Showing posts with label communication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label communication. Show all posts

Monday, March 30, 2015

Hide or shine? Finding your professional voice in social media

Did you hear about the CFO who got fired over his YouTube rant? What about the PR exec who torpedoed her career with an inappropriate tweet?
You probably didn’t hear about the banker who met his mentor on an internal social network, the unemployed marketer who found her dream job via LinkedIn, or the corporate communicator who accelerated her career growth by blogging what she learned along the way.
In a world where casual conversations can be shared with the public and archived forever, you have two options: You can hide, or you can embrace social media and use it to shine.
Hide or Shine
I advocate the latter. My blogs have led to professional connections and speaking engagements. At conferences, I use Twitter to capture notes and connect with other attendees. Facebook is more personal, but I occasionally share posts related to my work life, because I’m one person.
Hiding is becoming less of an option as more and more companies invest in internal social networks to connect employees and collaborate. Just like creating a PowerPoint deck or sending a coherent email, professional use of social media is becoming a core competency of workplace communication. The farther you go in your career, the more essential it will become.
What's Shiny in Social Media
I’ve identified three traits I consider most important to professional brand in social media. Do two of these well, and you’ll be pretty successful. Do all three, and you’ll shine.
Authenticity is showing up as your true, sincere, imperfect self. It means showing vulnerability, acknowledging challenges as well as successes, and posting about real, relevant things that happened to you. One of my most authentic blog posts was about a school project that I spectacularly failed. Was it hard to share that story? Absolutely, and that’s why it worked. Likewise, an authentic person steps up and owns his or her success without apology, qualification, or a contrived #humblebrag.
Digital Citizenship is what keeps authenticity from spiraling into narcissism. It’s about recognizing the human beings on your social networks and honoring their contributions. Digital citizenship starts with observing the social norms of your community. The conversational tone of LinkedIn is different from Facebook. Twitter and Instagram both use hashtags, but in different ways. Learn the rhythm of your network and pay attention to the people you know. Write thoughtful comments on their posts. Engage in conversations. Acknowledge their birthdays (Facebook) and work anniversaries (LinkedIn).
Intellectual Generosity means taking what you learn and paying it forward. I have a friend who shares health and fitness advice with her followers daily. It’s not her job, but she’s knowledgeable and intellectually generous. I try to blog on our internal social network after I attend a conference, because my employer invested in my learning and it seems unfair to hoard knowledge I could share with my coworkers. If you’re not a writer, you can still be intellectually generous by sharing links to articles that you find insightful, or quick little tips that make your life easier.
Communicating via social media is a professionally relevant skill, just like being present in a meeting. You can sit quietly, you can hide under the conference table, or you can stand up and shine.

Thursday, May 22, 2014

25 Leadership Blogs You Could Write Today (with 5 bonus tips!)

Blogging is a great way for leaders to communicate with employees. It fosters community, conversation, learning, and relationships that cross the org chart. If you’re stuck on “What do I write about?” here are a few suggestions.
  1. Include a link to an interesting news or business article that you read, and share your own perspective on it.
  2. Did you recently go to a conference or seminar? Share highlights of what you learned.
  3. Share career advice with employees who aspire to your role.
  4. Share career advice you wish someone had given you.
  5. Write about the best mentor, leader, or teacher that you ever had.
  6. Write about the worst day you ever had at work, and what you learned from it.
  7. Is this the career you planned to be in, or are you surprised by where you ended up? Discuss.
  8. Write a “day in the life” journal of either a typical day, or a unique one.
  9. Write about how one of your hobbies or outside interests (sports, family, gardening, etc.) has shaped your professional perspective.
  10. Give your own take on a broad business topic, e.g., customer service, personal accountability, planning, time management.
  11. Take one of your organization’s values or principles and explain what it means to you. Depending on how many values your company has, this could be a series of multiple blogs.
  12. Tell us how you do that thing that makes others ask, “How did you do that?”
  13. Share the most important things you learned in college or graduate school, now that you’re X years after graduation.
  14. Compare and contrast: What you thought effective leadership was at the beginning of your career, versus what you value today.
  15. Share the spotlight: Celebrate the success of a team or work group by telling their story.
  16. Make a list, e.g.: 10 Things You Don’t Know About Me, 5 Mistakes New Leaders Often Make, or 7 Tips for Presenting to Executives.
  17. Visit one of your company’s stores or branches where you don’t know anybody, or call the service center. Write about your experience from a customer’s perspective. (Only mention employees by name if your feedback is positive)
  18. Do the above, but with a competitor.
  19. Test-drive a new technology, such as Google Glass or 3D printing, and write about your experience.
  20. Compile a list of the mobile apps that you can’t live without.
  21. List 3-5 books that greatly influenced you, and explain why.
  22. Share your goals (personal, professional, or both) for a specific future timeframe – 3 months, 1 year, 10 years.
  23. Write a “Throwback Thursday” entry – Tell us about something interesting that happened to you a long time ago.
  24. Is this your first blog? Acknowledge your newness and tell your readers why you decided to start blogging, and how it feels to be putting your words out in this format for the first time.
  25. Turn it around: Pose a question you find interesting, invite readers to answer in the comments, then join in the conversation by commenting on your own blog.

5 Bonus Tips!
  • The tone of your blog should be conversational, friendly, and sincere. Write in the same voice you would address your employees in a meeting or via email.
  • Even if you’re brand new to this, you already have the skills to do it well. If you can write a clear email or present before a group in a meeting, you’re over halfway to a great blog.
  • Break up your text visually with frequent paragraph breaks, subsections, bulleted lists, or (better yet!) photos. Big text blocks are ugly and hard to read.
  • Personal stories are always more interesting than vague platitudes.
  • Vulnerability is the new black for leaders.

Monday, March 31, 2014

Do's and Don'ts of Communicating Organizational Change

For the last few months, my organization has been changing. I have a new leader, I'll soon have some new employees. I've been through more org changes than I can count on my fingers, but this is my first as a leader, and the best one yet. I'm not steering the ship - I'm one of those org chart boxes in the middle - but I've learned a few things that I would like to pass on to other leaders and communicators.


When planning an organizational change:

Don't take the surprise party approach. It never works. Employees can smell change in the air, and they notice when certain leaders start having long meetings with Human Resources in conference rooms. It breeds suspicion and fear. Instead, be transparent: "We're looking at our team's structure to see if it's the best approach." Chances are, your employees have already noticed that your department might benefit from some shuffling, and they may have some useful feedback or suggestions.

Do make space to dream. When we first found out that we would be reporting to a new leader and that our roles would be changing, I started by having a lengthy conversation with my employees about our team's work. What was working well? What needed attention? What would they do completely differently if we could start from scratch? These conversations are inspiring and energizing. 

Do ask your people what they want. I manage a small team, and I feel like I know each of my employees well: their strengths, their interests, their career aspirations. We talk about these topics at annual reviews, at goal-setting sessions, and regularly at our 1:1s. However, an org change can stir up new ideas and interests. It's worth asking questions like "What do you most enjoy doing?" and "Where would you like to go next?" even if you think you know the answer.

Don't lie to people. I was once in a conference room, listening to a HR manager explain a new organizational structure. She said, "This is not a RIF" (our internal acronym for Reduction in Force). The problem was, the PowerPoint document on her screen - which was projected for everyone in the room to see - was titled with the name of our department and the acronym "RIF." My job was officially eliminated a few weeks later.


When announcing a decision:

Do tell the affected people as soon as possible. The people most affected by an org change are the ones who are getting new managers, new job titles, or new teammates. Or, of course, severance packages. Once a decision has been made, they should be the first to know. The rest of the "FYI" list can wait. There's nothing worse than finding out about your own career change through the office grapevine.

Do follow a communication plan with clear dates, time of day, and order of notifications. During a layoff at another company, the telecom team shut off voice mail and extensions for terminated employees before HR had the conversation with the affected people. Nobody knew why certain coworkers' extensions were showing as "vacant" - until an hour later, when everybody knew. Time of day matters.

Do bring people together as humans. Shortly after I found out I had a new leader, he invited me to lunch. A few days later, he invited our entire local team to a hockey game. These little gestures went a long way to alleviating my fear of the unknown. Nobody wants to report to an unfamiliar name on the org chart. If you're inheriting new employees, get to know them in a friendly, low-key setting as quickly as possible. If those employees are spread across different offices, invest in the travel if at all humanly possible.


When you don't know any more about what's going on than your employees do:

Don't be Chicken Little. Leaders set the tone. Don't tell everyone that the sky is falling or the department is crumbling, even if you sometimes fear that it is. Remind yourself and your employees: You're smart, you're skilled at what you do, and the best thing you can do each day is show up and shine your brightest and embrace the opportunities around the corner.

Don't make it all about yourself. A friend found out on a Thursday afternoon that half of her team was laid off. When she returned to work on Friday morning, her manager wasn't there. The manager still had a job, but she had spent the morning exercising with her personal trainer and getting a massage. She was so tense, she explained to her employees when she arrived two hours late. So were they, and the support and reassurance of their leader would have gone a long way.

Do acknowledge the emotions that it stirs up. Even a re-organization with no layoffs, no budget cuts, and great opportunities for everybody is still incredibly emotional. Your employees have been working for a boss they know, doing a familiar job, and suddenly everything is thrown into chaos. There's the uncertainty of adapting to a new leader and new coworkers, the merging of different teams' processes and cultures, and often an insecurity about where they will fit in the new world order. For some people, it's an exhilarating time of opportunity. For others, it's a terrifying loss of control. Often, it's both. Acknowledge this. Let your employees know that it's perfectly normal to grieve for the old way, and to be apprehensive about the new one. Soon, the new way will become familiar, and you'll wonder how you ever worked any differently.

Do embrace the positive. Change can be scary, but change can be wonderful. It's a catalyst for creativity. Things that were previously too difficult suddenly become possible. It can bring clarity and insight. It can bust you out of a rut and turn you into a better, braver version of yourself.

The best thing about change is that it always, always teaches us something. I'm here, excited, and ready to learn.



Thursday, March 6, 2014

After the tone, please hang up and text me: Why I hate voicemail

"Woohoo, voicemail!"

Do you ever think that? I don't. I see the red light on my work phone and I feel like I've been sternly called into the boss's office.


Voicemail is among my least favorite forms of communication, somewhere between "barely legible Post-It note" and "swift kick to the shins." The good news is, I think it will soon go the way of the pager and the overhead projector, and here's why:

It's awkward. There is something disconcerting about hearing one side of a conversation. It's why hearing a stranger yammer on their cell phone is more annoying than hearing two people chatting nearby. Our brain perceives the gaps and longs to fill them with replies or questions. I'll sometimes say, "Wait, what was that?" while replaying a voicemail, but the person at the other end never pauses.

It's slow. My office phone won't let me delete a message until I've played it all the way through. This is annoying when our school district's auto-dialer leaves a 3-minute recording listing every after-school activity that's cancelled because of the truly awful weather. (All of them. They're all cancelled. Let's move on, please.)

Replying isn't always simple. When you receive an email, you can see who it's from and reply with a click. About once a month, I get a voicemail from an elderly woman who has mistaken my office phone number for that of her adult son or daughter. She begins with "Hi, it's your Mom" in heavily accented English, then switches into an unfamiliar Asian language for a 15-20 minute monologue which ends with "Call me, I miss you." I don't know how to tell her she has the wrong number. Meanwhile, her actual son or daughter is receiving bilingual guilt trips for never returning Mom's calls.*


It puts the burden on the receiver. Is leaving a long voicemail easier than sending an email message? Yes, for the person who's leaving the message. Email requires you to organize your thoughts. Texting requires you to pare down your message to its most essential components. A stream-of-consciousness voicemail is much easier to give than to receive.


It's mostly obsolete. Answering machines and voicemail filled a  gap before email or texting, when you needed to get a message to a person who wasn't available to take your call. Pagers and fax machines were handy, too, but we're doing fine without them.


It's the worst of both worlds. Talking on the phone has some huge advantages over written communication: You can hear tone of voice, express empathy, and engage in warmer dialogue than via email. But much of that warmth dissipates when you're leaving a soliloquy at the command of a disembodied robot voice.



I can think of two scenarios in which voicemail is the best tool available: 1. When you're driving (although, really, 99% of the time, it can wait) and 2. When you need to reach somebody, the only contact info you have is their phone number, and you're not sure if that number accepts texts.

If you can think of another scenario, let me know. Just don't leave me a voicemail.

* This is especially weird, because I also have an immigrant mother whom I don't call often enough. She leaves me sweet voicemails in Polish, in which she introduces herself as my Mom. I'm teaching her to email.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

My LinkedIn Success Story

I achieved a career milestone yesterday, my first talk at a professional conference. It went well. I channeled my nervous energy into enthusiasm. I shared anecdotes and metaphors and slides with more pictures than words. I saw myself quoted on Twitter and even had a few people tell me mine was their favorite session of the day. You wouldn't have guessed I was a rookie, unless you saw me photographing my badge.



So, how did I achieve this milestone? Two words... Or maybe it's one. LinkedIn.

I started using LinkedIn in earnest five years ago, when I was looking for a job halfway across the country. I wrote a detailed profile, joined a few groups, and connected with some strangers whose interests aligned with mine. It was on LinkedIn that I first spotted the posting that I called "the big bank job."

Nowadays, pretty much everyone knows that LinkedIn is helpful for job hunters. What I didn't know is how valuable it can be when you're happily employed.

I work in Internal Communications. We're a small team at a big company, and it's easy to feel like outliers, writers among bankers. But every time I go to a conference, I remember that we're not unique. Every big company has people like us. We tend to be alike: English majors, ex-journalists, storytellers who found a creative outlet in a corporate landscape. On our best days, we help bank tellers and cube dwellers feel connected to the company's culture and values. We have strong opinions on Oxford commas, Sharepoint, and most-hated corporate buzzwords (yes, no, and utilize).

We're all trying to solve the same problems. Why shouldn't we learn from each other? It's a non-competitive space. Customers don't see our internal communications. Employees don't study our intranet, compare it to a competitor's, and then choose to take their talent to the company with the prettier corporate news page.

I started following LinkedIn groups because I wanted to know what other communicators were doing. I started posting in them because I saw a space to contribute.

That's how I met Jane, a French consultant researching digital workplaces. She asked interesting questions; I answered them. She asked to quote me in her report; I got the proper permissions from my employer and said Yes. She invited me to Washington, DC to speak at this conference with her.

Last night, sitting around a dinner table with Jane and a dozen like-minded professionals from around the world, I remembered that there's a unique energy to in-person networking, an honesty and connection that flows from a bottle of wine and a shared passion for the work you do. Those connections can take shape online. They start with openness, curiosity, and intellectual generosity.

I'm writing this blog so perhaps it will inspire someone else to put him or herself out there. If you ever feel isolated in your job, you're not. If you wonder whether you can grow your career without changing jobs, you can.

Here are my tips for finding authentic connections online: Show up. Join groups. Be more kind than necessary. Listen to people before you speak to them. Add value. If people around you are being self serving and dull, fill the space with what is needed and be the person you would like to meet. Always, always show gratitude for those who help you along the way.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

5 New(ish) Communication Skills Leaders Need

“I’ll never use Facebook. Forget Linked In; that’s why I have a Rolodex. The symbol # is called pound, and it’s a button on my phone – which is plugged into my wall.”

If this sounds like you, I have some bad news and some good news.

The bad news is, social media isn’t a trend you’ll be able to wait out. In 10 years, Facebook may look as dated as a pair of acid wash jeans, but the concept of being in simultaneous conversation with just about everyone you know – that idea is significantly, permanently changing the way human beings relate to the world and one another. Leading employees in this world requires us to strengthen and practice a new set of communication skills.

The good news is, you can develop these skills without sending a single tweet.

1. Do dialogue well.

Meetings make us worse at dialogue. In a crowded meeting room, time is limited, and the ideas that prevail are the ones that get spoken aloud before moving to the next agenda topic. Traditional business meetings condition us to await our turn to speak, rather than to listen with an open mind.

Dialogue is fluid, collaborative, and open-ended. With online dialogue, there are no limits to how long your conversation can last and how many voices can be heard. You can comment on a blog written four years ago. In discussion forums, "off-topic" threads tend to be the most lively. Respect this openness and resist the urge to control every conversation or spin it back to a pre-formulated agenda. Creative ideas and surprising connections often come from unstructured conversations.


2. Make feedback a daily habit.

We live in a world where people are accustomed to giving and hearing immediate feedback on matters large and small. On Twitter, people constantly and instantly share their opinions about everything from Congressional decisions to new flavors of potato chips. On Facebook, we post a photo or status update and wait for the comments and “Likes” to roll in.

It’s unrealistic and unfair to expect our employees to only give and receive feedback about their jobs once a year. While annual reviews and surveys are useful tools, conversations about job performance and work environment need to be ongoing. Facebook asks its users “What’s on your mind?” every day. Your employees deserve the same courtesy from you.


3. Be succinct.

Twitter’s magic is brevity. Whether or not you tweet, practice distilling important messages into 140 characters for impact and clarity.


4. Respect communication styles and preferences.

Quick: Identify the introverts and extraverts on your team. Can you do it?

Introverts tend to develop their best ideas through quiet reflection, while extraverts draw energy from social interactions and prefer to “think aloud.” Some people straddle the middle ground, but most of us have a dominant style. If you're unfamiliar with introversion, listen to this TED talk for an insightful explanation.

Engage your team in a variety of ways to let the different styles shine. Use brainstorming meetings to engage extraverts, but send out the materials ahead of time or keep a discussion forum going afterward so that introverts have time to process and analyze the data before responding.


5. Know which tool to use for maximum impact.

Not every message is best expressed via email. I recently blogged about how to choose among the tools in our toolbox. As online communication evolves, we’re likely to see new tools added and refined.

Also, find out the preferred communication tool for each of your employees. Some people appreciate the speed and simplicity of instant messenger, while others find it intrusive. Some people love to talk on the phone, while others order their pizzas online. With more tools than ever, there are more ways to perfectly reach the people with whom you communicate.

Even if your phone is still plugged into a wall.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

E-Mail is a #2 Pencil: Choosing the Right Communication Tool

Most of us learn to draw with crayons and learn to write with a pencil. In elementary school, we’re handed markers, watercolor paints, glue sticks and elbow macaroni. Later, we get access to the dangerous tools like pastels, Xacto knives, and Adobe Creative Suite. If you’re brave and artistic, these tools are liberating. For the rest of us, it’s tempting to keep reaching for those trusty yellow pencils; they feel good in our hands, we remember how to hold them, and we always know which end is the eraser.

The tools we have to communicate with one another are like the supplies in an artist’s tool box. Knowing when to pick up the right one can mean the difference between a masterpiece and the grayest sunset ever.

I’m not claiming to be Rembrandt, but here’s my attempt at organizing the toolbox most of us bring to work each day:



E-Mail
Best features: It’s familiar, comfortable, and everyone uses it. It’s the #2 pencil of communications tools.

Drawbacks: Everyone uses it. Inbox overload is a common problem. Reply-All volleyball matches and unwieldy file attachments are excruciating.

What it’s best for: The two paragraph conversation. Direct requests for action or information. Urgent announcements.

When it doesn’t work: Discussions with large groups, very short messages (consider using instant messenger instead), sensitive topics or contentious debates (just pick up the phone, already!)

Tips for using it well: Be brief, but not curt. Start with a short greeting, and make your request or call to action clear. Close with a word of thanks. The key to using email well is to know when not to use it: If your message is more than three paragraphs long or takes more than 20 minutes to write, set up a meeting instead. If your topic is sensitive and you’re at all concerned about how the other person will react, pick up the phone or talk in person. If your file attachment is bigger than 1 MB, post the document on a file-sharing site and email your audience the link instead. If you’re hoping for a lively back-and-forth conversation with a group, use an online discussion forum.



Instant Messenger
Best features: You can get someone’s attention immediately. The conversation doesn’t linger afterward and clog your inbox. It’s easy to use and you can tell whether someone is available, busy, or offline. You can send file attachments or screenshots.

Drawbacks: Flashing messages can trigger anxiety if you’re busy or get too many at once.

What it’s best for: The two-sentence conversation: Little nuggets of info, quick questions with easy answers.

When it doesn’t work: Long, complex conversations. Requests that require research, follow-up, or a record of the conversation. Discussions with more than 3-4 people.

Tips for using it well: Start conversations with a friendly greeting. If you’re making a request of someone, ask if they have a moment to chat. Set your own status to “In a Meeting” or “Do Not Disturb” or sign out altogether if you are unavailable.


Meetings
Best features: Face to face (or voice to voice) contact strengthens communication with body language, vocal inflection, and full attention (or so we hope).


Drawbacks: Costly, in terms of time - a 1-hour meeting with 20 people costs the bank 20 hours of productivity. In large meetings, more vocal/extraverted participants tend to dominate the conversation.

What it’s best for: Brainstorming with small groups (fewer than 10), making big/high-level announcements to larger groups, team building and camaraderie

When it doesn’t work: Decision making and brainstorming with large groups, presenting detailed information to large groups

Tips for using it well: Keep your meeting small and ask yourself if it’s the best use of everyone’s time. If you’re including more than 10 attendees, consider using a blog (to give news updates) or a discussion forum (to brainstorm or make a decision) instead of or in addition to your meeting. Check out some of my tips for making the most of offsite meetings and conference calls.


Online Discussion Forum
Best features: Enables many:many conversation, where multiple participants can post messages, read, and reply to one another. More effective than meetings at giving everyone a voice, especially introverts.

Drawbacks: Newer technology, has a learning curve. People often need to be reminded to participate (email helps). Depending on your company's available technology, creating a forum or community with all of your participants may require extra effort.

What it’s best for: Brainstorming and problem-solving with groups of 5 or more. Socializing and team building with a geographically diverse group. Crowdsourcing – posing a question to a large group without knowing exactly who will have the answer.

When it doesn’t work: Quick decisions or strong declarations – If you open yourself up to everyone’s input, be prepared to receive and listen to it.

Tips for using it well: Follow the same rules of politeness that you would in a meeting. Don't try to rein in the conversation if it veers slightly off-topic; the magic of this medium is its openness.



Blog
Best features: Easy online publishing, supports sharing of photos and videos, allows user comments, reach an interested audience without imposing on people’s time or inbox space.

Drawbacks: Learning curve. Depending on where you post it, your blog may attract readers outside of your intended audience.

What it’s best for: Project updates, leadership messaging, knowledge sharing, an elegant alternative to meetings and emails

When it doesn’t work: Urgent messages – Since blogging is a “pull” communication method, your readers may not find you right away unless you email them.

Tips for using it well:  The next time you're getting ready to send a mass email to your team, copy/paste the message into a blog instead, and email your team the link. See how they respond.


Tuesday, August 14, 2012

8 Ways to Rock a Conference Call

I spend a lot of time on the phone. Talking to people is a big part of my job, and most of the people I need to talk to aren't in the same building or even the same city. I've been on awesome conference calls, I've been on unfortunate conference calls, and I've facilitated my share of both.

I've compiled these tips based on some of the best calls I've observed, the ones where I hang up the phone and think "Wow, we got a lot done!" or "I can't wait to get working on this project!"

Here are 5 tips for facilitators, and 3 for attendees. I'd also love to hear your tips.


If you're leading the call...


1. Send a detailed meeting invitation. In the meeting description, let your invitees know what the meeting is about, why you invited them, and what action you expect from them both before and during the meeting. Include your conference call number, link to the Sametime meeting (if applicable), and attachments or links to any documents you'd like your participants to review. If you need to add details later, open the invite on your calendar and save the updates directly into the meeting invitation. Nobody enjoys starting a meeting by scrambling through a cluttered Inbox trying to find all the details.

2. Get to know your conference line. I recently learned that, on my company's conferencing system, you can press *5 to mute all lines except your own. This is perfect if you're experiencing background noise, or if one of your attendees is eating a crunchy sandwich or puts you on hold. Just be sure to tell your participants to press *6 to un-mute if they'd like to ask a question or make a comment.

Our system has a default setting in which a robotic voice instructs callers: "Please state your name, then press the pound key." One day, I called into my own conference line and didn't press 1 to begin my meeting. I stayed on the phone with the friendly robot to listen to what other options she had for me. It turned out, this feature could be turned off. I like to think that anyone who dials into one of my conference calls is getting precious seconds of his or her life back.

3. Boost interactivity with online meetings. I recently attended a meeting where the presenter used the Sametime Whiteboard to brainstorm ideas with 30 people. It was great: Everyone got a chance to be heard, nobody talked over one another, and lots of great ideas were captured. Other fun tools include screen sharing, live polls, and group chat. Group chat and hand-raising are handy ways for large audiences to ask questions without interrupting the speaker.

4. Mind the time. If your meeting's agenda is packed with multiple topics or speakers, allocate a time for each, and clearly communicate it to all presenters well in advance. Build in some buffer time and schedule Q&A at the end of your call, so that none of your speakers feel rushed.

Do you or your presenters tend to ramble? (I do!) Have a designated timekeeper on your call watch the clock and send speakers an instant message with 5-minute and 2-minute warnings when it's time to wrap up. If there's just NO way you can fairly cover a topic in 15 minutes, give it the time it deserves and set up a dedicated call.

Ending on time is a basic courtesy, but to rock your call, end 5 minutes early, The best gift that you can give to a coworker who's been on back-to-back conference calls all day is a sweet little 5-minute respite to stretch, get something to drink, or use the restroom before the next meeting.

5. Don't read your slides. Think of your PowerPoint deck as a complement to your presentation, not as the presentation itself. If you're using your slides to anchor key points of your presentation, be brief (7-10 words per key point, up to 3 key points per slide). If you're including the slides as reference material, you can be more verbose, but resist the urge to read the slides aloud to your audience. Your spoken commentary should include examples, stories, and context for the points in your presentation.


If you're a participant...


6. Do your pre-work. Set aside some time at the beginning of the week and at the beginning of each day to look through your upcoming meetings. Is there any pre-work or reading required? Do you have a good understanding of what's expected of you and what each meeting will be about?

7. Know the difference between listening and waiting for your turn to speak. I'm one of those extraverted people who's very excited to share my own ideas, so I've had to make a conscious effort to listen more closely. I take copious notes. Taking notes on others' comments helps me listen and absorb their ideas more effectively. Jotting down my own ideas helps me remember them and clear them out of my mind so I can give others my full attention.

8. Resist the multi-tasking urge. I can't tell you to stop multi-tasking altogether, but know that you can't rock a conference call unless you're truly present. Switch your instant message status so it automatically shows that you're in a meeting. If that doesn't work, change to "Do Not Disturb" or sign out altogether. I have found that signing out of email, while scary at first, is a good way to minimize distraction.

If I'm feeling incredibly restless, sometimes I'll pick up a physical task such as cleaning. My hands are occupied, but my ears and brain are on the conference call. I've been known to remove and clean under every key on my keyboard, just so I could keep my attention focused on a really important call (and because, frankly, it was kind of gross under there).

You're not going to rock every call. There will always be calls that are just plain old status updates, short and utilitarian run-downs of straightforward facts. But when it really counts, when you're making decisions or charting new courses or looking to WOW an audience, try some of these tricks and perhaps your call will be the one everyone remembers.



Wednesday, September 21, 2011

The Magic of Social Networking

This is my speech from a presentation I shared at work, modeled after a TED talk. I omitted the slides because they contain information that's confidential to my employer, but they're basically screen shots of our systems combined with pictures of my kids, my friends, and spaceships.

This is my daughter, Evie. She’s four and a half. When Evie is really impressed with something, she declares that it’s magic. She’s also the reason I’m standing here today, talking to you about why social networking is magic.

When we learned of Evie’s impending arrival, my husband and I were living in Reno, Nevada, and all of our family was here in the Midwest. I wanted to give updates and share ultrasound photos and talk about nursery colors and naming philosophies and do all the things that excited pregnant women do, but it was exhausting to call everyone, repeating the same story each time. So, I posted a blog on MySpace – It was 2006, after all - to share the latest news with family and friends. It was great, especially after the baby arrived, when I was too tired to see straight but could post enough photos and cute stories to keep Evie’s admirers feeling connected. I had been using the Internet for some time, but this was when the real power of social networking hit home for me.

The need to communicate with other people is an essential part of being human. It’s also critical to our success as a company, and it’s part of my job to think of ways we can do it more effectively. A couple years ago, the bank invested in social networking tools that employees can use to connect with one another: Blogs, wikis, profiles similar to the ones people use on Facebook. I was fortunate enough to be one of the pilot users of these tools. The idea was that social networking tools could make employees more efficient and productive. I think they can move space and time.

Space and Time are the two largest constraints on our ability to communicate effectively with other people. And let’s be honest, they’re pretty big.

Space – Our relationships have always been, for the most part, limited to people in our physical proximity. In school, you talked to your classmates. At work, your cubicle neighbors and office mates tend to be the coworkers you know best. Relationships aren’t just about proximity, of course - We build relationships by connecting to people with shared interests and compatible personalities – but we most of the time, we’re drawing from that pool of people who are in our space.

Now, you can work around the space constraint. Did anyone here ever have a pen pal? It’s a neat idea – by building a relationship with someone whose life experience is distant from your own, you’ll learn things, gain a broader understanding of the world and have some fun in the process. How many of you lost touch with your pen pals after a couple of letters? There, we’re bumping into the other constraint – Time. It’s a hassle to write letters, address and mail them, and then wait for a response. Plus, what if your pen pal is a dud? I actually met my 6th grade pen pal during a family vacation to Germany. It was awkward and she stole my Swatch.

The time constraint is especially noticeable when you’re trying to work with groups. Groups of people are great at solving problems and brainstorming ideas. Group discussions can provide a diverse set of perspectives, the ability to see something from multiple angles at once. The problem with group discussions often comes back to time: It is really, really hard to get a group together. Think about the planning that went into this conference. Could you do this every week? Every month, even? Not without tremendous cost and effort.

So what’s a large organization like the bank to do? We sort ourselves into silos. We don’t create silos because we’re grumpy, or don’t like the other groups, we do it out of practical necessity, so we can actually make decisions and get things done. But we all know, deep down, that we need to collaborate more. We know that there are lost opportunities for idea sharing and project synergy.

So we send e-mail and we have meetings.

Meetings are great, but very expensive in terms of time. A one-hour meeting with 10 people isn’t a one-hour meeting; from the bank’s perspective, it’s a 10-hour meeting.

E-mail seems easy, but it quickly adds up to a time burden as well. Does anyone here get too much e-mail? Do you ever spend work time deleting e-mails that you didn’t really need to receive in the first place? Stop and think about that one for a minute. If you’ve ever done that, then you’re receiving too much e-mail.

The trouble with e-mail and meetings is that neither one is an effective or especially efficient way to catalyze a large group to action. The larger the group, the less effective they are. E-mail is not a group collaboration tool. Don’t let the Reply-All button convince you otherwise – please, don’t.

E-mail and meetings are what we call “push” communications. Someone, at the other end of your network connection, decides what you need to know and pushes that information in your direction. If you feel overwhelmed because you receive too many e-mails or meeting invites, don’t blame the sender – They’re just trying to be inclusive and transparent, because leaving people out of the loop is often worse than over-communicating.

In our daily lives, where information overload is a real problem, we’re seeing a shift from push to pull communication.

Gone are the days when everyone got their world news from a paper on their doorstep or the same anchor on TV. You can choose to get your news from CNN, or Fox News, or Huffington Post, or TMZ or US Weekly. You can click the headlines of the stories you want and skip the rest, saving yourself time – unlike when you had to listen to the news anchor read every story before he got to the one you cared about.

Facebook lets you engage in pull communications with your friends. It’s brilliant. You choose your friends, and then you choose how closely to watch them. You can click on someone’s page to see everything they’ve been up to lately, or you can just watch your news feed for the top stories. You can hide the people who irritate you or you can hide applications if you’re tired of reading about the potatoes your second cousin grew in Farmville.

This is US Book, our internal social network. You can’t hide or block people. But you can choose whom to follow and add to your network. You can filter your news feed a few different ways, including by key word or topic. You can follow the communities and blogs that you want to follow.

The magic of social networking is that it transcends space and time. Because it’s pull communication, the threshold at which you impose on other people’s time is much, much higher. If all you want to do is keep people in the loop about what you’re working on, a blog is an elegant way to do that. Instead of clogging everyone’s Inbox with your project updates, you can post them on your blog for people to read when they’re ready.

I’ve seen leaders use US Book blogs to summarize pricing calls for their teams. Now that’s an example of taking the time spent in a meeting – an hour out of the leader’s day – and turning that hour into more value for the organization. Imagine if every leader and project leader in the bank shared high level updates on their blog. Instead of wondering about the status of a project or chasing people down to send them e-mail, you could search for that person – or search by project name – and get the information that you wanted, when you wanted it. Pull communication. You could discover similar projects where different business lines were trying to solve the same problem. You could peek into other groups and find inspiration and best practices.

If you love the idea of everyone else having a blog, but aren’t sure you’d want to write one yourself, remember that people don’t read business blogs expecting poetry. The most useful ones are short, clear and to the point. If you can write an e-mail, or present an update in a meeting, then you can write a blog. Blogging isn’t a whole new thing – It’s a new tool that lets us do something we’re already doing, but in a more effective way.

“Crowdsourcing” is one of my favorite social media buzzwords. Crowdsourcing is when you ask a question of a lot of people all at once – is both easy and powerful. Through Facebook, I’ve asked my friends for help with cooking beets, choosing workout music, and entertaining a toddler on a rainy day. I got lots of great advice, often from people at the periphery of my social circle who had fresh perspectives and were eager to share. Can you imagine how annoying it would be if I e-mailed those questions to 300 people simultaneously? And if the people who had ideas for me clicked Reply-All?

I’ve seen some great examples of Crowdsourcing on US Book. One of my colleagues in Marketing was at her wit’s end, wrestling with an Excel formula. She posted a status update asking for help, and within minutes she had the answer. The number of employees logging into US Book daily is still in the 100s – but imagine if even half of our 63,000 employees were in the same conversation.

Managing a focused conversation with that many people can get a little unwieldy. That’s where communities and discussion forums come in.

Back to little Evie for a minute. When she arrived on the scene, I knew nothing about babies. I had read lots of books and articles – but information without context is just noise. I needed people. My family was half a continent away, and my friends – none of whom had children – were at happy hour drinking mojitos.

On the website Babycenter.com, I found a message board specifically for mothers with due dates in March 2007. People were asking health questions and talking about names and swapping tips. We were women from all over the world who wanted to talk about the exact same thing.

Discussion forums or communities are great for a few reasons. First, they accelerate the sharing of knowledge. You have a lot of people interested in the same topic, they’re all learning and doing research, and they can share ideas and resources with one another. Imagine how powerful this could be if you’re the only person at your office in your role – say, you’re a trainer – and you could connect with other U.S. Bank trainers to find out how they’re handling the same kinds of challenges you face every day. And every time you ask or answer a question on a public forum, that learning is visible to anyone who reads it – unlike if you asked your question by e-mail or phone call.

Secondly, in a community setting, people can build rapport that can grow into relationships. There’s a social karma factor – The more kind and helpful you are to others, the more people want to help you. Just like in real life. And real networking can develop when you find someone who has a shared interest or a compatible personality. Collaboration comes naturally when you feel like you know someone – and when you like someone. I’m a big believer in the value of non-work related conversations in US Book. If you know that a colleague shares your enthusiasm for basset hounds or Battlestar Galactica, you’re naturally going to be more inclined to collaborate.

And thirdly, communities allow for richer and deeper participation from larger groups of people. If you hold a meeting with 70 people, how many of those people will really be part of the conversation? There will be the one or two who have a lot to say – you know who I’m talking about, there’s at least one in every meeting. There will be a lot of nods and “Me toos,” and maybe a couple of counterpoints here and there, but the majority of the people in your meeting will stay silent. Some of this is personality style: Extraverts tend to think out loud, while introverts prefer to have some time to mull things over and digest before sharing their thoughts.

My team, Corporate Marketing, has an US Book community. At a recent department meeting, we had two agencies present us with proposals for marketing materials. Our leader wanted all of our opinions – not just the opinions of most extraverted people in the room. After the meeting, she instructed everyone in the department to post in the discussion forum with the three most compelling things they’d seen in the meeting, their preference between the agencies, and any other observations. It took a couple of days for everyone to respond, but she got more thoughtful and useful feedback than would have been possible in a meeting.

Social networking is magic. It’s a spaceship and a time machine in one.

But the real magic is something else. It’s the most basic thing of all, it’s the connection of human beings who want to help one another, who want to learn and to teach, who want to listen and who want to be heard.

The moms I met on that pregnancy board 5 years ago continued talking. Parenting is similar to work in this regard: Once you finally know all the answers, they change all the questions. So my friends and I created our own online community and we continued to share our experiences and learn from each other. We’re still in daily conversation, with 76 members and over 250,000 posts (as of this morning) about everything from disciplining preschoolers to the latest episode of Survivor. It was my experience as a moderator of this community that inspired me and helped shape the professional point of view that I’ve shared with you today.

I’ll leave you with some pictures from my family vacation, the third one I’ve taken with friends from my parenting group. I have no doubt that social networking works, that online connections are real, and that the effort you give to an online community can repay you in something that looks and feels just like magic.

Monday, September 21, 2009

From bards to bloggers: What's old is new again

It was the cranky old grandpa on The Simpsons who said it best:

"Why, a fax machine is nothing but a waffle iron with a phone attached."

Really, a lot of the "game changing" technologies that we've seen over the last few decades are improvements on things we had seen before. E-mail is a speedier, lightweight version of the same 1:1 written communication that we've known for millennia. One could argue that Paul's letters to the Ephesians, as published in the Bible, were an early form of blogging.

So, what's the big deal about social media? Are we really shifting paradigms and redefining communication, or are we just doing the same old things in faster, shinier ways?

Think of the different ways we spread our ideas to other people. There's 1:1 communication: Two people speaking, listening, and responding to one another. Face to face dialogue, phone calls, letters, e-mail, private chat, Skype calls... all of these are the same fundamental dynamic in which one human being connects to another.

Broadcast conversation is old, too. From cave paintings to books to speeches to TV shows to Youtube clips, the idea of a person standing before a group of people and broadcasting a message isn't new either. One important shift is the opportunity for feedback that social media allows: Suddenly, broadcast communication is two-way. People can (and do) leave comments on videos, ask questions of bloggers, and spark debates about the news articles they read online. In this way, we harken back to the ancient tradition of the oral history - in which the traveling storyteller could hear the audience reaction and refine his narrative as he wandered from place to place.

Where I see the biggest, deepest shift is in many:many communication. These types of connections aren't new; we've all sat around a table or campfire and swapped ideas with a group of people. In an online discussion forum or social network, the conversation stays after the people have left. It doesn't disappear. It doesn't get forgotten or filtered or retold with changes and self-serving edits. You can see the exact words that people used in their lively banter, you can watch an idea unfold, you can watch the exact process that a group followed to solve their problem collaboratively. You can also watch an idea go down the tubes, watch a project fail as if it were a bacterium dying in a petri dish. And not only can you see it - so can everyone else who shares your network.

This openness is at once exciting and startling. It requires some personal and rhetorical skills that don't always come naturally: The willingness to be open, the courage to put your ideas into a public space, the consideration to reply to other people's posts, and the emotional maturity to learn from your own missteps and review your dialogues without censoring.

The benefits of this type of collaboration are innumerable: By opening up many:many communication in a public and shared setting, we can gain a clear and powerful understanding of who we are, how we relate to one another, and what we can do to improve the world or our organization.

Is social media an exciting and powerful way to tap into our collective ideas? Absolutely.

Is it new? Not really.



Monica Wiant