Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - #464: The Secret To Captivating Any Audience with Ashley Stahl Top 100 TEDx Speaker Bestselling Author, TEDx Talk Booker & Speechwriter
Episode Date: September 24, 2024In This Episode You Will Learn About: Why real IMPACT comes from being RAW and AUTHENTIC, not flawless How to OWN your narrative What moments truly CONNECT and INSPIRE Why start NOW and transfor...m LATER Ways your story can CHANGE lives Resources: Website: www.ashleystahl.com Listen to You Turn Podcast Read You Turn: Get Unstuck, Discover Your Direction, and Design Your Dream Career Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, & LinkedIn: @ashleystahl Mention this episode for $1000 off at wisewhisperagency.com Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at shopify.com/monahan Kajabi is offering a free 30-day trial to start your business if you go to Kajabi.com/confidence Get your KPI Checklist, absolutely free, at NetSuite.com/MONAHAN. Want to do more and spend less like Uber, 8x8, and Databricks Mosaic? Take a free test drive of OCI at oracle.com/MONAHAN. Get 15% off your first order on www.jennikayne.com when you use code CONFIDENCE15 at checkout. Go to ro.co/confidence, and pay just $99 for your first month. Call my digital clone at 201-897-2553! Visit heathermonahan.com Reach out to me on Instagram & LinkedIn Sign up for my mailing list: heathermonahan.com/mailing-list/ Overcome Your Villains is Available NOW! Order here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com If you haven't yet, get my first book Confidence Creator Show Notes: Have you ever stopped to think about the POWER of your own story? Ashley Stahl is back to share the power of storytelling—not just to captivate an audience—but to completely TRANSFORM your life. Ashley’s shift from working at the Pentagon to commanding the TEDx stage proves that the stories we tell can open doors we never IMAGINED. The most impactful stories aren’t polished or perfect; they’re the raw, authentic moments that connect us on a human level. It’s not about having all the answers—it’s about sharing your TRUTH and letting that truth INSPIRE others. When you embrace vulnerability and tell your story, you’re not just building a brand, you’re creating real, lasting IMPACT. Your story has the POWER to change everything. Start telling it. If You Liked This Episode You Might Also Like These Episodes: #88: Ashley Stahl on Making a You Turn: Finding a Career that Honors You #355: The Secrets To MASTERING The TEDx Talk with Ashley Stahl TEDx Talk Booker & Speechwriter, Bestselling Author, Career Fulfillment Coach, & Top 100 TEDx speaker #326: Turn Your Passion Into ACTION With Ellen Bennett, Sarah Pendrick, Tiffani Bova, Ashley Stahl, Brit Morin & Christmas Abbott
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Why would we do one conversation after the other when we can just stand in front of an audience of 500 people and just move them so powerfully that they come to find us to work with us?
It's just unlike any other method I've found so far.
Come on this journey with me.
Each week when you join me, we are going to chase down our goals, overcome adversity and set you up for a better tomorrow.
That's a no-signal dance.
I'm ready for my close-up.
Hi, and welcome back.
I'm so glad you're back here with us this week.
OK, you know it's so rare that I have a guest on multiple times,
but today I just had to do it.
One, she's my friend, but two, this girl drops gems
and teaches just at a whole other level
that I had to expose you to yet again.
OK, Ashley Stahl, she's a founder
of Wise Whisperer Agency. She's literally crafted hundreds of TEDx talks and speeches, stages all
over from South by Southwest, MGM, so many venues and events, other level. I mean, her speaker agency
is crushing it and she's turning dreams into reality for hundreds of people and she can do it for you too.
Ashley, thank you so much for being here with us today.
Thank you for having me.
Okay, so there's so much we wanna talk about today,
how to craft an ideal talk,
how to be a captivating storyteller and blow people away
and how to go viral.
But before we get into your wheelhouse
and you've done all of those things
and I can't wait to hear from you on it,
I was just asking you offline about
when you worked at the Pentagon
and you took me into this whole story
about how when you were at the Pentagon,
you were asked to speak and give your first keynote ever
and talk me through how that went.
Cause I know a lot of people that are listening now
have never gotten on stage,
have always thought about,
like, how do you do it?
So break it down how it all happened
and how you were able to pull it off.
It's so funny.
I always used to think that when we would see somebody on TV,
somebody like went running after them to grab them
and put them there.
And what I didn't realize is that that person
is a publicist, not like somebody else that just
wants them to be there.
I don't know why,
everybody who's quote unquote sought after, I just really growing up thought, wow, people must be
TV networks must be racing down to get this expert. They must be good. I didn't understand the world of PR and publicity and how there is just entire workforces full of people that people
are paying to get them on TV, to get them on stages.
I had no idea how much personal brand can be a game of pay to play. Or if you don't
want to pay, you need to work and get it done because it's a lot of tedious work.
So for me, in my twenties, I worked in national security. It was during the Obama administration.
I know we live in a very politically heated era, so I hope nobody gets spicy about that
for better or for worse.
What we can agree, regardless of our politics, is that he was seen as a pretty good speaker.
And so I would watch him speak.
And one of the things I noticed that he would do is he would always pause.
And in his pauses, I could see people processing his information in such a different way.
Meanwhile, I ended up getting a job working in national security at the
Pentagon, and so I wasn't really tied to him.
My team reported to the secretary of defense and I spent my
whole life trying to get there.
I learned languages.
I got the degrees.
I spoke French, Arabic.
I started learning Dari, which is spoken in Afghanistan.
And so there I was at the Pentagon in DC.
I was like 23 and I wanted to join the CIA.
I wanted to become a spy.
And the reason I wanted to do that
was because people always shared things with me.
And I thought, wow, after seeing 9-11 happen,
you know, when I was in high school
standing there watching the TV screen,
I thought, wow, if this is happening in the world and I can use my language
skills and my people skills to fix this in some way, because I always knew
it was a gift from a young age.
I'm going to use it.
And what I didn't realize or calculate was how much I didn't know myself, how
much my values didn't really line up with being a spy or working in national
security, but I benefited from a lot of the trainings. They put me in the FBI.
We learned different communication tools like elicitation and counter elicitation.
So what that looks like, Heather, is if I'm wanting to get information from you, I
want to know how many people you're in a class and you walk out the door and I
want to know how many people are in that classroom is at five, is it 10?
I'll say, Hey, that's a pretty big class you have right there.
What is that?
Like 20 people.
And then you'll say, no, it's 10. You class you have right there. What is that, like 20 people? And they'll say, no, it's 10.
You make people correct you, that's counter elicitation.
So there's so many different communication tools I learned.
And I like to think that I use my tools for good and not for evil.
But it's been years since I worked in national security, but I'll never forget.
I went to an award ceremony.
I got this award in DC.
I met this girl, Her name was Sarah.
And I have so many friends named Sarah. There's something with me and the Saras. They've all been
so good to me. This Sarah, she won this award with me. It was like a top 99 ceremony for women under
33 in national security or something like that. My dad flew into DC. He was like so proud, you know,
of my little award. And I was like, Oh, you look so put
together. Who are you? And I'm talking to the Sarah girl. She
goes, Oh, I just gave a TED talk at the UN. It's the TEDx UN
Plaza event. I was like, Oh my gosh, that's so cool that you
did that. And I said to her, one day, I hope I can do something
like that. And she looked at me, she said, Oh, I'm sure it's
coming. And she said it like, she said, oh, I'm sure it's coming.
And she said it like a cartoon, like a sparkle on her tooth,
like, ding, you know, like, I'm sure that's
going to happen for you.
I'm like, no, it's not.
And sure enough, I flew to Istanbul that week.
I was in a protest.
It was like a government protest.
If you'd watched the news in 2012,
you'd see Istanbul was not going well.
A lot of civil unrest. There's tear gas
in the air flying in my eye. I'm squinting my eyeballs and I get a text and it's this girl
from last week from the award ceremony. And she said, Hey, I recommended you to Tedx Berkeley.
And they took my recommendation. You're going to speak there. By the way, this is Sarah from the thing. I'm like, Oh my God.
So I'm like 22, 23.
I don't even know how many years old.
I'm like a fetus.
I'm so young.
And I've never spoken on a stage in my freaking life.
Like what?
And so I ended up getting an email from them going back to my hotel that night.
And they asked me for a speaking reel.
I had no idea how they're, what a speaking reel was.
I use my iPhone like two, like what iPhone was in, in 2010, 2011, I
use my iPhone, whatever on Safari and typed in, what is a speaking reel?
Didn't have it.
So I propped my phone against the bathroom window of my motel in Istanbul. I pulled the curtain behind me. So
I had like a backdrop and I just started talking at the screen and decided that was going to be my
speaking reel. Like really hot mess express for some reason it was like an act of God.
They took me, they accepted me and you know, it's so great. It's honestly great. I can't find it.
Like I look at my email and I see, but I sent it via we transfer, you
know, when we transfer was a thing.
And the link is obviously dead because it's like 15 years old or whatever it is.
And thank God it is.
Cause I don't think I could sit and watch myself in this video, but
they accepted me as a speaker.
I ended up going on stage after guy Kawasaki who is a, I don't even know
what, how to describe him as a speaker, like an epic speaker on stage after Guy Kawasaki, who is a, I don't even know
what, how to describe him as a speaker, like an epic speaker.
And he's a legend.
And everybody, when I got to the Ted X Berkeley event, it was 2013, that event.
Cause once you get booked for a talk like this, you still have three to six,
even eight months to prepare.
It depends.
There's some runway.
So I got the yes every night.
I thought they were going to take it away from me.
They were going to change their mind and be like, nevermind.
You're not our speaker.
Cause I just felt like this imposter.
Cause I kind of was like, I had never spoken in my whole life, but that's
the thing that makes the Ted and Ted X brand so awesome is that they're
really looking for people who have.
A story.
And the thing that I've learned as a writer at my core, that's really who I
am is that you can make stories and art out of everyday life.
That's what great writers and artists can do.
So I deeply believe that everybody has a story to tell.
And this moment in time was my moment to tell mine.
So I got on stage right after Guy,
I forgot my lines as I was walking up,
and then I just kind of centered myself
and remembered everything.
I memorized every word of my nine minutes speech and the thing went
viral, which was like just mind blowing.
And the reason that was possible was because when I got this Ted X talk
opportunity, I found somebody in the administration in DC who was a
speech writer and I said, look, like I'm about to embarrass myself and
fall flat on this YouTube red dot.
Thing like you've got to help me. fall flat on this YouTube red dot thing.
Like you've got to help me.
And he just sat me down for like 20 minutes and he's like, here's how you write a speech.
There's the opener.
There's the key points.
How many minutes is it?
Okay.
Nine minutes.
Okay.
That's only three pages typed Ashley.
That's not a long speech.
You should memorize it.
If you memorize it, you'll say it better.
I followed his directions in that 20 minutes and there we were.
I gave my thing and it changed my whole life.
Like that talk, I got around two to 3 million views from it.
I got 80% of my leads.
I ended up launching a coaching business and leaving Washington DC.
Cause I was so good at job hunting and that was my thing.
And it was the recession.
I helped everybody with their job hunt.
So I started a business,
80% of my clients came from that one nine minute talk.
And I always had a wait list
and I just couldn't believe it.
I'm like, wow, I am watching so many business people
do so many things to get leads, to make money, to survive.
And I just needed to go memorize three pages typed
and like go stand on this dot and that's it.
Me and different guests each week.
When you're not in the chat, confidence cleared.
When I started podcasting,
an online store was the furthest thing from my mind.
Now I'm selling my group coaching on the regular
and it is just so easy. All
because I use Shopify.
It felt like a lot when I was doing it because I held it so heavily. Like it was a big deal
for my career and it was. It was my first speech of my whole life and it was going to
be memorialized on a YouTube channel with 40 million subscribers.
I didn't want to fall flat on my face. And that fear, there was like the fear of God in me. It
lent itself to me, I don't know, like giving the best talk I could at that time. And it all started
in a spice bizarre with a text message in my pocket during a protest.
And yeah, fast forward 10, 12, 15 years, I had a coaching business. Most of my success came from not one, but two Tedx talks. I would go on to give.
I got international licensing deals on my courses from my Tedx talk. I have,
my courses are all in Chinese and Asia on platforms like masterclass, but in Asia, it's not masterclass,
but it's like it. I got a speaking agent. He saw my talk. He contacted me. He put me on a
speaking tour. He booked me on 40 stages. My keynote fee went from 5k to 30k per speech.
It was all from these two little talks. And I forever wondered in my career,
why is anybody doing anything
when they could just be doing this?
And I don't care how much you like speaking or not,
you have a story and you have a voice.
So if you don't wanna be a speaker, which, you know,
spoiler alert, I learned I don't want to,
I actually wanna be the woman behind the speaker.
I'm the writer.
I got six book deals offered to me from these TEDx talks.
I ended up taking one of them and that book has been translated into multiple languages.
We've done about 60,000 books sold.
And just for little old me who identifies as a writer, first and
foremost, it gave me permission to start offering myself up as a speech writer
to people as the 10 or 15 years pressed on.
And I really got my mastery and went on those speaking tours and really learned how to command
an audience.
And now I have a writing team of 20 people at wise whisper.
We do many different things, but the most important ones is we help craft keynote speeches.
We help get clients booked on all sorts of stages.
A hundred of our clients we've helped get booked
on the TEDx stage with a hundred percent success,
but we help clients every single month.
We pitch them to up to 40 aligned stages.
So anyone who finds us that wants to establish themselves
as a speaker, wants to speak for their brand,
get book sales, get clients through speaking,
we pitch them every single month as part of our offers to get them booked for those.
Um, we ghost write books.
So I've become officially the artist that I was meant to be.
And it's funny cause I opened up my book in preschool and I remember the thing
in preschool that happened preschool graduation, the principal said, what do
you want to be when you grow up?
And that was our graduation ceremony.
All the kids went up to the microphone and said, I want to be a firefighter.
I want to be a, you know, whatever.
I walked up and I think it was like a class of 30 kids.
And I said, I want to be a mom and a poet.
And I waited for the audience to clap.
And it was like a black void, like deafening silence. And it's wild
because that's just how life is, right? Like, you know, who you want to be so early sometimes.
And then I went off and worked in national security and counterterrorism. I went off and
had a career coaching business. And then eventually all these things brought me back to who I am,
which is I wrote a book.
Now I oversee a speech writing team.
We're writing speeches and we're not just a speech writing team.
We're like a fucking dynasty.
Like the people on my team, I have writers from shows like succession, new
girl, Lizzie McGuire, that's so Raven, like classics and like shows right now
that we're watching now, our executive creative director spent 13 years at Apple.
She was Steve jobs, right hand making decks for him, writing speeches
for his executive team.
So where I'm at now in running this agency is really being in an energy of
creativity, of artistry, of poetry.
And I have learned so much about what it takes to captivate an audience.
And it has been such a joy to help other people craft talks,
even if it's a 10 minute talk that actually create results for them.
We had a client just last week. We crafted a talk for him.
It was like a 10 minute Tedx speech that he's going to go give,
or we booked him on the Tedx stage and he ended up getting a, an award at a gala and they're like, you can speak up to 10 minutes. And he used his TEDx
script that we helped him craft. And he said at the end, he made an ask for the audience to donate
to a cause. He got $2.6 million in donations off that 10 minute script that he just tacked on an
ask at the end. It is just the power of being able to move people and make an ask.
That is incredible.
Oh my gosh.
He must have been over the moon when he called you.
Yeah.
I mean, it's funny.
These people that are our clients, we are pretty high end service.
The talent that we scope is so world class.
And there's a part of me that kind of hates the fact that we
can't be like the discount agency that's more affordable because there were so many years in
business that I needed and still need like more affordable resources. That's not us. We're pretty
high-end because high-end talent has high-end compensation and I've learned it firsthand over
here. So we have clients that are coming in that are really movers and shakers in the world.
So for him, I guess it was just another day, like he pulled 2.6, but he shot me a
text and said, great script, like people were in tears and they just donated so
much money to my cause.
And I just thought like, isn't that wild that the only thing standing between you
and what you want are the words you choose and how they make people feel.
Like that ability to have a conversation that moves somebody
is the epicenter of getting what you want out of your life.
Oh my gosh, you make it all sound so simple.
However, it doesn't feel that simple for the rest of us.
So break down for us or share with us,
what is captivating storytelling
and how do people use that in day-to-day life? You know, one of the things I've been sitting
with recently is that there's a lot of different types of storytellers and there's two types that
we really lead with at Wise Whisper Agency. And I'll just give everybody the, I say nine types,
the ninth one is the boring storytellers. There's really just eight. The first one is the hero's journey, right? So that's like from Joseph Campbell.
It's a typical beginning, middle, and end, you know, like in the middle, there's some
sort of conflict and the end it resolves itself. It's a standard story arc.
The second type of story that you hear all the time, we often see on TV dramas, it's
a lot of ups and downs, and then it completes in some way,
like a finale. So it's almost like they have some ups, they have some downs, we don't really
know where it's going. And then it has this sort of completion to it. That's the drama
stories.
The snapshot stories are less. What I like to call them. It's snapshots of multiple stories
from multiple people's perspectives and bringing them into one. So we see this type of storytelling in a lot of
movies. And as people are listening, especially if they have a pen in hand, they can write this
down. They can start to see like, what kind of storyteller are you? Right? So the snapshot
stories, there's a movie called life itself. It's a tearjerker. It shows a car accident happening
and somebody dies and the whole movie backs up and it's written in a way
where you look at the life of every single person
that was impacted by that car accident.
And then the movie ends with all of those people
coming together and meeting each other.
A lot of books are like that.
A chapter might be the name of a character
and the chapters told you the name of the character.
This is snapshot storytelling.
And that's just, you know,
maybe somebody listening right now,
they're thinking about reading a book or writing a book.
They're thinking about writing a speech.
These are all different approaches you could do,
but I would argue the two that we're using
are the most powerful, so I'll get into those.
The fourth type is the gap stories.
It's comparing what is now with what could be.
We see this often in speeches.
Like Martin Luther King's, I have a dream speech. That is a traditional gap storytelling method.
My dream is that it's over here. We're over here. Very, very common storytelling method.
You see a lot of politicians doing that. Number, the fifth one is the proof in the
pudding storytelling. I use this one quite often. Politicians use this a lot. And we've had a lot of politicians come to us
and ask us if we can write their campaign trail
speech for them, because it's like a TED Talk.
It's like this inspirational 10 minute thing
that gets people rallying.
So the proof in the pudding stories,
it's about one core concept with different people or situations
to prove it.
So you might see a core argument, and then a lawyer is using evidence to prove it, stories to prove it. Right. So you might see a court argument and then a lawyer is
using evidence to prove it, stories to prove it. Or you might see a politician saying, this is what
we should do. And here's all these people that are impacted by us not doing this. We're proving that
we should do this. So that's an educational framework, educational storytelling. We use that
quite a bit at wise whisper agency and might get more into that.
The sixth one is mosaic stories. It's showing how all these different ideas came to be,
all these different fragments came to be. So one thing I think about a lot, maybe this
is just that I worked in counterterrorism is the Arab spring. So we remember like the
entire middle East like lit up in around 2012 Arab Spring. And there was a lot of little
pieces of that movement that became momentum to create the entire movement. So if somebody
wanted to tell a story about something like the Arab Spring, they might want to use the
Mosaic method. They're grabbing little peaks and little moments of different people's lives, different situations that
catapulted into one full movement.
The seventh is the bait and switch story.
It's a story that sounds like it's going one way and then it completely blindsides you
and goes a different way.
A lot of people think of TV shows like The Undoing with Nicole Kidman.
That show on HBO was all about like somebody was found dead
and who did it.
And then in the end you get completely blindsided
by who did it, right?
That's the bait and switch storytelling.
And then the one that we use at Wise Whisper
in addition to the proof in the pudding
where we have one argument and we educate people
on why that's the way to go is this one.
It's called the powerful flashback stories.
This approach to storytelling is dropping people
right into a moment in time
that you don't give them context,
you don't talk about how it was a sunny day at 6 a.m.
and you made your coffee, no.
You get them right into the heat of the moment.
So think about a spy movie
where you're dropped right into a spy mission
in the first scene.
Like you don't know who to, you don't know what's what, but somebody's running and somebody's being chased and you're in as fuck.
Right? Like that's a powerful flashback story. So, and then I just say number nine, boring stories,
because life is just too short for a boring story or a bad haircut. That's like my motto.
It's just too short. So what does wiseper use? We use the powerful flashback.
We use the proof in the pudding.
So let's talk a little bit about the flashback
since we just left off on that.
There's many different things that you
want to think about to make something go viral,
to make something do well.
The first piece is obviously the title.
When I think about titles, I think about white elephant
parties.
You don't really know what you're working with. You just see presents that are wrapped. So why would you pick
an ugly present? Like if you're not going to pick one that has like snot on it and the ball is
falling off and like, God knows what happened to the present to get to the white elephant party.
You're going to pick the one that looks exciting, that looks fun, because that's all you have to
work off of. That's how titles are. So you wanna ask yourself,
what is a title that aligns
with what my ideal customer is searching?
The person who I want to find me.
If you look at the top 100 most trending TEDx talks,
and I say that because we've just helped
so many clients right there and get booked for those,
you're gonna see titles like The Art Of,
The Skill Of, Three Ways To, The Missing Ingredient For.
You're gonna see words that have SEO optimized potential.
Like if you write the art of confidence
and you're working with a platform like YouTube,
you have pretty high SEO potential to be found, right?
So first thing first is the title.
The second piece, which is what I want to get into
with your storytelling, is how you open up your story.
So if you're giving a speech,
there's maybe like three different approaches
that we see people open up speeches with quite often,
and they all line up with the powerful flashback.
So the first one is the cheap shot.
I don't mean to insult it by calling it a cheap shot,
but what it really is is the most crazy story
of your life, right?
So my second TEDx talk opens up
with my dad being in the kitchen.
It's not even a story about me, by the way.
I think that's interesting to point out
that I opened up a speech about my speech
about somebody else's story.
You can do that.
You can open up a speech with a story that's not yours.
Permission slip. I gave a story about my dad in the kitchen brewing his coffee
and getting a phone call from somebody saying that I was kidnapped.
It's a crazy story.
People were in right away.
That's my second TEDx talk in 2019.
My first TEDx talk.
The first three words of that talk are spying, the Pentagon, counterterrorism.
And then I say, this was my career path at age 22.
It's all about grabbing people and the cheap shot is about grabbing them with the craziest
story you could ever think of.
So for example, we had a client at Wise Whisper Agency, we were helping him distill his ideas
into a TEDx talk and to a keynote speech.
And we went through his life stories.
We do this all the time.
And one of his life stories was that he got in two,
not one, but two fatal car accidents.
Nobody survived except for him.
And he walked away completely unscathed.
So to us, that was a pretty crazy story.
Like, how could you step away from something like that?
So that's a cheap shot story.
Cheap shots always work.
And I don't mean to call them cheap shots to insult them.
They just are, they're a low lift.
They tell themselves, they're so wild.
Everybody's gonna tune in.
The second type of powerful flashback
is more about the relatable heartfelt story.
And I think it's really important I talk about this
because a lot of people might think,
oh, I don't have any crazy stories.
My life has been kind of unremarkable.
I totally get that.
You have just as much potency
as somebody with a cheap shot
because everyday life can be so relatable and so heartfelt.
I think about a client we had
who we helped her write her keynote
and we have a very comprehensive intake form
that collects people's life stories.
And in her intake form, she told the story of her being in high school and she was at a party and it was the popular guy's house. And she always felt kind of insecure, kind of uncomfortable.
She told me she felt like she was pudgy and just like, you know, whatever those things are in high
school that feel really bad is what she was going through. She heard a girl say, hey, so-and-so wants to talk to you. It was the popular kid that wanted to talk
to her. She ran to the bathroom to get her hair all... She heard through the crack of the bathroom
door somebody telling him, hey, she wants to talk to you. He said, ew, that girl, I don't want to
talk to her. That moment really set her on a low self-esteem path,
lower than Lo could get. But as an opening story, that's not a cheap shot. That's not a crazy
story. It's just a sad, hard moment in her life. And that's why the powerful flashback method,
it's not just about bringing people into a whole story. It's about looping people into a moment
in time. So if she was opening up her
keynote with that moment, she would open up by saying, I was at a party and I'll never forget
this moment where this person, you know, and then she can back into the whole story. It was early
in the morning, but that hook of getting people right into that pain moment. And I think a lot
of people think storytelling and speeches are about making people cry.
And that's not the case. This is just a sad story. There's a lot of heartfelt stories, right?
I think about a client who we wrote a speech for her about burnout. And when we really looked at
the speech, it actually was a speech about having fun. We opened up her talk about her surfing,
and it was like the first time she did something fun
after years of being sobered out and being a workaholic.
And I think that's what it's really about
is taking a simple story, but looking deeper beneath it
and saying, what does this story really represent for me?
And making that be the thing
that you share about in your flashback.
So she could get on stage and say,
in 2017 I got on a surfboard and I realized
it was the first time I'd had fun in 10 years.
So it's like really just opening up
and painting a picture for people in a heartfelt way.
So you don't have to have a cheap shot.
The third type of storytelling is the conversational approach.
This is the kind of story that you see all the time.
You see it a lot on the TED or the TEDx stage. People get on stage, they'll tell you a shocking statistic.
They'll tell you some sort of piece of data. The problem with this one, we try not to use this
very much, but I wanted to include it for people to just contextualize how this can exist in a
powerful flashback, is people might start to have a discussion with the audience and drop a powerful statistic to
get to their intentions or to get their attention. But then they start to converse with the audience
and usually the audience will get bored unless the story in the conversation is powerful enough
and heartfelt enough. So it's kind of not as effective as giving a heartfelt story and taking
people on a journey. Because if you say, did you know that 90% of the blah, blah, blah, has blah, blah, blah happen in their life?
People will get your attention. But then once you start to back up and explain it,
you could lose people unless you have powerful storytelling. So just something to consider if
you want to open up a speech with like a powerful statistic is make sure you have a story to go with
it. That is a flashback moment,
something potent that people can go into with you.
Wow. Oh my gosh. This is like a deeper dive
than I've ever done into the art storytelling.
So thank you for explaining all that.
When you look at the data and the most successful TEDx talks,
TED Talks, is there a trend that one opener is the right opener?
What does it tell you?
Yeah. I mean, pretty much like you're gonna go viral
if you have a cheap shot story
and you tell it with enough spirit.
So if you have a crazy story
and it's the craziest story ever,
not only a crazy story,
but you can help people feel a range of emotion
throughout the crazy story.
That's the second piece.
Then you're in a position for something to go very viral.
As long as it's followed by good content.
Cause if you should have a crazy story,
but the rest of your content isn't really helpful
for people, it's not gonna hit.
They're just gonna be like, wow, that's a crazy story.
I felt so much, but it didn't help me.
And they're not gonna share it.
So you have to pair crazy story with a range of emotion.
If you look at my second TEDx talk in 2019
about how to figure out what you really want,
my dad gets that phone call in the kitchen
I was kidnapped.
And I talk about how we had just lost my big sister.
We just took her off of life support.
And the fear in his body of like
his only other daughter left, getting a phone call like this.
That's a, so I made people feel like his fear,
his heartbreak, it ended up being a scam. Spoiler alert, the phone call like this. That's a, so I made people feel like his fear, his heartbreak, it ended up being a scam.
Spoiler alert, the phone call that he got
that I was kidnapped was a scam.
But I ended up going home that night.
And it was like, for me,
this moment of seeing how fragile he is,
like he almost wired his entire life savings
to some nobody who scammed him and pretended
that they had kidnapped me on the phone.
Meanwhile, I was like sitting at coffee with somebody down the street. So this phone call was
so real for him. But so it's a cheap shot story. It's a crazy story. And I say that again, without
judgment towards myself for using it. But I still showed people the range of emotion on my dad's
experience, what he had just been through in his life, why that phone call meant so much.
I made commentary in the speech about that.
I brought people into my experience
that for me, what came up was realizing
my dad's getting older.
Like he's too fragile to handle phone calls like this.
And then I also started talking about the compassion
I had for the kidnappers in the TED Talk.
I talked about how, why would anybody make a living this way
scaring the life out of people and taking their life savings.
And the only thing I could come up with was like, maybe they
didn't think of another option.
Maybe they didn't have another option.
Maybe they live somewhere that this was like the only
real way to make money.
There's a lot of third world countries where people are making
money through scams because of survival reasons.
And so I just remember looking at these kidnappers
in this speech and saying like, wow,
and that's the story I'm gonna tell myself about them,
that they must have thought there was no other option.
And so showing people that range of emotion
was pretty critical, I think,
to being able to not just take a cheap shot story,
but to give it texture, to make it memorable.
And then from there, you gotta give your best content.
You gotta give your best talking points.
And any speech you write,
my rule of thumb is 115 words per minute.
So I'm always thinking, okay, around 25%
of any speech I give can be the opener.
And so I just kind of do my word count accordingly.
When should people be hiring someone to write a speech for them?
So for example, I was sitting here, I'm like, I should have hired you to write my first
TEDx talk.
I didn't know what I was doing.
Right.
I didn't even oftentimes you just don't even know that's available to you that that's a thing, right? Like you just think that you're not even allowed
to do that. So is it important enough that somebody should be actually hiring to have
something written for them?
It's such a chicken or egg thing because on one hand, we are pretty high end service.
So I would tell people work with us when you've already kind of done the lift to get yourself
somewhere, but you want to get further. But then there's the other part of me that's like, no,
invest in the best, get the best talk.
Cause people can come in and have us write a 10 to 15 minute talk for them.
And that's scoped out at a lower price point, right?
They don't even need to ask us to book them on stages if they don't want.
And they want to do the tedious work of pitching themselves to get booked on
stages, but if you have one 15 minute talk, and here's a mistake that I'm sure you've
seen a lot of speakers make is they say yes to every talk and then they're
constantly creating new content.
It's one of the biggest mistakes you can make in your speaking career is
constantly diluting what you know and turning it into these, you know, new
speeches, one after the night that really turns your speaking career into
this graveyard of content that you haven't really mastered.
And so I would say to anybody here who has at least, you know, maybe
six figures in their business, if you want to take your business to the
next level, at least have a 15 minute talk.
And by the way, if you invest in a team like ours at wise whisper,
you can take that 15 minutes.
You have a spine of your speech and you can expand upon it on your own.
Right?
Like if you don't want to pay us to make it longer, you can put that time in, but
now you've got a base, you've got a base talk.
And so I would say anybody that has a business that they want to get out there.
And I was telling you earlier, Heather, there's two types of speaking in my opinion.
Like the first type is speaking for your brand, just getting brand awareness, right? So speaking in front of
ideal audiences to get book sales, to put your influence out there, to practice your
speeches, to get consulting clients that's speaking for your brand. In that case, it's
beneficial for you to be able to promote yourself. So usually you're going to want to do unpaid
speaking engagements because as soon as they're paying you a high fee, they're your customer, they're
your client, and they are demanding of you what they want for their audience.
It's not about you promoting yourself.
The second type of speaking is that it's having an established speaking
career going on the speaking circuit, being a full-time speaker.
And I know, you know, Heather, with all of the work you've done in the
speaking arena, that that's a very real thing is there's a lot of people who want to be a full-time paid
speaker.
Those speakers usually will come to us to help them craft a TEDx talk and get it booked
on the TEDx stage or any stage that they want.
But I would say any business owner, you really owe it to yourself to have a powerful talk
in your back pocket.
If you want our help getting you on stages all over the world, we have an offer where we pitch up to 40 aligned targeted stages per month for you.
We have relationships on these stages.
It includes podcasts, the amount of people that we are booking every day
for speeches in front of ideal customers who want to hear what they have to offer.
It just makes me think like, why would we do one
conversation after the other when we can just stand in front of an audience of 500 people
and just move them so powerfully that they come to find us to work with us? It's just
unlike any other method I've found so far. And I feel like same with you because you've
been speaking for so long.
No, you just really illustrate the example of it doesn't need to be one to one selling
when it can be one to many and instead attracting that business to you.
It's the power of the personal brand and the power of taking stages.
You also brought up another really interesting point that I had not thought about previously,
which is the importance of storytelling in regards to other arenas, not just on stage,
but you just brought it up.
As a guest on podcasts, how often do you see people,
you're teaching them through talks that you're giving them,
but then they're applying that to podcasts.
Right, and if you take a look at the beginning
of this conversation, you were like,
Ashley, you worked in national security
and I did the flashback approach.
In this conversation, I was like, oh yeah,
I got this award and there I was in Istanbul and the tear gas was going off.
I brought you bright into the moment with me.
So I do this without even knowing I'm doing anymore.
I think it's because we've just written so many speeches
and I've overseen so many of them.
But the way I see it is good storytelling.
And again, there's those eight different ways you can tell stories
or write books or make movies.
But these two ways I do where one is about the flashback.
The second one, which I can get into is about proof in the pudding.
It's educational storytelling.
There's different tactics you can use to just be valuable.
And one thing I want to share with everybody is original content cuts through the noise.
And what I mean by that is sometimes we look at our stories and we think in conversations
like this, how do we be the most powerful storyteller ever? But what I want to tell everybody listening
is if you are giving content that people really need, if you break your leg, the most important
thing you want to know is how to fix your leg, how to make it not be broken, right? You don't need a
good storytelling doctor to tell you a whole story about how they're gonna fix your leg
You just need the steps you need to take from the doctor
Okay, first you need to come in then we need to get a scan then we need to put you on this plan
And then it's gonna be better when somebody is in deep need of your services
You actually don't need to be that good of a storyteller
Because at the end of the day, they just need it. You are the scratch to their itch. And so I also want to point out the power of just being an expert
and not just being an expert, but covering a topic that an audience picture, an audience, like a desert.
If they're thirsty for water and your content is the water, you don't even have to put that much
pressure on yourself to be a good storyteller.
I think that that's really important based on what you're booking, based on what you're
talking about.
I think a lot about clients who come into Wise Whisper Agency.
We tried not to write books because writing speeches, I could probably have one writer
on my team and these are coveted resources for us, our writing team.
I could probably have one of them write three speeches or four speeches in
a month. It probably takes seven months for them to be stuck in one book. So I've stayed away from
books, but now too many clients have come back. I mean like, please, please, please. And our writers
really love them. And we're like, no, we love them too much. We want to write their books. So
we've gotten into book writing. The books that we have really found are the best ones to write,
are the ones that kind of write themselves,
right? It's like the broken leg. It's like, this is very straightforward content and people are
going to read it. If this is what they need, it really, you really don't have to be that
interesting. I think being a good storyteller is a service to make the ride more beautiful.
And a lot of my job as a storyteller is I kind of picture my clients, my listeners,
I picture myself like the driver of the magic school bus.
And when I go on a podcast, I'm like, all right,
everybody get in and let me show you what happened
at that protest that morning and get in
and let me show you what happened on the phone.
Look at my dad, he's right there, he's on the phone.
You bring people into your world with you
and you cut the noise and the power of that
and getting people's attention cannot be underestimated.
You know, that being said, that approach that I talked about the proof in the pudding, educational storytelling, while we do a lot of flashback storytelling
for our openers of speeches, we do a lot of educational storytelling.
And what that looks like is etymology.
So for example, etymology is the study of words and how they've
evolved throughout history.
So you've heard a lot of people talk about the word passion and it comes from the Latin root, which means suffering,
compassion means with suffering, right? People talk about that all the time. We use that. So
we're being educational in our speeches, or we might talk about history. Like maybe there's an
approach on this podcast I could have taken where I could have talked about ancient storytelling and how it kept tribes together since XBC, right?
Like I could have gone into the history of storytelling and how it's one of the most
important parts of the human experience and how people understand each other.
That wasn't the approach I took on this podcast, but having an educational historical approach to how you talk about
something, let's say that you are a midwife. Can you talk about the history of midwifing babies?
Like, where does this come from in society? That's very educational. People love to be
stimulated to learn something new and to understand the relevance of what you're doing in the
contextualize it in the experience of life that we're all in.
Another educational tool is obviously data. Really, really powerful. So there's many things you can do
with storytelling, but hopefully this gives everybody listening some starting points on how
to craft a speech that. Confidence created.
Confidence created.
I ask you to try to find your passion.
I'm not a machine.
Ashley, I mean, obviously, you're so gifted at this.
But so for someone, because I'm even thinking of myself now,
because I've never thought at this level in depth in regards
to strategic, being this strategic about an approach.
So is there something to be said about the audience that you're addressing and which
approach is best for them? That's a great question. I mean, every audience is different. And I think
it kind of goes back to what I said with like the doctor and the leg being broken. There are some
service providers where they really are fixing a broken leg and their speech rights itself.
You don't have to put the frills on.
It just makes it for a better school bus ride if you put the magical storytelling on it.
But your tips alone, you're in a desert and they need water and water is going to taste
better than it's ever tasted if they need it that bad.
So I would say some audiences, they just need your information and you're the subject matter
expert and you don the subject matter expert
and you don't have to put the pressure on yourself.
And I tell clients this all the time
because in our offer,
it's called the Speaker Skyrocket program.
We have pitched so many clients on stages.
Some of them, it's a panel and they'll be like,
how do I prepare?
And I'm like, honestly, this is like a scratch and itch panel.
Like you are such an expert.
This is a panel about the topic you know.
You don't need to zhuzh it up with stories.
Just know what they need to know,
and you already know what that is.
You don't even need to have it written down.
You don't need to put more work in.
Then there's other audiences
where maybe it's a more general audience,
and they're there to inspire.
That's when the storytelling becomes pretty crucial.
Okay, you brought up panels, and this is something that...
Maybe this is just me,
but I find panels so boring.
What is that?
Is it because people aren't given enough time or autonomy to tell stories and
they're just answering like a bulleted, direct question?
But I can't be the only person that feels that way.
You know what? I do find that a lot of panels have been super boring.
I personally think I'm better on a panel than I am as a keynote
because I'm somebody that has a lot to say. I have a lot of content and when people can meet me where
they are, I can hit that exact need so much more than I would if I did a keynote speech in front
of everybody and it's more of a blanket topic, right? But I do think that panels are a really good place because they are
so boring for people to shine.
So one thing that a lot of speakers have is called bits and bobs.
Like, I don't know if you've ever used that language and you're speaking
Heather, but like I hear a lot of high paid speakers on the circuit use it.
There's this exercise I like to give clients at wise whisper agency where
I tell them to make a lifetime timeline, write down every significant event
of your life, inflection points, decisions, impasses from when you were a little kid to now.
And there's probably like 15 events that you're like, Oh, like graduating college was a big moment
for me or that girl that like I tripped, fell and broke my arm. I don't know. It's all these bones
broken in this episode, but anyway, like big moments and then write down what you learned from that moment. What was the lesson
from that moment? What was significant about that moment? The amount of clients who come in and fill
out our intake form and say, Oh my God, that pulled so many stories out of me. I didn't even know
existed. And now those stories are in their repertoire of stories that they can tell.
We call those bits and bobs. It's like, you can pull a bit or a bob off the shelf and throw it in to a panel, right? So maybe somebody asked you a question from the
audience. It's like they're grabbing on a bit or a bob that you have from your life stories.
And because you've taken the time to excavate those, you are able to share those in a powerful
way. One of the things I want to share with you is, you know, a number of my clients have
hired you in the agency to craft talks for them, land TEDx stages
for them, land big stages for them. And one of the consistent feedback that I hear from everybody
is when they're working with you or the team initially, the actual questionnaire that you
guys put together, the work that they need to go through, right, which you were just touching on a
little bit of it, is so cathartic, healing,
shocking.
And they all say the same thing.
Why is that?
I love that you're saying that.
I didn't even realize how mystical this agency could
be for me because I'm such a results person.
Take me out of the Pentagon and national security.
Take me out of the military.
But I still was in it long enough.
Even if I have good intentions in life, I really look at the net outcomes of things. That's how I think in business.
I'm like, if somebody pays you, even if your intention was to give them the service,
they didn't get the service, they better get the damn service. That's how I think.
I wasn't thinking enough when I started this company about the journey the clients were
actually going through emotionally. I was so caught up in how do we write the best talk ever and they have it in their hand? How do we get them on the TEDx stage?
How do we get them at South by Southwest? How do we get them their spots? But you are correct that
so many people have said, wow, this has been like therapy for me. And I think this comes from a quote
that I love by Martin Scorsese. He says, what's most personal is most creative.
And what we are really doing in our intake form
is we are taking a look at what is most personal
so that we can be creative.
And our intake form has questions.
There's a couple of questions.
One question is, name 10 of the most significant life events
in your entire lifetime.
Why were they significant?
What did you learn from it?
How are you different because of it?
Another question we have in there is what do you want the world to really know?
Something that you intimately understand that the world just doesn't get yet.
And how would the world be different if they got it?
So yeah, we are excavating into people's psyches, into people's
souls, and people are coming out. And it's really fun to hear that you've sent us all these clients
that are telling you that, that they've gotten like a therapeutic experience through going through
this with us. Yeah, I think it's so much bigger than a talk, but it's a talent, understanding
yourself. It's about self-awareness. It's about seeing value in yourself. It's a confidence building exercise.
It's like they said, a healing exercise in your life
and seeing the value of yourself.
And you're teaching them these tools
and skills that they can use.
And it goes beyond just telling a talk.
It's like you said, the power of storytelling
and captivating storytelling is something
that can be done one-on-one in a conversation with somebody.
That you can use this tool everywhere in your life
and just like you're using right now in the podcast.
Yeah, exactly.
And that's my hope for everybody listening.
I'm hoping that because of this episode,
they become better storytellers
and they make conversations that turn into results for them,
all because they could bring people on the magic school bus
with them.
All right, well, tell everybody how they can work with you,
how do they find you, and how can you
unlock that magic in them.
OK, well, first of all, I am not me
if I don't give this audience a promo because I just
love you and your audience.
So anyone who contacts us within 90 days of this episode
coming out,
please let us know you came from Heather and we'll give you a thousand dollars off whatever
you do with us. But we have pretty formal offerings. Number one is crafting your signature
talk. A lot of clients like that to be a TEDx talk and getting you booked on a big stage.
A lot of clients like that to be the TEDx stage. We also craft all sorts of keynotes.
We go straight books and we have an offer,
the Speaker Skyrocket program on our website that's all about just getting you booked on stages so
that you can give the best talk of your life over and over and get all the business, more business
than what you know what to do with. And that's all at wisewhisperagency.com.
Guys, check it out. I mean, Ashley has done the most incredible work for so many of my clients.
All I hear is by star reviews on her and I personally know her. She's an incredible human,
incredible person, stands behind her work. If you're looking to become a better storyteller,
if you're looking to have a keynote or a speech, a signature speech, this is the one place to go.
wisewhisperagency.com. Thank you so much.
Ashley, thank you so much for being here. Guys, get ahold of her. She's the best. I'll link it all for you in the show notes. Keep creating
your confidence. You just found a new way to do it. Now I'll see you next week. Hey team, if you're enjoying this podcast where we delve into high achieving people
with transformative lives, then I have an exciting recommendation just for you.
Introducing the Tyese Gibson podcast, a show that dives into creating long lasting change
by starting at the subconscious level.
Did you know 95% of our conscious decisions are actually determined by our subconscious?
Tyese, an expert in attachment theory, is the creator behind this podcast.
She uses her expertise to help you transform your relationships, health, career, and every
other area of your life by leveraging the power of your subconscious mind.
So if you're ready to break those limiting patterns and create the life you truly desire,
tune into the Tyese Gibson podcast.
You can find it on all major podcast platforms.
Trust me, you won't want to miss it.
What's up, everyone? I'm Hala Taha, host of YAP Young and Profiting Podcast, a top 10
entrepreneurship podcast on Apple. I'm also the CEO and founder of the YAP Media Podcast Network,
the number one business and self-improvement podcast network. That's why they call me the
podcast princess. On Young and Profiting Podcast, I interview the brightest minds in the world,
offering actionable advice to level up your life.
I've interviewed marketing legends
like Gary Vee and Seth Godin,
serial entrepreneurs like Alex Hermosy and Damon John,
and even the godmother and godfather of AI,
Fifi Lee and Stephen Wolfram respectively.
I've interviewed so many inspiring guests,
and I don't really like to put my podcast in a box. We talk about anything that will improve your life as an entrepreneur. I tend
to talk a lot about brand, marketing, sales strategies, and better understanding psychology
and human behavior to get what you want. But we also cover things like balance, biohacking,
and mental wellness, and of course hot topics like AI. One thing my listeners always say is that my podcast is highly motivational.
If you want to get pumped up and take your life and business to the next level, come
listen, learn, and profit with the YAP fam.
We're young and profiting not because of our age, but because we're committed to ongoing
learning and self-improvement.
So join Podcast Royalty and subscribe to YAP Young and Profiting on Apple, Spotify, or
wherever you listen to your podcasts.