Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Lila Smith: Say Things Better | E53
Episode Date: January 21, 2020Ready to level up your communication skills? Communication is the language of leadership, and learning to do it effectively is key to personal and career success! Join us this week with Lila Smith, ac...tress, Linkedin influencer and founder of communication consultancy, Say Things Better. Tune in to learn how acting helped Lila perfect her communication strategy, get an overview of her 5-step framework to Say Things Better, and hear her tips on communication from how to prepare for a speaking event to her advice on pivoting during a talk based on the the cues and visual signs your audience gives off. Fivver: Get services like logo creation, whiteboard videos, animation and web development on Fivver: https://track.fiverr.com/visit/?bta=51570&brand=fiverrcpaIf you liked this episode, please write us a review! Want to connect with other YAP listeners? Join the YAP Society on Slack: bit.ly/yapsociety Earn rewards for inviting your friends to YAP Society: bit.ly/sharethewealthyap Follow YAP on IG: www.instagram.com/youngandprofiting Reach out to Hala directly at Hala@YoungandProfiting.com Follow Hala on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Follow Hala on Instagram: www.instagram.com/yapwithhala Check out our website to meet the team, view show notes and transcripts: www.youngandprofiting.com  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Young and Profiting Podcast, a place where you can listen, learn and profit. I'm your host
Talataha and today we're talking with Lila Smith.
Lila has a fascinating background.
She started her career as an actress, and then dabbled in e-commerce and made a name for
herself in the corporate world.
And after garnering major attention on LinkedIn for a unique perspective on communication, she
became an entrepreneur, launching a communication coaching business called a say things better.
Tune in to learn how acting helped Lila perfect her communication strategy,
get an overview of her five-step framework to say things better,
and hear her tips on communication,
from how to prepare for a speaking event to her advice on pivoting during a talk
based on the cues and visual signs that your audience gives off.
Hi Lila, thanks for joining Young and Profiting Podcast. talk based on the cues and visual signs that your audience gives off.
Hi, Lila. Thanks for joining Young and Profiting podcast.
Oh, thank you so much for having me. It's really exciting to be a guest on a podcast that I am a subscriber of. I know you were telling me before this conversation. And that's so
cool. I love it when the guests that I talk to like to follow the podcast. I have David Meltzer,
who I've interviewed a few times.
There's also, like, a big fan of the show.
I know.
He was on an episode that was just a couple of weeks
after my birthday.
Well, I mean, my birthday's the same time every year,
but it was a couple of weeks after my birthday last year.
And I remember that episode.
And sometimes I will listen to your podcast,
get introduced to a guest, and then I'll go stalk them around the internet.
I listen to your episode with Claude Silver, and then I also, she's on an episode of my
friend Adam Posner's podcast, The Pause Cast, and then I went and binge on her stuff on
LinkedIn.
And so it's a great way to get exposed to other creative thinkers.
I love what you do.
Oh, thank you so much. I really appreciate it. Today we're really going to be
focused on communication. And we haven't really talked about this on the
podcast. So really excited that I get to talk about this topic as it's one of
my favorite topics as a marketer. To me, communication is so fascinating
because it's kind of like a subtle field wars have been fought relationships all around the world
Formed and broken businesses failing and succeeding and it's really all stemming from at the core
communication in my opinion and it's really like the foundation of life and business
You are really focused on communication right now
But you started your career as an actress.
And you actually went on to work in the corporate world
in e-commerce, and then you became an entrepreneur
with your current business, say things better
as a communication consultant.
So could you share some more color
about your professional journey
and how you landed on communication
as your main focus area?
Yeah, thank you so much for doing your research and learning so much about my
background so far to share with some people who don't know anything about me
yet. I'm Lila Smith. I'm the creator of the Safe Things Better method of
intentional communication. And it happens to be that I was this actress
professionally for 10 years in New York City and on tours around the country. I learned all of this stuff when I was acting that I felt could be used
in a way that was more immediate, that, you know, a show, you'll go and see a player, you'll
go and watch a movie, and maybe the story will stick with you. And so I think that story
is important. But communication happens in a moment, interpersonally.
So if I'm talking to you now or a brand is giving you one blast of a message or one ad
that you scroll by, we have almost no time to communicate effectively.
So in that time, the whole story has to be told.
You don't have a full play or a full movie to really be clear with what's important for
you to have other people understand.
So I've been using my tools that I learned in theater to help other people communicate
better in those moments in everyday life and in branding.
It's been kind of a wild journey because I was performing for a really long time and I thought
this has got to be the way that I'm meant to share my gifts with the world.
I'm a creative person, I love being on stage, I love sharing stories that I think are important,
I love the work that we're doing creatively, but I still felt like my story was getting lost in the background,
and my words were nowhere to be found. It was always some playwright's words that I was speaking,
and my storytelling happened through those words as a vehicle, but I wasn't in it.
And now what I love to do is help people to use the tools that I learned in acting,
to express themselves and connect with their message directly to the people that need to hear
at the most. I love this. I heard you on another interview where you talk about make believe,
and how make believe doesn't necessarily mean pretending. Could you talk about that a little bit?
Yeah, I mean, when you're playing make believe,
you're making somebody else believe
because you believe it first.
When you look at kids playing the game of make believe,
or you're looking at an episode of Mr. Rogers'
neighborhood and the land of make believe,
it all exists in reality.
It's reality in your imagination, it's reality in your heart,
and you only have to share that world that you believe in for other people to believe in it too.
You can look at kids who are experts at this because they haven't been socialized out of
being comfortable exploring what they believe and expressing what they believe.
It's only as we get older that we start worrying about
whether other people can see what we imagine or whether their reality is not going to
jive with ours.
So making believe, you can make somebody else believe by believing it first yourself
and expressing and creating a world based in story or based in just presence
and a moment and intentional communication that brings them into that with you.
Totally, I love that.
So you've transitioned your career a few times.
Let's begin with acting.
You spent your young life preparing to be in actress.
I think almost 30 years you were acting. How did you decide to switch paths and how did you realize that acting just wasn't for you anymore?
It was my whole life. I kind of came out dancing, you know, like feet first. And so I was meant to be in some way on a stage or in front of people, my parents thought this girl needs to be on some kind of a stage. Let's put her in acting glasses and camps and I loved it.
And I demanded more of it. So it was what I thought at the time was the best way to connect through
story and to get to express different kinds of perspectives creatively. I do that same thing now,
but there's no fiction about it. I'm telling my story as a
speaker and I'm helping other people tell theirs, and that feels more direct for me, and I like
that a lot more. It's not that I would never perform again, but I'm so much happier now dealing
with the non-fiction world and using those same tools that I used in acting.
But I stopped acting when I was, oh gosh,
I was really excited to be in this play.
I had hustled and auditioned and I had gotten cast
in something with a really great theater company in New York.
And I was just one night, like, God,
I would rather wash dishes than go to rehearsal right now.
And it was just it was not a good feeling. You know, I had been doing this for so long and loving it so
much. And then when I stopped loving it and I started feeling more like I was doing it out of
obligation to the time I had already put in rather than to being called from my heart to continue creating
this way, it wasn't a good feeling. And it made me feel like I have I've been wasting my time,
have I been doing the completely wrong thing. And I don't think that's true. I had to forgive
myself in the moment. And remember, we go through seasons in our life. We can change and we can change our minds, do something else.
And it was that permission that I gave myself to go and see how else can I use this creativity,
how else can I apply this that will feel better than this?
Because there is nothing worse than going into an extremely hard to survive an industry when your
heart is not in it. That's just stupid. You're going to lose your mind. You're going to
lose your money. And I did for a while. And so I had to kind of rescue myself to get out
and do some searching. Yeah. After you left acting, you went into
corporate, I believe, and you dabbled in e-commerce. What was that experience like being an actor not,
and I think you went to undergrad in college
like for theater.
So you didn't really have like a business credentials.
What was that experience like being in the corporate world
and how did you navigate that?
And then why did you decide, you know,
okay, this isn't for me again,
I wanna be an entrepreneur. So, we know, you know, okay, this isn't for me again. I want to be an entrepreneur.
So we know it's funny like yes, I had this career in e-commerce and you know before that in
brand experiences so like events and
in-store, retail, pop-ups, things like that, but that was my day job.
Actors need to have some kind of day job to give them income while they're pursuing this
very low paid path, at least in the beginning.
And so a lot of actors look for things with flexible schedules like bartending or waiting
tables, especially in New York City where, you know, every waiter is also an actor.
But for me, that was not going to be it.
I'm not like a great waitress.
I was a singing waitress one summer.
And I was also in the plays that that theater company produced.
But otherwise, that is, it's a real skill
and I don't really have it.
So that wasn't going to be it for me.
So I needed to make money while I was performing.
And so I happened
to have this very traditional career trajectory that ran parallel to my acting career. So
it wasn't like one and then another. It always happened at the same time. So when I was
in leading a department in e-commerce, I was also performing in this theater off Broadway playing amazing roles, things that I was loving, sinking my teeth into, and then taking some of that creative energy back over to the office.
So I saw firsthand how the communication skills that I had that I used in theater translated right away into an office environment, into e-commerce and digital marketing, and expressing
creatively a full story of everything that mattered about a brand to a customer, and
everything that mattered about a company to the employees, and everything that mattered
about a story to the audience that I was performing for.
It all was happening at the same time for me. But I didn't even realize it
until I went over to LinkedIn and started getting engaged in a community there and started
commenting on things. And I would come up with things like, oh, this thing happened in
the office. It's sort of like that thing that happened in theater. And then people would
ask me questions, oh, say more about that. And at first I was like, really, that's interesting to you.
You know, I had no idea that it would be interesting to people that theater provides a
perspective in business that it's otherwise missing.
Yeah.
And so when I was told by my audience on LinkedIn, what you have to say is interesting
and different and we want it and we'll pay you for it. That's what started me on this entrepreneurial path.
This, I have to provide something
because people are asking for it.
They're telling me, they're offering me money,
they're offering me opportunities.
They're saying this is interesting.
What is it that I can do to make a thing of this?
And it happened to be just something
that my audience made for
me.
I really feel like my life now is due to those people.
Do you feel that if you didn't grow your following on LinkedIn that you would never have started
savings better?
Absolutely.
I would never have.
I would never have.
It didn't occur to me.
I mean, okay, so never, like, maybe it would have popped into my head,
but I'm not a risky person. You know, I might have had the idea, but I'm not somebody who
takes big leaps comfortably without a strategy, and strategists, so it looks like I'm taking
big leaps fast, but I'm just smart about the steps that come next and things once I make
a decision, but I don't have a lot of risk
in me.
I don't have a lot of, let me take this leap off this bridge, not knowing who's going
to catch me.
I am needed of full community of people cheering and saying, jump, jump, jump, you know,
we got you.
Totally.
Totally.
I needed that.
I'm not like a crowd surfer without a crowd, basically. And just for context from my listeners who don't know Lila,
she has about like 30,000 followers on LinkedIn,
very engaged community, she does LinkedIn live.
She's got a very active community base that supports her on that channel.
That worked well because I was going to ask you one of my next questions
was how have you leveraged LinkedIn? But LinkedIn is basically what propelled you.
So that's awesome.
Well, it started that way.
It is.
I'm like, you and I met there.
I've met so many very cool people on LinkedIn who I would never have had the chance to
meet otherwise.
People from all over the world, and I'm not talking about social media superstars or
influencers.
I'm talking about people who run businesses in Ghana
or who are philosophers in India
or who are architects in London.
I'm talking about the people who have varied
professional interests,
but everybody on that platform is there for one reason
and that's connective professional growth.
We all kind of rise together.
We share ideas, we share support.
And the diversity of the landscape of people that I've been exposed to on LinkedIn makes me
better at my job. I'm listening every single day. It's been almost a thousand consecutive days
that I've been on LinkedIn listening and watching and engaging in building relationships.
So I know how to serve that many more kinds of people
because of the exposure of the platform.
So it's not just that they propelled me into this business,
but that they give me everything I need to know
to better serve with what I do.
It's like instant feedback.
And you also get ideas from other people.
Like when I'm posting content and people are commenting things
They're giving me insight that I wouldn't have ever thought of by myself
Let's talk about say things better. What is your mission with say things better? And what is a day in the life of Laila Smith?
Oh, is there a typical day?
I'm looking for it. I mean, I do a bunch of different podcast interviews,
so there's usually one week or so,
sometimes less, sometimes more.
But there's no real typical day.
I have clients in different parts of the world,
like Australia and Saudi Arabia and London and Oregon.
So like, there are people in all the different time zones.
So a lot of it is trying to balance what is a normal time for them to work and for me
to work with them, trying to help them with branding themselves and their communication
challenges and being better as a speaker.
Whatever it is that I'm working on with that person has to happen at a time that makes
sense for them when I'm also not supposed to be sleeping. So that's like the primary priority is make sure that people have
time with me. And then I try to fit other things in around that. I'm pretty flexible and adaptable
with my own schedule, so that works out. But otherwise I don't really have like a typical thing.
It's always something new, and I love that about what I do. What is say things better? Can you describe your communication consultant
business with everybody? Yeah, so say things better is a methodology. It helps people to communicate
in a way that connects, whether that's one-on-one or business-to-audience. It's just five steps,
and it's based on the method that I used in theater when I was rehearsing to get the best parts of me to come through the story
I was telling in service of the character in service of the story and service of the audience that we were connecting to.
So we did all of this chain of communication person to person on stage, the people on stage in a scene, the
environment that they're in, which translated to in my e-commerce life, the website that
people were looking at.
What did it feel like to be in that room?
And this immersion in a storytelling experience really gave me so much to use to communicate
very clearly and to communicate in a way that people would
feel like they belonged there in that story that they were part of it.
So the method that I used in acting to pull my story through, it comes in a series of steps
and I sort of reappropriated some of those steps and then added a few that were based
on my personal values.
And that's because in theater, we do all of this stuff
to create dramatic conflict on stage,
which is interesting to watch.
But it's the opposite of what I want
to achieve in communication.
I don't want conflict.
I want connection and confluence and collaboration.
So those are the things that I used as inspiration.
Were my acting tools.
Put them into this series of five steps.
And now I give that to people.
And I use it to help them refine who they're talking to, why it's important to them to
say anything to them at all, what they want to get out of this particular communication
event that they're going into.
So what'll make it a win for them?
What'll make it a win for the other people that they're asking something of to be there and what it's going to feel like there. And all of
that is in just these five steps, motivation, objective, communication
partners, objective toolbox and verb your values.
Awesome. Well, that's my next question. Could you walk us through your five step
methodology for say things better? Yeah, sure. So motivation is the thing that's
going to hold you accountable to being
an intentional communicator at all.
We all have some kind of a legacy
we want to leave behind or a mission of some kind that
drives us.
And putting that into a motivation statement
is a way of being clear about everything
that you're doing, all of the goals that you're setting,
what are they ultimately serving,
so that you can set your priorities better
and connect with people more clearly.
I think you also call this a super objective, correct?
At one point, yeah, I was like a super objective
for a character in a play or in a movie.
A character has a super objective,
which is their goal for an entire play.
When you look at them and you say, this is what's driving them in their journey to move from
beginning of the story to the end of it, at least where we see. And then furthermore,
like past off the page, off of the script, that journey for that character continues if they're,
you know, if you make believe that they exist and that they have a real life.
So that's where I got that from, is Super Objective, which comes from the Stanislavski system,
which is a rehearsal method for actors that really made the acting movement more about humanistic,
natural connection rather than being showy on stage. So it really took everything from,
let me show off and get a pause for being stupid
to let me connect and tell a real story
in a way that feels like you're getting a peek
into a window in someone's house or someone's life
and feeling like you're part of that story,
like you're another character.
So it's a much more connective way of performing,
and that's where that first step comes from.
Very cool.
So the second step is setting one objective
for one communication event at a time.
In acting, actors will go on stage for a character in one scene
and decide what is the one thing that my character must get from
the other person on stage in order for this scene to be a success for them and then use
everything we can, whether it's the script or our own context and performance and creative
work to make that happen for them. Even if the script says they don't get it, the character
doesn't know that until the very last second that they're given that final
no or the scene ends.
So that's what's interesting to watch.
And we're driven for our own objectives in life too.
We're all positively motivated.
Even people that you think are jerks.
They're not trying necessarily to make someone else feel bad for no reason. They know, they're not driven to make other people feel bad unless they're like,
you know, a psychopath or something. But they are driven to do something that will feel good for
themselves. We all are. We are all choosing what is going to make me happy, what is going to make
me in a better positive position. And that's your objective for this one communication event
at a time.
So an email subject line should have the objective get
them to open the email.
The email itself can have a new objective.
That's a different communication event.
So setting one at a time, one objective at a time
keeps you clear on message.
The third step is your communication partners objective,
and this is where theater really leaves off.
We are only driven as actors to pursue
our own characters objectives,
because again, it creates that conflict
that's interesting to watch.
But in real life, you want partnerships,
you want sustainability, you want the opposite of conflict.
So the opposite of only pursuing our own objectives
is not to not pursue our objectives,
but to also pursue our communication partners' objectives.
Everybody else needs something too.
So we have to think, what do they want?
What do they want to get out of this?
What does Hollow need to get out of this
to feel like this was a great episode?
What can I give to her audience to make them feel like I'm so glad I
downloaded the Young & Profiting podcast today because Lila Smith was on it and she gave me these
things that I needed in order to move forward or think of things from a different angle or to
examine my communication more closely. So if those are the objectives of the audience in listening to an episode about communication,
then it's my job to look at step four, your toolbox,
and see what can I uniquely provide that is just mine,
that I can provide to this audience
to make them feel that their objective was met
in listening to this episode.
So I'm picking the things that are different about me.
I did theater and I did e-commerce. I did creative work and I did leadership. You know, I did
management. I did, I've done all of these different things in combination and it makes
me different than any other actress who's out there who didn't also have a corporate
career. It makes me different than anybody in corporate who talks about leadership without
really understanding the creative potential of communication.
So those are the things that I bring up and I try to use examples of.
And then verb your values, the fifth step, this is about how it feels when you communicate with people.
So do you want to play a game?
Sure.
Okay, so you're going to be the actress and I'm going to give you a line.
I'm just going to look at like any book that's by me or okay, I have a bottle of water and it says
call us for more information. Okay, so that's your line. Call us for more information. It's not a
very compelling line, so it's really on you to make this interesting for your audience. Call us for more information.
Are you off-booked? Do you know your line now?
Yes.
Okay, great.
So now give me that line.
I'm your communication partner, but set your intention to, to excite me.
To excite me. Call us for more information and your intention is to excite.
Call us for more information if you want to know something that you've
never heard before. Well, I'm intrigued, so you definitely did
intrigue me, and now I'm going to put a limit on you. You can only use the words, call
us for more information. You don't get to choose any other words, call us for more information,
and your intention is to excite. Call us for more information! your intention is to excite.
Call us for more information!
Awesome!
And it definitely changed what you sounded like.
Not because you were like, let me make my voice sound this way, but because you know what
it is for you to try and excite someone.
That's you exciting someone.
So let's try a different verb.
If you want to say, call us for more information, try to dismiss.
Cause for more information.
It sounds really different. It sounds really different.
And so we always sound some way, whether we set our
intentions to sound that way or not.
If we're trying to excite people, we have to decide to
excite them. And it's really that simple. And now you're a gifted actress. And you're also a more
connective communicator. It's my intention to affirm because that's where my values are.
I want people to feel acknowledged and safe and valued just for where they are right now.
In this moment, already. Without improvement,
I want people to see that they already have value. It's not on me to create it for them
that they already are valuable. So that acknowledgement of existing specialness is one of my values,
and I express that with this verb to affirm. So I'm not walking around saying to affirm,
to affirm, to affirm, but it is always my intention
to affirm my communication partner.
And it comes out in the way that I talk to them.
When we started this episode,
you know, I began by affirming
what you're doing is so great.
You get these people who are so awesome, you know?
And saying there's so much value here.
Just affirming that comes from my values
and I do it on purpose.
I'm intentionally affirming the people
that I really believe in.
My communication partner is like you.
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Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. That's awesome. What great advice. I love this framework.
I'm going to ask some questions to dig deep, bro, on this. First, let's start by listening. You
didn't inherently say it, but you did mention that we need to pay attention to how
our communication partners are feeling.
And I think a big part of this is listening, and you say listening is where the magic happens.
So tell us about the importance of listening, and not only listening, but watching your communication
partners as you are speaking.
Oh, people tell us so much that has nothing to do with words.
Look, you know, I just gave you words that didn't belong to you,
that didn't mean anything.
And what I'm listening for is what I think you want me to feel.
You know, I feel dismissed when you choose to dismiss and say those words.
I feel excited when you choose to excite me and say those words.
So I'm looking not for just what is the content of the words that you're sharing, but what
is the intent?
We're always listening for intent to determine whether or not we can trust our communication
partners.
So that is something that I'm always aware of, is what is the intent, how are they feeling,
and also how is my message being received?
I'm looking at things like,
do I still have a connection and eye connection here?
Eye contact is not just one way when I'm looking at someone's eyes,
they have to be looking back at me in order for that to be a real connection.
I'm looking at, are they shifting
around, are they looking around the room, or are they leaning forward in their chair?
Are they hanging on the words that I'm saying, are they looking for more? There's so much
that we can tell by body language, there's so much that we can tell from the words that
people use and the words that they don't use. I'm looking for what people intentionally don't say,
just as much as what they intentionally do say. And it tells a full picture of things. It really
gives us a lot more to go on. If you're in marketing and you're looking in, you know, at web
behavioral data for your customers, you're looking at what time of day are they buying things? When do they make purchases?
And you want to probably scale out and plan and strategize your content and your advertisements
to be close to that point of conversion, that point where they're going to make a purchase.
Just like in theater, you want to put the climax at a certain point in a play where you know you have the
audience hooked and they're hooked and they're hooked and they're with you and
they're with you and if you put it at the wrong part they're gonna lose
interest. They're gonna start thinking about what they're gonna have for lunch
tomorrow. So that timing is everything and so paying attention to is it is now
the time. Is now the time for my audience to hear this message.
Do they seem open to it?
If you're just communicating at home, let's say that you wanted to express something to, you know, your mother, your husband, your brother, your friend,
whoever's around you, and they are in the middle of getting dressed, running out the door, and it seems like they're preoccupied.
Their head is in a million places.
Is it the best time to start a conversation about some feedback
that's really important to you to give
because your feelings were hurt?
Are they gonna be the most open to that message
like at that time?
Most likely not.
So I think that's great advice.
So let's say we are speaking to a group and we notice that there's crossed arms, wandering
eyes, people are fidgeting, maybe a yarn or two.
What do we do then?
How do we turn it around?
Pivot.
Pivot.
Pick a different verb.
Ask yourself, am I exciting them right now?
And maybe you know, if you can pivot your content, it could be your content, or it could
be just your engagement, it could be how connective you are, it could be that they need to
feel something else in order to be compelled to listen.
So disrupt them, make a big, you know, physical gesture just to grab their attention, get
them back in, and then change your verb.
So just now I moved into to mobilize and you can hear a difference in my voice.
Just in case people had been kind of going, I don't know, maybe I'll listen to the rest
of this later, now I am in mobilize mode.
I'm going, if people are listening to this right now, I need you to take action.
I need you to think about the way that you're communicating
and decide that you can do better,
that you don't have to be lazy about it,
that you can do something yourself to be accountable for.
It was because I had this personal relationship
that taught me a very personal lesson,
that I really decided that this verb,
your values, technique,
was something we should be using in real life, not just on stage. So I can share that story if you're
up for it. I'd love to eat too. So in theater, afters, you know, we go on stage and we know what
our objective is for a scene, we know what we're supposed to be going after, but people who've studied Stella Adler and some other techniques,
we choose verbs to guide our communication on stage. We say, it is my intention to communicate to that other person on stage, my
scene partner, and I'm going to exhilarate them. I'm going to accelerate them. I'm going to uplift them. I'm going to encourage
them. I'm going to comfort them. We choose before we go on stage and in the rehearsal process,
what to try. So I know that it's possible to just make that decision. We did it here in this podcast
playing a game. Everybody can do it. You can do it for the whole rest of the day, for the whole
rest of your life. you can decide how to communicate
with people in your life. You can decide what it feels like. A brand can decide. I want, if you're,
let me be your gatorade, and I want to fuel the champion within. You know, I want to fuel. I want
to champion. I want to quench. I want to motivate my communication partner. You make that choice. But in my life, I had
this relationship that I was in for a really long time, where, and I'm sure that you've heard this
before too, and probably a lot of people listening have heard somebody say to them, a lot of times,
it wasn't my intention to offend you. It wasn't my intention to upset you. It wasn't my intention to offend you.
It wasn't my intention to upset you.
It wasn't my intention to leave you out.
It wasn't my intention to exclude you.
It wasn't my intention to put you down.
It wasn't my intention to minimize your dreams.
It wasn't my intention to bury you.
It wasn't my intention to hurt you. So you hear these things a lot.
Like have you heard that from anyone in your life?
Oh, yeah.
Over and over again.
And have you ever said it?
I'm sure I've said it before too.
I've said it too.
Yeah, but it came up.
It was like it just popped happening.
And this was at the time that I was doing a lot of performing.
And I was like, you know what?
No!
That's not good enough.
It's not good enough to say it wasn't my intention.
What was your intention?
And if you can't tell me what it was, then you didn't set your intentions to begin with.
And that shows me that you didn't care enough.
You didn't care as much as you could have about connecting with me,
about our relationship.
Making me feel like I'm the primary communication partner that matters. You didn't care as much as you could have about connecting with me about our relationship.
Making me feel like I'm the primary communication partner that matters.
It minimizes someone if you say things like, well, I could ask 20 other people and they
would all agree with me.
Like there are no other 20 people here.
And even if they did, you're not in a relationship with those people.
I'm
the communication partner who matters. You have to care for me. You have to give me
what my objective is for me to feel that this communication event is a win for me.
You have to verb your values. You have to actively pursue who you want to be as a
person to be accountable for how you make people feel. That's where this comes
from. That's so interesting.
Let's move on to our own body language.
So there's been so many studies where basically
they say that nonverbal communication accounts
for 50 plus percent of how an audience perceives a presenter.
So that means a majority of what we say
is actually not communicated
through our words but through our different physical cues. So how about our own
body language? How do we send the right signals and what are some best practices
when it comes to our own body language? Oh best practices are not to worry about it at
all. Like stop thinking about your body but if you really want to see what
you're doing you can check whether or not you're present and whether you're not your intentional in your communication.
So, video is a really helpful tool. If you are presenting, get on video. It doesn't have to be
like somebody else takes a fancy video. It's just for you to watch yourself. Be aware. You don't
have to make eye contact with seven people. You don't have to move your arms in and out from the
center of your body. You don't have to take your arms in and out from the center of your body.
You don't have to take five steps in one direction
and 10 steps in another.
If you're thinking about that,
then you're not thinking about what you're saying.
So if you really wanna be present,
verb your values is really my direction.
Watch yourself on video and ask yourself
if you are communicating in a way that exemplifies your values.
My three, for my
verb your values set, and we always get three, one of which is a listening
verb, are to affirm, to connect, and to empower. So if I'm watching a video of
myself and I ask myself like, do I look like I'm trying to empower the audience
right here? We don't have to know, move this way, do this thing, do that thing.
All we have to know is have I achieved that or not? And then go into that mindset. It's
so much more connective to start from within rather than to make adjustments without.
Let's talk about tone and pace of voice. So we briefly touched on this before. What's your opinion on the tone and
pace that we should use? I know I'm sure it depends on what we're trying to communicate,
but do you have any like rules of thumb like for example if we want to come across as trustworthy?
How should we sound? I mean it depends on how you want to achieve trust. So if you're trying to educate someone and that's how you want to
achieve their trust, if that's your value, putting that into action, it's to educate. So when you decide
to educate someone, then you naturally know to slow down around points that you want to nail, but
you want to say things maybe another time or bring them up in a different context, repeating
things.
When it's your goal to educate, then you speak like an educator.
If you earn trust by influencing people, lighting their fire, if they trust you because
they see you have an energy that they want to have themselves, then too ignite might
be your verb, your guiding verb.
Think tone really comes from your intentions.
We heard it in your voice before,
saying call us for more information.
So you have to decide how you want to earn people's trust
and what's natural to you.
So there's no one size fits all method for earning trust
because if I tried to do it in the way that somebody else did,
it probably wouldn't earn their trust.
It would achieve the opposite.
If I wanted to equip people with tools for like data or whatever, I would be sharing things
that really aren't my specialty.
I'd feel a lack of confidence and I would be ill-equipped to equip people that way.
But what I can do is connect.
So when I connect, I am thinking about that way. But what I can do is connect. So when I connect, I am thinking
about that person, I'm looking at them. And when our intentions are to connect, we do.
There are some things that are just like very brief, like a couple of practical things.
You want to make sure that you're heard. So having proper breath support, doing physical,
vocal warm-ups are important. And breath support is important when you're speaking on stage.
And there's the way that we go through things, and there's also a moving through an idea really quickly, which can sometimes lose people if the details are too new.
If you move through an idea really quickly, when it's a story that is very familiar to people, then
it's okay to go fast. But when you need to share something that's brand new for people,
you might want to give a little bit of space for that information to land. That's just
a basic tip for that kind of thing. But there's also having hope that people in the audience
are open to you and having faith that they will receive what you're giving them if they are.
So I did a lot of Shakespeare.
And Shakespeare, you know, it's a many hundred zero old version
of a language we speak now, it's English, but kind of.
You know, people think it sounds like a different language.
And that's often because people are trying to over-educate
while they are using these words.
You know, if you're really listening, if you're watching like reality TV in a language
you don't speak, you probably will still understand the story.
So if that's the case, if I'm watching like, you know, a telenovela or I'm watching like
an Arabic reality TV show or something, which are fun things to do if you've never tried
it, but I tried it. But
I get it. Like I get it enough. And that's really the point. When you're performing Shakespeare
and treating the language as alien, then the audience will receive it as alien. When you're
treating the language like normal, then people understand it. Yeah. They get the message of
the story. So just be be aware of like whether you're overemphasizing because that can cause people to
lose focus and to be trying to remember what they think you're trying to tell
them is important. They're trying to remember a definition that they've
decided based on what you've done. And then they have it listened to the next
thing that you've done or the next thing that you've said. So really just go
go with the flow of what you're meaning
to say and trust the material.
I think that's really, really great advice.
And it's so eye-opening to just realize
how much your energy has to do with what you're communicating
and how the way that you say something is so impactful
to how the audience actually receives your message
and that you could say the same exact words,
or two people could say these same exact words,
and the audience will read it totally differently
just based on how it's presented to them.
So, to me, that's a really big takeaway,
and I haven't really thought about it like that before.
People will think about what you're saying differently,
not just based on your tone, but like who you are,
what your context is, what they know about you or not. People will hear saying differently, not just based on your tone, but like who you are, what your context is, what they know about you or not.
People will hear something differently if Gary Vaynerchuk says it, then if I say it,
people will hear something differently.
If Tony Robbins says it, then if Gary Vaynerchuk says it, people will hear things differently
if Oprah says it, then if Tony Robbins says it.
And people will hear things differently if, you know, a local business owner says something
then if Oprah says something, and they'll hear something differently if their local business owner says something then if Oprah
says something and they'll hear something differently if their parents says it then their
husband.
And so, even if the same words, even with the same intentions behind them, the context
of what we know about a person or a brand or a business, that will color our experience
of receiving that information.
Let's talk about preparing for a communication event.
Do you find any value in thinking about what other people's objections might be
or any obstacles that we might face while we're in this communication event?
Oh yeah, I mean, if you're not prepared for what those are,
then it looks like you didn't care.
You know, that you don't really understand them.
Because objections to something that you might want to offer are very valuable,
because they show people that you know how to handle what their questions are,
that you respect their questions enough to be prepared for them,
that you know that there is no cure-all for anything,
and that people have a right to ask questions.
So rather than minimizing them or brushing them off,
you can always say like, you know what?
I don't know the answer to that,
but I will get back to you.
That's a really important question.
People want to feel validated.
And they want to feel like you've done your work
and making them feel cared for in a communication event.
And so do you recommend that,
let's say we're doing a presentation or even having a very formal meeting with a boss,
do you ever recommend that people script out what they want to say, or are you more of the perspective that we should just have like our high level objectives and then kind of speak from the heart?
Like what is your recommendation there? I think if you are really strict on time,
there are talks that you can give
that you have a very limited amount of time
and you have maybe 30 seconds exactly
or one minute exactly to speak
that you wanna rehearse it.
But in a meeting, I think it's best to make sure
you're prepared enough to speak confidently and succinctly
so that you can hit the points that you want to hit.
And educating yourself about a broad range of things, maybe making like an index card
with a few points you don't want to leave out or forget by accident.
But if you over script something, then you take away the spontaneity of what the people
in the room are showing you with their communication is important for you to hit.
You want to be open to what they're asking you and be able to flow with that conversation.
Have you ever been on a call with a customer service agent?
And they are so desperately trying to go back to the script.
They're like, yes, that's very good.
I agree with what you're trying to state.
And then they go very formal like that, you know?
And I also want to share with you
that we were the number one, like whatever you know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I've experienced that.
I've heard a lot of that.
And I can tell when somebody's trying to go back to script,
what it shows me when I hear script in someone's voice,
is that they're not confident talking about the subject matter.
And it breaks trust.
It doesn't earn my trust for somebody to feel scripted.
Personally, what I like to do is I tend to like to script out my presentations, but only
for learning purposes.
So like I'll script it out as if like this would be the perfect way to do it.
And then it kind of just helps me learn the material better
so that I could do it more on the cuff
when it's time to go live.
Oh, I like that.
Yeah, I mean, I think rehearsal is important.
Yeah.
And getting a sense to doing tests of an audience
that's similar to yours.
Or right now to tonight, I'm going
to be doing beta testing of new worksheets that I've created. And I have a sample audience coming to work with
me in person through these. I actually have a few different groups and I'm doing
rehearsal and also testing. So the worksheets themselves are what I'm trying to
determine, like what am I going to do with these? How valuable are they for in-person
workshops? How valuable are they?
Are they ready to be consumed in a book form?
So I've created this material, but now it needs to be rehearsed.
I need to see what is it going to feel like for me to present it?
What is it going to feel like for other people to just read it?
So I have one focus group of people, about 10 people,
some of whom you may know, are going to be reading the worksheets
on their own with no additional instruction from me other than what's on the page.
And that group are people who've had some exposure to me, but I've never worked with directly.
So important for me to see, because that's likely the reader of my book, people who have
had some exposure to me, but have never worked with me directly are probably going to be the bulk of the at least the
initial wave of readers of a book. So I'm looking to get that information from
that kind of analogous audience. Tonight in person I'm rehearsing like what
is this like if I have an in-person audience of people that either have
worked with me before
or they know me really well,
they're pretty familiar with this.
Do they get more deeper value
out of an in-person workshop with the same worksheets
and conversation?
What kind of things come up?
So I think it's really important to do that,
to try things out,
give yourself the opportunity to see what things are like, and then you'll be
better prepared for when they come up. Totally. Sticking on preparing for a conversation or a
communication event, how about getting confident before you have to speak? What is your perspective on
that? Do you have any tips around that? Yeah, if you're speaking about things that you are actually
an expert in, then you
probably will be more confident. You can do your prep work to make sure that you have
some new information to give people. People are always looking for something they haven't
heard before. So if you make sure that there is stuff like that, then you can be confident
that you have something of value. When you rehearse your material, you can see, are there
things that people think are valuable
that I didn't even realize before? So doing that preparation is hugely important for building confidence.
And then even if you are not confident in a moment, the worst thing you can do is walk on stage
like an apology. You never walk on stage like an apology where people are like, oh gosh,
now I have to take care of them and give them a certain kind of reaction to make them feel comfortable. You want to
make them feel them being the audience that you're there to take care of them. And that's
the confidence. When you know that you're there with something that is rich of value,
that will help them in some way, then it feels less like you're trying to sell them.
It feels less like you have anything to apologize for.
Even if you trip and fall and break a tooth on your way up,
you say, I'm gonna go get my tooth fixed, be right back.
Then you can come back with your tooth fixed
and be like, all set.
So thanks so much for coming.
Here's what I have to explain to you.
If you make a big deal about that,
if you spend valuable time that you could be educating your audience with on apologizing
for being there, how are you going to instill confidence in them that they should take
action based on what you've said? It'll just never happen. So you just being prepared
with the value and then not spending too much time focusing
on whether there are mistakes or errors or technology
that doesn't work.
Another thing I will tell people,
this is just a practical tip.
If you are planning a presentation or a talk
that relies heavily on tech elements,
like PowerPoint or slides of some kind or multimedia.
You know, unless it is a multimedia showcase and you're there specifically to show your
creative work, then you have to be prepared to give your talk without it.
Tech malfunctions all the time.
Yeah.
You'll be confident with your material if you've prepared it and that the tech is an additional
element, not the central element.
Yeah. You need your material to be the central element. It's a great point. Okay, let's talk about
speaking more eloquently. So millennials like myself have a problem with saying things like
so and like too much. This is like my number one biggest problem. So tell me, do you have any advice on how to stop saying so
and like so much?
Well, I don't know that you really have to.
It doesn't bother me.
I'm a millennial, so I'm listening to you,
and I'm hearing you in a voice that sounds very much like mine.
And so it doesn't really bother me as much.
It depends on who you're talking to.
But I do feel that filler words can take away
from the value of what you're saying.
If you find that you're saying them
when you're searching for your words,
which is usually what we're doing when we say,
so like, when we say, which is what of mine.
When we use those filler words,
it's that we're searching for the words that we really wanna say.
Let it go.
You're never gonna find the perfect words.
There will always be better ones
that you can determine later,
but unless you are writing something out,
you're never going to have the perfect words all the time.
Give yourself a second.
Take a breath, slow down,
find the words that are suitable enough for the moment, because
no one else is going to remember them anyway.
We're all very interesting, but no one is interesting enough to memorize.
Yeah, that's good advice.
People are not going to be paying attention later.
They're going to say, oh, I heard this really interesting thing, and I may be remembered
one or two points from it.
No one is going to remember the exact words that you say.
It's a good point.
I find that I do better with the so and the like.
If I write down different adjectives to use,
because the like for the most part is in replace of some other word that you're
like you mentioned, let you're trying to search for.
So I'll try to think of other words to use sometimes.
I have vocabulary and I struck. search for us all try to think of other words to use sometimes. So yeah vocabularies a nice truck.
Yeah, be sure that you have.
Have a vocabularie.
Yeah, maybe read the dictionary, I don't know.
It is important to prepare like writing down some points ahead of time will help you.
Yeah, totally.
There's a famous saying from Aristotle, it goes, tell them what you're going to tell them, tell them, and then tell them what you told them.
Most people have an attention span of about eight seconds,
the same as a goldfish.
What's your perspective on over communicating?
Do you agree with that strategy?
I do, because we hear things in stages.
You want to hook their attention in at the beginning.
You want something clever or you want something compelling, you want people at the beginning of what you're
saying to understand what you're about to give them as information. And I've just done
it. I said, people want to hear at the beginning, you know, and then I went into a little bit
more detail or a couple more words. And so the middle part is about giving people a story, giving them an
experience of it, giving them an example that's going to drive a point home. And then at the end,
you want to sum up for them because they're now lost in that story, they're still experiencing it,
what you want them to take away from it. So you get their attention, you use their attention to
instill a point, and then you want to drive it home so
that they can take it away with them. Yeah. So the last question that we ask all
our listeners is what is your secret to profiting in life? Oh my gosh. Well I
think when I think of profiting I really think of you know my definition of
success and all of our because I you know I can make as much money as I want,
but what am I going to use it for?
And so making sure that I'm budgeting my time
and my expenses around things that are aligned with my values.
I did a values exercise to determine what my top values are
as part of my UMAP.
And I'm a certified UMAP coach myself so that I can help people
understand themselves before I actually help them talk about what they do and what they
bring to it.
So understanding where my values are means I can tell if I am spending my money, my time,
my energy in the right place. My top values are love and connection,
community, communication, fun,
specialness, diversity, meaningful work, creativity,
acknowledgement, and making a difference.
So if I'm spending money on, for me, material things,
stuff that I think is cute that I'd like to have, I can be surrounded
by many, many piles of things I've spent that money on.
But none of that is aligned with my values, really, unless it's creativity in the way that
I dress, that only goes so far.
I have these top 10 values.
So if I'm spending my money time, resources, attention, energy on
those things that are valuable to me, then I will feel rich every day.
That's wonderful. That's so great. I love that. And where can our listeners go to find
more about you and everything that you do? Find me at saythingspedter.com. Find me on
Instagram at Lila Lasagna and find me on LinkedIn at LilaSmith.
Awesome. Well, I've really enjoyed this conversation. I think we had a lot of great tips for
communication and I hope my listeners enjoyed it too. Thank you so much for having me.
Thanks for listening to Young and Profiting Podcast. If you enjoyed this episode,
don't forget to leave a review or comment on your favorite platform.
Follow Yapp on Instagram at Young and Profiting
and check us out at Young and Profiting.com.
And now you can chat live with us every single day
on Yapp Society on Slack.
Check out our show notes or Young and Profiting.com
for the registration link.
And if you're already active on Yapp,
share the wealth and invite your friends.
You can find me on Instagram at YAP with Hala or LinkedIn,
just search for my name, Hala Taha.
Big thanks to the YAP team, as always,
stay blessed and I'll catch you next time.
This is Hala, signing off.
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