Why your tweets don’t get the love that Simon Sinek’s or Brené Brown’s tweets get.
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Transcript
When Simon Sinek or Brené Brown tweet a sentence, it gets them a thousand likes
Speaker:and 100 retweets in a matter of minutes.
Speaker:When you – or I – tweet the same sentence, it doesn't work that way.
Speaker:So, why do people love these words when Sinek or brown say them,
Speaker:but not when you do, even when it's the exact same phrasing?
Speaker:Because you're a stranger while Sinek and Brown are not.
Speaker:In fact, for many in their audience, they are heroes and as such they
Speaker:speak up on behalf of their audience.
Speaker:They say out loud their audience’s thoughts.
Speaker:The appeal of their tweets is not that their audience agrees with the
Speaker:celebrity, but the other way around.
Speaker:For the audience, it feels like their hero agrees with them.
Speaker:And this is why it matters whether you're a stranger or not.
Speaker:Because nobody cares for when a stranger agrees with them.
Speaker:They don't know you and so you haven't earned the right to speak on their behalf.
Speaker:It's been the same for the celebrity when she wasn't famous, yet.
Speaker:Of course, the safest way to earn the right to speak on your
Speaker:audience's behalf is consistency.
Speaker:Show up consistently, speak the truth consistently capturing your
Speaker:audience's thoughts consistently.
Speaker:And have a little patience with it.
Speaker:And step by step, you’ll earn the right to speak on their behalf.