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2012年9月17日 星期一

Spectacular Content Presentation Tips - Sensory and Emotional Communication


How Sensory and Emotional Communication Engages Your Audience

While you never want to ignore the analytical aspects of communication, you must realize the value of the sensory and emotional aspects of communication. The authoritativeness and competence with which you command an audience is influenced powerfully by these facets of communication.

Sensory Communication

Sensory communication is one of the most powerful tools to grab an audience's attention. It allows the presenter to engage the audience and add dimension, variety, and interest to the content. This tool not only engages the audience, but it also dramatically improves the audience's recall of the content. This is a very important factor.

Emotional Communication

Most presenters are aware of the fact that you need to build a rapport with your audience. This is not a secret. However, this is done most quickly through emotional communication. The way the audience members feel will seriously influence what they think of the presentation and their final decisions. Whether or not the listeners are moved to action is dependent upon how the presentation, and more importantly the presenter, made them feel.

Everything passes through an emotional filter. How you made people feel about yourself and the topic you presented will affect how they process the information you provided. Emotions drive the perception the audience takes away from the presentation. Emotional thinking influences the end results dramatically.

Your goals as a presenter should be:


Earn the audience's trust
Build a rapport with the audience
Demonstrate professionalism

It is not uncommon for presenters to be judged solely on their ability to connect with the audience on an emotional level. The intensity of the emotions that are elicited has great bearing on the attention you receive from the audience and their level of recall and their likelihood to take action.

How to Move Your Audience toward Action

The best way to move your audience to action is to involve them emotionally in the presentation. The conviction and passion that you convey will affect the emotional connection you make with your audience. There are some powerful tools you can use to elicit emotional connections with your listeners, such as:


Music
Images or pictures
Stories

These are all wonderful tools that you should make use of whenever possible.

When you balance your sensory and emotional communication with your analytical information, you have the ingredients for a powerful presentation. The sensory and emotional aspects allow you to get the audience's attention and connect with them so that the analytical information can be received, processed and retained.

Never neglect the emotional and sensory aspects of a presentation as this is where you earn trust and build rapport with your audience. A presentation that ignores these features tends to be dry, dull, and uninteresting. It will not be well received, thus the information will rarely make it to processing. Keep the personal aspects of the communication process fully integrated and you will have a successful and memorable presentation.




And we'd like to invite you watch and listen to additional FREE online marketing tips and powerful strategies by going to http://www.SpectacularOnlineSecrets.com

To find out more about Pat and Lorna Shanks (The Coolest Couple) please visit our blog at http://www.ToPatAndLorna.com





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

2012年3月16日 星期五

Teaching Children With Autism Better Verbal Communication Skills


Children with autism commonly face problems with verbal communication. This is usually due to the frequent speech and language problems associated with the disorder. Though the actual reason that these problems are faced by autistic children is unknown, many experts believe that they are the result of several conditions occurring before, during, or after the child's birth that have had an impact on the development of the brain. The inability to properly communicate verbally can make interpretation and interaction with the child's world much more difficult.

The communication problems experienced vary from child to child, depending on the individual's social and intellectual development. While some may not be able to speak at all, others may maintain extensive vocabularies and can express themselves regarding complex topics. However, most children with autism experience some form of communication difficulty usually with the appropriate use of the language, for example difficulty with intonation, rhythm, and word and sentence meaning.

Autistic children who are able to speak may say things without true information, expression, or content. They are only words with no meaning to the situation. Others will use echolalia, where they simply repeat what they have heard, even if they have been asked a question. And yet other autistic children will use delayed echolalia, using the question previously posed in order to ask for what they want. For example, a child who had earlier been asked "are you hungry?" may say "are you hungry" at a later time to express his or her hunger.

Many autistic children will have a stock of phrases that they use in specific conditions. For example, a child may introduce him or herself at the beginning of every conversation. Some autistic children learn scripts from television shows, commercials, books, or other recorded dialogs.

Autistic children able to speak can frequently speak extensively about a topic without the ability to actually converse with others. They may also make up a voice to use other than their own such as a robot voice, a deep voice, a squeaky voice or another similar type of alteration.

It is possible to help an autistic child to better his or her verbal communication skills with improvements made through the use of appropriate treatments.

The first step is to consult a speech and language pathologist in order to have your child's communication skills evaluated. Specific treatments suitable for your child may be recommended during this evaluation.

No single method of communication treatment has been universally found to improve all autistic children, but starting early increases the chances of significant improvements. Try to target your child's specific communication strengths and weaknesses. Different forms of goal orientated therapy for useful communications are the most successful techniques, though not guaranteed to work for all children. Periodic in-depth evaluations from a specialist are recommended for perfecting and altering the therapy to best work for your child's unique needs.

Many parents find that consulting physical and occupational therapists can also be very helpful for helping to reduce unwanted behaviors during communication, which are common hindrances to the development of skills.

Find out what your child best responds to: a structured behavior modification program, an in-home therapy program, or another type of therapy that utilizes reality-based situations as a foundation for the therapy.

It may surprise you to discover that music therapy and sensory integration therapies may have a large impact on your child's ability to use verbal communication. This is because stimulation of the senses often helps to improve the child's ability to respond to sensory information, and therefore helps him or her recognize what he or she is hearing through verbal communication and seeing through non-verbal communication. The goal is to help improve the effectiveness of sensory understanding.

Medications may also improve an autistic child's attention span, which in turn can help to improve verbal communication in your child. However, with long-term medication use there is the possibility of undesirable side effects.

To be certain that your child is at his or her fullest potential, mineral and vitamin supplements, as well as a tailored diet, psychotherapy, and overcoming sleep challenges may greatly assist in focus and attention, which should help improve verbal communication.




Grab your free copy of Rachel Evans' brand new Autism Newsletter - Overflowing with easy to implement methods to help you and your family find out about autism treatment options plus information on improving autism verbal skills





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

2012年1月14日 星期六

Three Golden Rules for Communication Success


Have you been passionate about communicating something important to others, but have not received the acknowledgment, attention and outcomes you envisioned? Three "golden rules" for communication success are neuroscience-based methods that draw people into engaging with you and improve the probability of reaching win-win outcomes. They engender respect, build trust and improve relationships.

Golden Rule #1: People do things for their reasons, not for yours.

The brain only engages with listening, observing, thinking and action when a value component is present. The value can be feeling important, being needed or reaching out and helping someone because it's the right thing to do. It may be intellectual curiosity, solving a nagging life problem or acquiring a physical possession. The reason is irrelevant. Any reason the brain deems valuable gets the brain's attention. If you don't know the "hot buttons" of a person or group, try using phrases like: "I have a problem and need your help." "Will you take a look at a situation that may change your life for the better?" "Is this a good time to ask your opinion about something that may interest you?" Make sure the "attention getter" has integrity, serving the best and highest interests of the person or group you are addressing.

Golden Rule #2: Do it the Socratic way.

Provide information with a minimum of "telling." Maximize asking questions that draw the person into the communication process, thus encouraging an exchange of information and insights, rather than a one-sided monologue. Questions expand insights and integrate knowledge into common understanding, consensus, solutions and pathways to positive action. Asking Socratic questions is a life skill that anyone can learn. You can start the process now by beginning conversations and presentations with "what, why, when and how." Everyone learns with this method and you can be the facilitator of this dynamic and fun learning process.

Golden Rule #3: Communicate on the wavelength of your audience or listener

Visual Learners Need: Visual media, key written points, pictures, graphics, images, color, clutter-free environment

Kinesthetic Learners Need: Physical or hands-on experiences, comfort, freedom to move about, frequent breaks

Auditory Learners Need: Clarity of words, attentive listening, ability to ask questions, quiet environment

Sequential Thinkers Need: Logic, order, particulars, realism, practicality, data, schedules, content

Global Thinkers Need: Possibilities, options, generalities, open-ended, big picture, context

These "golden rules" for communication success are neuroscience principles available to everyone interested in positive outcomes for all parties. People engage when subjects are important and valuable to them, not necessarily to you. Therefore, you must provide reasons for them to interact with you and the subject. Inclusiveness, rather than exclusiveness is the operative word. Asking open-ended questions with a minimum of telling is an ancient Socratic principle of learning, more recently discovered to be based in neuroscience. Communicating on the wavelengths of others enables them to take in, process and gain understanding in the minimum amount of time.




It is essential in personal and business relationships to communicate on each other's sensory and cognitive thinking "wavelengths." This builds rapport and saves valuable time. Find comprehensive tools to improve communication effectiveness with anyone by 25% to 40% or more at http://www.brainpathways.net. You'll also find free resources like the Brain PathWays Blog and Free Daily Messages From Your Brain. Stephen Hager is a lifelong learner, scientist, author, speaker and teacher. Along with Deanna Phelps, he is the co-creator of brain-based human development products. Their goal is to help people live better and more peaceful lives through the "power within." Since 1992, Deanna and Stephen have been developing practical neuroscience solutions for better communications, clearer thinking, faster learning, higher productivity, stress management and creative problem solving. Everything they have learned from 20 years of research and working with people is incorporated in the comprehensive and individualized Brain PathWays 14-page report. Brain PathWays is the most advanced and value packed neuroscience system available anywhere.





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

2012年1月6日 星期五

Spectacular Content Presentation Tips - Sensory and Emotional Communication


How Sensory and Emotional Communication Engages Your Audience

While you never want to ignore the analytical aspects of communication, you must realize the value of the sensory and emotional aspects of communication. The authoritativeness and competence with which you command an audience is influenced powerfully by these facets of communication.

Sensory Communication

Sensory communication is one of the most powerful tools to grab an audience's attention. It allows the presenter to engage the audience and add dimension, variety, and interest to the content. This tool not only engages the audience, but it also dramatically improves the audience's recall of the content. This is a very important factor.

Emotional Communication

Most presenters are aware of the fact that you need to build a rapport with your audience. This is not a secret. However, this is done most quickly through emotional communication. The way the audience members feel will seriously influence what they think of the presentation and their final decisions. Whether or not the listeners are moved to action is dependent upon how the presentation, and more importantly the presenter, made them feel.

Everything passes through an emotional filter. How you made people feel about yourself and the topic you presented will affect how they process the information you provided. Emotions drive the perception the audience takes away from the presentation. Emotional thinking influences the end results dramatically.

Your goals as a presenter should be:


Earn the audience's trust
Build a rapport with the audience
Demonstrate professionalism

It is not uncommon for presenters to be judged solely on their ability to connect with the audience on an emotional level. The intensity of the emotions that are elicited has great bearing on the attention you receive from the audience and their level of recall and their likelihood to take action.

How to Move Your Audience toward Action

The best way to move your audience to action is to involve them emotionally in the presentation. The conviction and passion that you convey will affect the emotional connection you make with your audience. There are some powerful tools you can use to elicit emotional connections with your listeners, such as:


Music
Images or pictures
Stories

These are all wonderful tools that you should make use of whenever possible.

When you balance your sensory and emotional communication with your analytical information, you have the ingredients for a powerful presentation. The sensory and emotional aspects allow you to get the audience's attention and connect with them so that the analytical information can be received, processed and retained.

Never neglect the emotional and sensory aspects of a presentation as this is where you earn trust and build rapport with your audience. A presentation that ignores these features tends to be dry, dull, and uninteresting. It will not be well received, thus the information will rarely make it to processing. Keep the personal aspects of the communication process fully integrated and you will have a successful and memorable presentation.




And we'd like to invite you watch and listen to additional FREE online marketing tips and powerful strategies by going to http://www.SpectacularOnlineSecrets.com

To find out more about Pat and Lorna Shanks (The Coolest Couple) please visit our blog at http://www.ToPatAndLorna.com





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.