Leaders Light The Path

PODCAST EPISODE

Speaking up on their behalf

Why your tweets don’t get the love that Simon Sinek’s or Brené Brown’s tweets get.

Read more thoughts on the art of communicating week-daily at https://michaelgerharz.com/blog

Transcript
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When Simon Sinek or Brené Brown tweet a sentence, it gets them a thousand likes

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and 100 retweets in a matter of minutes.

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When you – or I – tweet the same sentence, it doesn't work that way.

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So, why do people love these words when Sinek or brown say them,

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but not when you do, even when it's the exact same phrasing?

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Because you're a stranger while Sinek and Brown are not.

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In fact, for many in their audience, they are heroes and as such they

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speak up on behalf of their audience.

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They say out loud their audience’s thoughts.

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The appeal of their tweets is not that their audience agrees with the

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celebrity, but the other way around.

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For the audience, it feels like their hero agrees with them.

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And this is why it matters whether you're a stranger or not.

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Because nobody cares for when a stranger agrees with them.

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They don't know you and so you haven't earned the right to speak on their behalf.

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It's been the same for the celebrity when she wasn't famous, yet.

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Of course, the safest way to earn the right to speak on your

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audience's behalf is consistency.

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Show up consistently, speak the truth consistently capturing your

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audience's thoughts consistently.

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And have a little patience with it.

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And step by step, you’ll earn the right to speak on their behalf.

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