughtful and strategic about this, and this is all that
you do, how many companies actually are thoughtful in regards to their work choices?
Well, I think more and more companies realize the dangers of getting their message wrong
and have become much more sensitive to not saying the
wrong thing for I think a growing group of companies that translates into being more deliberate and
thoughtful about how they communicate, but there's still plenty out there that don't. And I think
that one of the interesting things is that everything that we do is individuals and as companies
communicates, right? It's not just when we do a press release
or an advertisement or they're really obvious communications,
the way that we engage with customers
or with prospects communicates,
the way that we deal with employees, communicates,
and the thing that many companies still need to work
really hard to do is to recognize that
what they're trying to convey in one child
or to one audience or at one time is often contradicted by their behavior
or their message or their actions someplace else. And so that's the real
challenges looking across all of your communications and your actions and
communicating a consistent message and being really deliberate about that.
So there are so many great examples recently of some really impactful moments where
people use certain word choices and what a profound impact it had on audiences globally. And I was
getting looking at some of you know, an article that talked about in 2022, some of the biggest
most impactful moments, one being Ukrainian president Zensky and another great example that I thought was Tom Brady.
And I was hoping you could talk us through
some of these really relevant examples.
Sure, well, the Zelensky example
is when at the beginning of the war in Ukraine,
he said, I don't need a ride, I need ammunition.
And it was one of these things we talk a lot about
about how you're framing the conversation,
how you want people to view you
and the message that you're trying to communicate.
And in those two phrases,
he really conveyed this sense that,
I am not gonna run, I'm gonna stay here, I'm gonna fight.
And I'm gonna tell it like it is.
And I'm the kind of person that you can get behind.
And so it was one of those moments where I think all of the, probably all the betting
money prior to that was on this guy who was a comedian running for cover at the first
resistance and that Ukraine wasn't going to be able to withstand the attack from Russia.
It proved to be really telling of how things have played out. And as tragic as things are over there, they've shown that they really
did. They continued to want ammunition and they're going to fight. And so it was just one of those
moments that was very memorable. We caught a language moment that captures the designgeist
and certainly his mentality at the time. I want to piggyback on what you're saying about him
in that recently he was hearing the United States asking for funding from the Congress and certainly his mentality at the time. I want to piggyback on what you're saying about him
in that recently he was hearing the United States
asking for funding from the Congress and House.
And it was interesting, a couple of things.
It almost seems like he's one of your disciples
in regards to really fixating and being so intentional
about word choices and so much more.
The way he showed up, the way he dressed number one,
I thought was incredibly strategic that he showed up.
He wasn't wearing the same navy blue suit
that every other man in that room was wearing.
He came in wartime clothing in an effort,
obviously, in very impactful to have that vision
instead of language in this instance,
really resonate with people on what's going on
and that he isn't actually sitting there with everybody else.
He's in a very dangerous situation.
And then she and I'm going to botch it if I try, but he asked for funding from us,
but did not use that language.
Instead, he used language something like it was incredible.
But it was almost like reverse psychology where he was saying, I'm here today to
ensure your future freedom by your choices or something like that.
Yes, no, I mean, so one of the most important things that you have to do to be an effective
communicator when you're trying to persuade somebody to do something is know what's
in it for them, right?
And one of the things that he has done masterfully is that when he talks to people outside
of Ukraine, this is never about Ukraine.
It is never help us. It is about what
Ukraine stands for in the broader context of, you know, of the world that we're operating
in. And so it's an investment in the future of the Western world, in the future of all
free people, in the future of a global economy that works. And that reframing is really powerful because we all feel like we are
invested in it in a way that we wouldn't feel if this were just help us in Ukraine because we were
attacked by bad guys and it's the right thing to do. He really does an incredible job of that.
It really was eye opening to me how thoughtful and the reason why it's so eye opening to me,
I am not thoughtful
in that regard. So I was, you know, I bow down. I'm like, oh my gosh, this is something that
everyone can learn from in regards to any approach or any meeting that you may have, not even such,
you know, such a large scale issue. All right, let's get to TB Tom Brady and what did you think about
someone on your team wrote an article about his recent exposing his
personal situation. Yeah, I got a lot of shit going on. What he said. And you know, I think,
so here you've got a guy who has achieved just incredible things, is viewed, and I think kind of
viewed himself in any way as this perfect almost right. He's the goat, right? And he does everything perfectly.
And there is no vulnerability there.
And all of a sudden, strange things are happening.
We don't necessarily know what's happening at that point
until he says that.
And he can choose one of two paths.
He can kind of continue to be the straight-faced,
kind of robotic, almost individual
that doesn't acknowledge that he's human.
And then what often happens is we want to criticize those people when they're down.
We'll support them when they're up, but as soon as they're down, we'll go after them.
But when people who are perceived that way show some humanity, they show some vulnerability,
all of a sudden we're like, wow, there's like, there's a real person in there, and we're
more likely to support
them when they're down than, you know, the one to go after them. And so what he did, whether
it was intentional or not, it was, it was definitely honest. And he communicated in a way that
I think everybody can understand, you know, certainly anybody who's a parent like I am, like,
there's a lot going on. And you get pulled in a lot of different directions and
you can't do everything necessarily or sometimes it gets overwhelming. And so I just I think it was
a powerfully authentic moment and I don't actually like using that word because I think it gets
overused but that was one of those moments where it went totally against type and that's often a
way that you can demonstrate real credibility. When you say something that people just don't expect you to say, it has a lot more impact
than when you are following your normal script.
And this is something that you work with many CEOs on.
I know that we were talking prior to recording today about on your wall, you have blown up
of my bad.
And I thought that that was something that you were pointing out as something funny. today about on your wall, you have blown up my bad.
And I thought that that was something that, you know,
you were pointing out as something funny.
And you shared with me that that's actually a great reminder
for you, for your clients, to always be owning mistakes.
Can you dive into a little bit about
why that's important for leaders?
Absolutely.
So I believe that as a leader, as anyone who wants to build trust
with a partner in a relationship, whether it's a business relationship or a personal relationship with a leader, as anyone who wants to build trust with a partner in a relationship, whether
it's a business relationship or a personal relationship with a customer, with really any
stakeholder.
If you want to build trust, I believe in the power of flaws, I believe in the power of vulnerability.
I believe that those leaders in the world that we operate in today who can never acknowledge
any imperfection, that their, may not be perfect, that
they don't know the answers to every question, that they lack credibility. Those leaders who
are seen as the most credible are the ones who recognize that you don't get everything
right all the time. And other people may have a better answer some of the time. And if
I tell you that I'm wrong when I did something that was either wrong or just not as good as it could have been, then when
I'm doing it right, you're much more likely to believe in me, to trust me, and to follow
me. And so it has these benefits that I think for generations, the old kind of male dominated
culture was very much one that didn't allow for that kind of vulnerability.
And that doesn't work nearly as well today.
No, it definitely doesn't. I have personal experience working side by side with someone in a leadership position that wanted to appear perfect and tried incredibly hard. I mean, a constantly exerting effort to showing that there was
this perfect person. And in fact, I watched the distance that was created from
people to her and resentment because people felt they had to live up to that
same extreme, which wasn't real in her instance to begin with, but it's
impossible for anybody. So I couldn't agree with you more. That is a flawed
strategy, old school strategy that is not effective.
One of the things that you also mentioned to me
was this idea of fake it till you make it.
I actually have a chapter in my first book about that.
And there's a lot of conflict that brings up
a lot of emotion with people.
Some people hate that concept.
I personally love it.
I'd love to hear what your thoughts are
and fake it till you make it.
Yeah, so I mean, I think I was talking to a group
of college students the other day, and
many of them wanted to be entrepreneurs.
They were talking about, you know, how do you start when you don't have a lot of experience,
or if you kind of can't prove that you can do what you want to do.
And I said, if you look around and you think that everybody around you doesn't have imposter
syndrome, then you were, you, then you're totally mistaken. I think everybody has something that they are putting
on a face when they go out in public.
And I don't mean that in a bad way.
I mean, they're trying to present them their best self
and overcome that insecurity about something
or that fear of not being received that you want.
And that is, it's faking it, right?
I mean, it's what I've seen over and over again in my career,
is that there are times where overly cautious.
And I end up achieving what you get when you're overly cautious.
And then there are times when I just step in, and I say,
like, there's no reason why I can't do this and
You know, you tend to be able to do more than then you think you can you know
We have in our organization and I've worked with others over time
You know people who are more introverted and extroverted, but there are times that you have to be extroverted if you're in a client service business
Like mine my wife is an introvert, but she knows she's like I have to go out and put on high extroversion
when I'm gonna go and talk. All of it is about kind of knowing what role you need
to play to help yourself in a given environment and and if you can do that
it's not changing who you are. It is simply stepping up to the moment
and trying to make the most of it.
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Share with us a little bit, and I know your book does a really good job of framing this up,
but how does it work to work with you and work with your team?
I know that you have so much experience doing this, you have so much data that you leverage,
you know, so much research case studies that proves that your strategy's work,
but how does it actually work when someone comes to work with you? How does this messaging and clarity come to be? that you leverage so much research case studies that proves that your strategy's work,
but how does it actually work when someone comes to work with you?
How does this messaging and clarity come to be?
Yeah, well, so I think typically when we are working with clients,
they're coming to us and they say,
we have a message that we want to communicate
and people are not getting it.
Either they don't understand how good we are
or they don't understand why we're different
or they don't appreciate how good we are or they don't understand why we're different or they don't
appreciate how much we're doing in order to help them. And I would say that you know if when they
say if my customer or if my stakeholder would just understand I say this is going to be a long and
healthy relationship because nobody has to understand anything.
Like, our job as communicators is to make it easy for our audience to understand what
we have to say, make it easy for them to believe what we have to say, make it easy for them
to like what we have to say.
And to do it all, I believe really strongly while telling the truth, but finding the right
language to do it.
And so when clients come to us, the way that we approach things is we say,
look, the first step is, let's understand what it is that you want to communicate.
What's the substance of it?
How is it that you're communicating it today, or you think you should communicate it?
We then have a process that's grounded in a deep understanding of behavioral science,
and a real focus on language
and framing to say, all right,
why don't we approach it in a slightly different way?
We're gonna try and say the same thing,
different language, and then we're gonna go out
and test it with your audience.
And that testing may be in a focus group,
it might be in a survey, it might be in any number
of other methodologies that we use. But the point is,
and our business is built on this idea that it's not what you say that matters, it's what your audience
hears. And so we come up with a number of different ways of saying what it is that we're trying to
communicate, and then we ask the audience that we're trying to reach, how do they hear it? What is it
that they interpret? How do we know to take that instant coffee and move it to the end instead of leaving
it at the beginning? And when we test it with audiences, they generally give us the answer.
You know, and then ultimately we build a strategy out of that. And one of the things that
is really powerful to me and still amazes me each time we go and work with a different client.
And I think you probably see as well in the work
that you do is that industries have so many different
challenges and every company is unique,
but there are so many areas of commonality.
That there are certain things that just,
they work, there are certain things that don't work.
And if I wanna connect with you, I have to find a way to make the conversation personal.
I have to find a way to connect with you.
If I talk about myself the whole time, I'm going to be much less successful, and that's
true whether I'm talking about a drug in a pharmaceutical industry, a financial services product,
or any number, or any other industry anywhere.
And so we're often finding those universal truths and then identifying exactly the right
words to communicate that truth in that context on behalf of that client to that audience.
So when you're speaking about that, I'm thinking of it.
I believe it was your book, I'm sure you'll enlighten us,
where you use the example of a 401K
and a company trying to encourage people
to contribute to their 401K,
and then you framed it up four different ways
and showed how differently people received that.
Can you share a little bit about that?
Yeah, so there are, if you think about saving for retirement,
there are all different ways to talk about the benefits of saving for retirement.
On the one hand, it could be about living the retirement of your dreams.
Well, actually, I'll tell you, so one element of it,
which may not have been what you saw, but we ask you a question all the time about retirement.
It is which of the following describes the retirement
that you want. And there are three answers we give. Is it the retirement of your dreams,
a comfortable retirement or a retirement that maintains your lifestyle?
And if you look at historically what most financial services companies have promised about
retirement, it is running on the beach, taking these trips,
living the life you've always imagined.
But if you ask Americans, but it's true globally as well,
what retirement they want, it's a comfortable retirement.
It's one where they get to spend more time with family and friends.
Because for most people, dreams are dreams.
And they don't necessarily think about retirement
as a way to do lots of things that they haven't done.
They want financial security more than financial freedom.
Talking about the language of comfortable retirement,
having the peace of mind of knowing that
you don't have to worry about money,
that you've got your expenses taken care of
and you can spend time with the people that you care about.
Most often resonates much more than saying, you'll be able to go off and do whatever you
want because people don't necessarily believe that that's possible.
And so when we talk about 401Ks, it could be the difference between talking about a long
term future, it could be talking about saving a little bit today and how that will help
give you the confidence to retire in the future.
But each frame and each message really communicates a different aspect of what it means to think about
retirement and it's kind of remarkable how differently people will interpret those messages from the
way you might anticipate. Oh absolutely, that was such a great job making that example in the book.
But now that I'm listening to you,
there's so much validity to what you say.
I'm getting anxiety thinking, oh my gosh,
I have to start breaking down messaging
on every single thing I'm talking about.
How does someone give a keynote effectively now?
It's gonna take years to research this and develop it.
So how do you advise people,
what, when should we be looking at the messaging
and when are we just showing up?
Well, so I think first,
I suspect that you've figured a lot of this out
because you can tell from how people respond to you most, right?
And so I think the places where it becomes most evident
that you need to work on it is when you are hoping
for a desired reaction and you're not getting it, right?
And so if you're out there and you're not in your head
at me right now and that's a good signal to me
that I'm hopefully heading down the right path
in terms of engaging you, I'm sure you have.
Maybe you haven't.
I have looked out at an audience that I'm speaking to
and got, oh no, I'm like, I've lost them.
They're, you know, this is not the reaction
that I'm looking for.
Well, let me give you a hack.
That's when you stop and say,
wait a minute, did I ever do it?
And you need to renegade, right?
Right, but.
But, you know, but there are a lot of messages out there
where you know that, you know,
A, the stakes are really big.
You don't want to get it wrong.
The people that you're talking to are really important, you know, and so again, you don't want to get it wrong. Or, you know, it's a complicated issue, or it's
an emotional issue, or it's a politicized issue. And those are the places where it becomes
I think really most important to think about how have you framed this? Have you considered who your audience is?
What they want?
There's one saying that I use a lot, particularly in the realm of persuasion.
It's good for Thanksgiving dinner, which is the question of when was the last time you changed somebody's mind by telling them that they were wrong?
Never.
Never.
Right? And so most of us, when we want to, when we want to
persuade someone, we're so convinced of our truths of what we believe to be true, that we just want
to tell them everything. And if we just give them all of our facts, then it's going to change their
mind. But, but that's usually telling them that they're wrong because they've got a different set
of facts and beliefs. And so, you know, that's a place where you've got to say,
if I really want to change your mind about something
that you don't believe, I better think about what you want,
what you need, what you believe,
and then build my message from there
as opposed to just telling you what I think
that usually won't work.
Yeah, that's very true.
And I've experienced the same thing.
It's nearly impossible to do it that way.
All right, where does that or how important is the power of storytelling in all of this?
Well, storytelling, you know, as we've done throughout this conversation, is the way to bring these
concepts to life. And that by giving you an idea, but then showing you how that idea exists in the world is really powerful.
I think stories are essential. We often talk when we're talking to companies,
we talk about the fact that there are stories that are nice to hear, but they don't really move
a conversation forward. And then there are what we call scalable stories. And those are stories that are good stories
in their own right,
but they are indicative of a larger point
that the company's trying to make.
And so, you know, if I tell you a story
of one example of something that I've done,
let's say we've done work with companies
on telling their philanthropy story.
And they tell one story about their volunteer efforts. That's a story.
It's a nice story. It might be great to know that employees are going out and they're, you know,
building a house, and a habitat for humanity, but it hasn't yet become a scalable story because
it hasn't been connected to a larger point that you're trying to make about the organization. And so stories are essential, but it's not the story alone that matters.
It's how you connect it to a larger point and hopefully many other stories that reinforce that point
that really become powerful. That's again another element that I hadn't thought about. So thank you
for sharing that tip with me today. I will be applying a lot of us back to my own business
and to my own conversations.
One of the things that I noticed through some of your materials
is this idea to drop the negative instead of focusing,
and I saw it in some of your case that these two,
instead of focusing on what your competitors
aren't doing well, focus on what you're focused on,
the positive, and what's interesting to me
is I've had Chris Boss on the show a number
of times who's a very famous negotiator. He has a strategy where he leads with the negative
to hook people in, so I wanted to hear what your direction was different from that.
Well, so I think in general what we see is that if I want to bring people along with me,
I've got to give them a positive reason to do it. If I want to bring people along with me, I've got to give them a positive
reason to do it.
If I want to separate people, if I want to divide, if I want to paralyze people, I use negativity.
So going back to ancient rhetoric, that is a core idea of how we bring people together,
we use a positive vision for the future.
If we want to rally our base, if we want to get people to stop,
if we want to divide, we use negative language.
Now, there are times where a negative prompt or a disturbor
can be very helpful in setting up a conversation,
but it needs to be surrounded, at least in my experience,
with something positive.
What do you get out of this?
Why should you come with me? in my experience with something positive. What do you get out of this?
Why should you come with me?
What are the positive things that you will find?
And I think not knowing exactly what he said
in that context, I imagine he was talking about
kind of what you would lose if you don't do,
leave the hostages behind if you don't, you know.
And but part of that is also then creating a vision of keeping
what you have, which is positive.
And so there's a little bit of nuance to it, but, but I think, you know, companies often
have a tendency to, to talk about the negative, to say, if you do this something bad, or if
you don't do this this something bad will happen.
And over and over again we see examples that show in our research that it's the, instead
of saying that it's if you do do this, this will happen and the positive outcome that
gets people to move.
And so for example, if you go back to the retirement example and I say, if you don't start
saving today, you will not be able to retire when you want. And I'm your financial advisor, for example. Chances are you're not going to feel
that happy about working with me because I've kind of scared you a little bit, threatened you a
little bit, and maybe paralyzed you a little bit. If I say, look, if I help show you how you can
start saving a little bit today, so that when you get
to the point that you want to retire, you're able, I've now kind of set myself up as a partner,
as a guide, as a support, and I'm giving you a solution instead of just a problem. And so
chances are you're going to be more likely you want to work with me than the other person.
want to work with me, then the other person. And so that's where we see a lot of the positivity versus negativity really playing out. So does that mean that you don't, you're not for
scarcity marketing? I am not. So some of it really depends on how you present it, right? Because
there's scarcity marketing that says you kind of can't have this. And then there's scarcity marketing that says, you kind of can't have this. And then there's scarcity marketing that says,
I'm gonna show you how you can get it, right?
So, act now in some ways is a positive, right?
If you do this, you will get this,
as opposed to, you know, whatever the inverse of that would be,
that is just, you're not gonna be able to get this.
So, it becomes a question of whether or not I can give you access to a to the solution that you're
trying to get to or to the positive outcome that you're almost always trying to get to
as opposed to just basically telling you that if you don't act you're going to miss out.
Okay, so this is so funny. Organically this just led to another point that I wanted to
dive into. In both instances with the scarcity marketing and the Chris Voss story, I did not give you proper
context, and you talk about the importance of context. Can you give us a little bit of color on that?
Yeah, so I mean, context often determines what conversation we're having. In fact, so I may have
been talking about entirely the wrong thing, right? And that would be my, you know, my mistake, particularly if I was actually just having
somebody was pitching something to me.
And they didn't understand the context in which they were having the conversation with
me.
And it was a terrible conversation.
It was really like they said nothing that resonated with me because they didn't understand
what my needs were.
And so setting the context is often, you know, sometimes it's really understanding who you're
talking to and what it is that might be important to them or move them.
And then once I do that, it may be how I set the context in coming back to you and giving you a
response. And so what an example of that might be coming back
to the Chris Voss example is if I said something to you
as simple as let's say I was trying to do X,
I've now set the context in a certain place.
And that makes it much easier for me
to be an effective communicator in terms
of talking about that as opposed to not telling you what I was trying to achieve and then just trying to do it.
But there are, there are all different ways to use language to set the context. Sometimes it is talking about things at a very tactical level. Sometimes it's talking about them at a very high level or moving the conversation.
We see it a lot on when you have good politicians or good communicators where you ask me a question
that I don't want to answer. I can reset the context or pivot and answer a different question,
but it doesn't sound like I'm evading the question that you've asked.
So context plays a really important role in how we interact with one another,
how we interpret information, and ultimately, you know, whether or not we are successful.
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I'd actually randomly did a post on LinkedIn this morning
about labeling, and I'm very interested to hear your opinion
on how powerful labeling can be if you think it should be used.
And by labeling, I use the example of Crooked Hillary
in the post that she'd been labeled.
And whether it doesn't matter if you're Democrat or Republican,
you're probably gonna remember and have some emotion
around that labeling.
But then also I've seen in media instances be labeled
like quiet quitting.
So what is that actually?
What is the power of labeling and how can that user should be used?
It's really effective.
It can be really, it can be used for good or evil,
like many things, right?
One of the most important realities
for people in thinking about how to effectively communicate
is that you're not the only one communicating, right?
That we're inundated with all of these messages.
Everybody talks about how many times
we get interrupted during the day
or how many messages we are. we have to make things stick.
And one of the best ways to make things stick is to make them memorable and disruptive
and simple.
And labeling has a really powerful ability to do that.
It is really effective, you know, in the case of crooked Hillary, one of the reasons
why it was so effective
is because it tapped into an existing narrative right or wrong about Hillary, that there was,
you know, there were things in the Clinton's past that had been perceived by many as crooked,
and so if I put that label on it, it sticks. There are other times that Trump used labels that
didn't kind of tap into that same narrative and they didn't stick.
And so, you know, that's how to kind of use it effectively,
but they are really powerful.
I mean, it's hard to get messages, ideas to stick
and labeling is a really powerful way to do it.
Now, one of the other things that I think
is really interesting in doing this
is being careful not to use other people's labels.
So when we get into a lot of the most controversial debates that we have today, like use guns as
an example, if you are, if you use the term gun control or gun violence or gun safety,
you are using labels that have a whole lot of baggage already associated with them. And so you have a whole conversation going on in the background just by using that existing
label.
And so what we often try and do when we're trying to break through on an issue that has already
been labeled in different ways is to come up with a new way of talking about it.
What's a new category to use? What's a new label to use that doesn't have all of that baggage
that the existing labels already do?
There was an example you used somebody
on your team wrote an article and it was an LGBTQ issue
and they had changed the well-known label to something new
and different into your point was very strategic
in that
regard and change the conversation.
This was an article from someone on your team had written on your blog, the change in language
from the stop sexualization of children bill to the don't say gay bills sparked a larger
debate about the bill's true intentions and impact on the LGBTQ community.
Yeah, I mean, so in some ways that made that a powerful shift.
So if I say stop the sexualization of children,
I'm using a lot of words with a lot of sentences
that are not intuitive.
If I say don't say gay, first of all,
it's got a little bit of that alliteration and it's,
or very simple, it's very easy to understand.
And so that was a benefit to the people who were advocates on that side of the bill, to
simplify it and make it repeatable.
It also kind of tapped into something that I think with the constituents that they were
trying to reach, it just intuitively resonated much more. And so it took an issue that was kind of hard to understand,
or maybe felt a little distant and made it much more personal.
I mean, we have one of the examples that we were involved
in a long time ago was shifting the estate tax to the death
tax.
And the estate tax was something that an average American didn't
really pay attention to, because they don't live
in an estate and a state is the wealthy person up on the hill
and why not tax them more.
But if I talk about it as a death tax,
well everybody dies and nobody likes paying taxes.
So all of a sudden, it at least gives you a reason
to start to pay more attention to that term.
And that's what relabeling can do.
What can someone do?
Because this idea of taking something
that's too long-winded, too many words,
and how do we make it shorter and powerful, more powerful.
And your website is such a great example of how to do that.
I mean, it just pits you with these really clear, short,
tight windows of words that you understand immediately
what you do, and it's's very very powerful and clear.
Are there any strategies or tips that you can give people listening to how you can shorten some of these really long-winded
mantras or whatever they may be? Yeah, it's a great question Heather. You know, I think I think the
biggest challenge is often separating the most important thing from the other things that are
important but not as important.
I mean, when you narrow down, even if you don't say gay
as an example, like there were other aspects of the bill
and the debate and the issue that were not included
in that phrase, right?
They picked one thing to hone in on.
And so, you know, what is the one thing that matters most?
You can never communicate everything. And that's often where you end up going from one word to
five words to 15 words in a sentence when you try and describe your business or your value proposition,
what's the one thing that really matters most? And if you can identify that,
then it often becomes much easier
to come up with a simple statement to articulate it.
And where does emotion play into that?
Well, emotion is everywhere.
You know, I think sometimes we hear people push back
on the idea of being emotional versus being rational.
Everything that we do is driven by emotion. All the Everything that we do is driven by emotion.
All the decisions that we make are driven by emotion.
We then rationalize them with good reasons.
But emotion gets at the idea of how do I make it easy for you to like,
easy for you to believe, pleasing to your ear is often part of the emotion of it.
If I can quiet quitting, it sounds nice to the ear.
And so that people on the other side talked about,
or the come back to that was loud layoffs, right?
Because we find that we are attracted to those types
of terms, but all of this is about appealing to emotion.
I mean, it really is pretty rare.
We do a lot of work with physicians,
and physicians say, just give me the data.
I'm a scientist.
I want to know the data.
And what we do is we present the data in five different ways
in different narratives, each of which kind of taps
into a different emotion.
And there's always a difference in how they react.
And so they are responding to the same data,
racked in different emotional narratives
in ways that they don't think that they should be
or would be or want to be.
And so all of this is about emotion.
It's about kind of how does the message make you feel?
Does it resonate with something that you believe
already? Because, you know, as a communicator, the first thing that I'm trying to do, I want to get you nodding your head in approval. Before I'm going to change your mind,
before I'm going to introduce something new, or I'm going to tap into something that I know you
already believe, but if I can get you nodding your head in agreement, like I'm halfway down the field. It's like sales 101.
Couldn't have done anything.
Yeah, exactly.
But it is.
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It's the mic drop of chocolate. It's chocolate with
game. It's chocolate with, what's the word in it after? Oh yeah, crunch. So tell us a little
bit, I'm sure we've peaked the interest of many people listening right now. What does
it look like to work with you and your company and who is that that right person to reach
out to you that might need some help?
Are we're a number of different people within organizations. It's often the chief marketing officer or their teams chief communications officer.
We do a lot of market research as I mentioned as part of our work. And so it's people and insights functions.
Increasingly, it's actually in the HR function as well because companies are recognizing that how they communicate with their employees, with their team members
is critically important.
Or it's the CEO themselves who have something important that they want to communicate.
And then when they work with us, our job is to ultimately deliver them the right language, precisely the right words and phrases,
but not just the right words and phrases, and understanding of why those words and phrases
or that order or that reframing makes a difference.
Because if I give you a set of words and say these are the right words, first of all, you're
less likely to take my word for it. If I haven't explained
to you why they work. But also, if you get into a conversation and you need to go beyond those words,
you're stuck because I've just given you a set of words. And so we really focus on trying to
help people understand what's the obstacle to effectively communicating their message.
What's the insight we call it a shift? How you need to change
your mindset by going from A to B and hear the words to support that shift so that you can be effective.
And so ultimately we deliver a strategy that explains what to say, what not to say, and why it matters.
Well, the work that you're doing is incredibly interesting. It definitely can benefit so many people
Where can they go to find you and find out more? Well, I think the easiest is meslansky.com
Which is M-A-S-L-A-N-S-K-Y.com. That's our website. We can take it from there
And you can also check out his book Language of Trust Michael
Thank you so much for your time today and thank you for the impactful work and language that you are using
Thank you Heather. Great questions. great conversation, really appreciate it.
All right guys, until next week,
keep creating your confidence.
I'm gonna write a little over here.
I decided to change that tiny amount.
And the right bell out.
I couldn't be more excited
for what you're getting here.
Start learning and growing.
And inevitably something will happen.
You know what?
16 to 11.
You don't stop to look around once in a while.
You can miss it.
I'm on this journey with me.
I hope you're enjoying this episode so far.
I'm Jennifer Cohen, host the top ranking business and entrepreneur
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