Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Bill McGowan on How to Speak So People Listen | EP 626
Episode Date: June 19, 2025In this powerful episode of Passion Struck, host John R. Miles welcomes renowned media coach and Emmy-winning journalist Bill McGowan, author of the new book Speak, Memorably: The Art of Capt...ivating an Audience. With a client list that includes global leaders, celebrities, and top executives, Bill distills decades of experience into practical tools that anyone can use to transform the way they speak.The conversation dives into what makes a message truly unforgettable, how to structure your words to create resonance, and why emotional clarity often trumps flawless delivery. Bill and John explore the neuroscience of attention, the traps of over-preparing or under-structuring, and how to connect more deeply with your audience—whether you're on stage, on camera, or in a critical conversation.You’ll also hear actionable advice on overcoming nerves, developing presence, and mastering what Bill calls the "New ROI: Return on Impact." This is a must-listen for anyone who wants to lead, influence, or inspire through the power of words.Explore More: The Ignited Life SubstackIf today’s episode sparked something in you, you’ll love The Ignited Life— created to fuel your growth between episodes.👉 Subscribe now at TheIgnitedLife.net.Catch more of Bill McGowan: https://www.claritymediagroup.com/team-overview/bill-mcgowanIf you liked the show, please leave us a review—it only takes a moment and helps us reach more people! Don’t forget to include your Twitter or Instagram handle so we can thank you personally.How to Connect with John:Connect with John on Twitter at @John_RMilesFollow him on Instagram at @John_R_MilesSubscribe to our main YouTube Channel and to our YouTube Clips ChannelFor more insights and resources, visit www.passionstruck.com.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up next on Passion Struck.
I think it's a fool's errand to try to replicate the style and the content of an established
speaker. The minute you start playing somebody else's game, you've lost. And because there's
no way you're ever able to recreate that. It's not you. I often tell people that the best way to create content in a presentation or a speech is not to sit down at a computer and write it.
And the reason why is because unless you've worked in TV or radio, your writing style, it's one that's designed for the eye, not the ear. And
people in the media have been taught how to write content that
is easy to deliver, and is also easy for the audience to absorb.
So what I often recommend to people is...
Welcome to Passion Struck. Hi, I'm your host John R. Miles and on the show we decipher the
secrets tips and guidance of the world's most inspiring people
and turn their wisdom into practical advice for you and
those around you.
Our mission is to help you unlock the power of intentionality
so that you can become the best version of yourself.
If you're new to the show I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays.
We have long form interviews the rest of the week
with guests ranging from astronauts to authors, CEOs,
creators, innovators, scientists, military leaders,
visionaries and athletes.
Now let's go out there and become passion struck.
Hey, passion struck fam.
Welcome back to episode 626.
I'm your host, John Miles,
and this is the space where we ignite change
from the inside out.
So you can live life with more intention,
meaning and connection.
All this month, we're diving into the Connected Life,
a series exploring how we build real relationships in an age of noise,
distraction, and disconnection.
And one of the most powerful tools we have for building connection is communication.
Because here's the truth, how we speak, how we listen, and how we show up in conversation
doesn't just influence what people hear, it shapes how we're remembered.
Whether it's in a boardroom, a kitchen table,
a podcast studio, or a simple text thread, words matter and presence matters even more.
Earlier this week, I had an incredible conversation with Dr. Anna Lemke,
the best-selling author of Dopamine Nation. We explored the neuroscience of craving,
distraction, and how intentional discomfort can actually lead us back
to real connection. And last week, I had two powerful voices, Suzanne Geisman, who helped us
listen beyond the noise and into the soul, and Dr. David Hamilton, who revealed the biochemistry
of kindness and why human connection is literally good for our health. Today we take that conversation into one of the
most practical and high-impact arenas of modern life. How to speak memorably. My guest is Bill
McGowan, a two-time Emmy Award-winning journalist, world-renowned executive coach, and the founder of
Clarity Media Group. If you've ever watched someone walk into a room and command it, not with volume,
but with clarity and ease, there's a good chance they've been trained
by Bill.
He's helped CEOs, artists, and thought leaders communicate with impact, and his best-selling
book Pitch Perfect became a go-to guide for pervasive storytelling.
Now in his latest work, Speak Memorably, he distills over three decades of experience
into a toolkit for anyone who
wants to be heard, remembered, and understood.
In today's episode, Bill and I explore why trying to sound professional often sabotages
real connection.
The Ricky Bobby Quandary.
What happens when nerves hijack your delivery?
We go into how to transform data into stories that stick, and why saying less with clarity
can create the most lasting
impact. Whether you're pitching to investors leading a meeting or just trying to connect more
deeply with your partner or your kids, this conversation will sharpen the way you show up
and speak. And if you're looking to stay connected between episodes, here are three ways. Subscribe
to The Ignited Life on Substack. It's where I share exclusive tools,
curated episode starter packs, and personal reflections to help you live
more intentionally every week. You can find it at theignitedlife.net. Check out
the new passion-struck gear, apparel designed to be a daily reminder that your
life matters. It's more than merch, it's a mindset. Or head over to our YouTube
channels, where you'll find full episodes, behind the
scenes insights and bite-sized clips to revisit anytime you need a spark. Now let's dive into
this master class in powerful communication with the one and only Bill McGowan. Thank you for
choosing Passionstruck and choosing me to be your host and guide on your journey to creating an
intentional life. Now let that journey begin.
I am absolutely thrilled and honored to have Bill McGowan join us on
passion struck. Welcome Bill. Thanks for having me, John.
Bill, you have had such an impactful career and you have worked with some of the biggest names across sports, including Olympians, professional athletes, CEOs and titans of some of the largest companies that everyone knows about.
comes to speaking and how they present themselves. Have you found a couple of shortfalls or common mistakes
that are the grain across all of us, no matter who we are?
There are a number of most common mistakes.
And I would say, first is brevity.
I love the FDR quote of,
be sincere, be brief, be seated.
That's a great quote.
But I find that most people don't exercise
in economy of words.
And there's a chapter in the book called The Verbal Diet,
which is all about this notion of,
imagine if you were suddenly told that you couldn't say the normal amount of words you utter in a single day.
So the average person speaks about 16,000 words a day.
Now, imagine if somebody came along and said,
John, today you got 12,000.
Imagine what that would do to how selective you'd be. said, John, today you got 12,000.
Imagine what that would do to how selective you'd be about making every word count for
fear that 4 o'clock may roll around and you may run out of your allotment and have to
pantomime the rest of the day until midnight when your supply would automatically replenish. So we're constantly working with people on how to say things more succinctly,
because the more succinct it is, typically the more impact it has.
And the last thing you ever want to do is overstay your conversational welcome.
I'm sure all of us have had that terrible moment at a party where we realize,
okay, this story I think is dragging on a little too long.
And the person I'm talking to is now looking over my shoulder to see who else
at this party is available to talk to.
And you never want to be that person.
So I would say brevity is first and foremost on the list.
I love that because one of the things I first did when I was starting this podcast was I
started to go through and edit all my own episodes because I was wondering what I was
sounding like when I was on the air.
I realized, especially as I was interviewing people and then myself being interviewed,
that I was often talking way too much
and not leaving the proper succinctness,
as you point out, to how I was answering.
What are some tips that you have
for how people can see themselves
as a reflection of how they're speaking
to understand if they're doing what you just said
about being not succinct enough?
Recording yourself is a really effective tool. doing what you just said about being not succinct enough.
Recording yourself is a really effective tool. It's a reason why professional athletes
no longer wait until their first off day
after a game to watch film.
They're watching video on the sidelines
in between their time on the field.
And that's because video is just an amazing teaching tool.
So if you have a meeting you have to lead at work
or a presentation you have to give in front of colleagues
or maybe an external group, take your phone.
This is, they used to say practicing in the mirror.
This is the most amazing practice tool on the planet.
All you have to do is prop it up,
hit the red button for record and let it rip and record yourself saying it.
And I think what you'll find is that your tone in giving a presentation is too
formal, it's too stilted, it's too long, and you're often going to be able to
find by watching the video, wow, that transition from my second slide to my third slide, that's
pretty rocky.
I should be able to figure out a smoother or segue-driven way to say that.
You're going to be able to move the needle of improvement a lot better by watching yourself and making some changes
And of course, that's where I come in what I do for a profession
People hire me to be the watchful eye to give them the guidance when we look at the videotape to say
Maybe you don't want to start
That sentence with well, I think that's just running in place.
That's just filler talk and noise coming out of your mouth
when what should happen at the beginning of your thought
is making a very intentional decision.
What are the first five words out of my mouth
when I begin to convey this thought?
And if you make that a very intentional selection,
I think are not gonna be one of them.
You're gonna be able to start with crisp valuable content.
I couldn't agree more with you on that.
And I wanted to use those as a couple of warmup questions
because today what we are talking about
is how you communicate.
And we're actually in a month long series here on Passion Struck about how to communicate
in life, the art of communication.
And Bill, your first book, Pitch Perfect, is what many people know you for.
The subtitle of that was How to Say It Right the First Time Every Time.
And today we're talking about your brand new book Speak Memorably. And I wanted to ask,
why did you think now was the right time to bring out this book, which is all about the art of
captivating an audience? It has to do with the noise level that has changed since I wrote the first book.
I would say the level of competition for
attention has skyrocketed.
There's so much noise out there today.
Everybody grappling to be noticed, to have their words land.
And unfortunately, in companies all over the world, in every conference room,
in every press release, in every quarterly earnings call they do,
it's a golden opportunity through what you say to inspire, motivate, inform.
All those things are possible when you open your mouth to talk. And these opportunities
are getting squandered every single day in companies all over the world because people
fall into this conformity trap. That's what I talk about in the book. This desire to be in a comfort zone that is actually a conformity zone where you emulate everybody else you hear getting up in front of a room and speaking because that feels safe. And the problem is most people are emulating stylistically other people who are thoroughly forgettable.
And yes, it feels risky to be different and to migrate outside the bounds of that conformity zone,
but it is truly worth the effort and worth what you think is a perceived risk. I think one of the great gifts of life
is to have our words remembered.
And in fact, one of the great compliments anybody can pay you
is maybe you go to a company that you haven't been at in three
or four years, and you're having another visit.
To have someone come up to you and say,
I'll never forget that thing you forget to us the last time you we
that's pure gold. There's
that to realize some messa
had lasting power and it a
on people and maybe it per
it influenced them, maybe
maybe it inspired them in informing them. Maybe it motivated them. Maybe it inspired them in addition to just informing them.
I want to double down on that conformity trap
just for a second.
I was interviewing about 18 months ago, Christina Lacchiani.
If you're not familiar with her, if the audience isn't,
she's the co-founder of Mindvalley
with her ex-husband, Vishen.
And she was telling me this story that at mind valley, they did a lot of big
events and they had a lot of big names who talked there. You might've even talked there yourself,
but people like Tony Robbins, Bo Eason, et cetera. And she wouldn't give me the person's name,
but she said she was following one of these huge voices who's on stages around the world often.
these huge voices who's on stages around the world often.
And at first she was going to go up and emulate that person.
And then she said, she paused for a moment and said, there's no way I'm going to be able to bring the same speech, the same energy that let's just
say it was Tony Robbins is bringing.
So she made a deliberate decision that what people want to hear is her authenticity.
So she went into it giving a speech that was almost 180 degrees different,
but equally memorable.
A lot of people when faced in that same situation, uh, would take a different
route and probably try to follow the person who
was up there just before them in a similar manner. And I think this is what you talk about when you
talk about the conformity trap and how we actually dull our voices. You touched on it a little bit,
but maybe using Christina's example, could you highlight perhaps what she did right and what she did wrong in your opinion?
I think it's a fool's errand to try to replicate
the style and the content of an established speaker. The minute you start playing somebody else's game, you're you've lost.
And because there's no way you're ever able to
recreate that.
It's not you.
I often tell people that the best way to create content in a presentation or speech is not to sit down at a computer and write it. And the reason why is because unless you've worked in TV or radio,
your writing style, it's one that's designed for the eye, not the ear.
And people in the media have been taught how to write content that is easy to deliver
and is also easy for the audience to absorb. So what I often recommend to people is
make an outline of what it is you want to say. Don't overwrite it, just hit the points that you
want to make and then pick up your phone and there are lots of apps that will take the recording
of your voice and transcribe it.
And get up and just say it as it would naturally come to you.
And don't worry if it's full of starts and stops
and mistakes and hiccups.
That totally doesn't matter.
You can go and clean that up later.
Just keep forging ahead.
And then what I want you to do is take that
transcript and export it to a Word document or whatever you work off of and make that
your rough first draft. And again, you can clean it up, but don't stylistically change
it. And what you're going to find is that stylistically, it's shorter, choppier sentences.
Not everything is a full, grammatically complete,
beautifully prosed sentence, which is good.
That's not how we naturally talk to people in real conversation.
We don't speak the way we write.
And the other benefit to it is what you've recorded
is going to be a much closer representation of instinctively how these ideas come spilling out of you.
So when you go to deliver it for real, you're never going to feel at odds with the content. It's going to be naturally what comes to you.
And that's going to aid in the delivery of it. But the conformity zone, John, that I was
referring to, and there are lots of things that exist in that nasty circle, one of them is this
preponderance of warning people about what you're about to tell them. All this talking about what
we're going to talk about. Or, so I want to walk you
through this strategy. It's all this advanced heads up about what you're about to say. Just say it.
That you don't need to tee yourself up all the time. But in every single presentation I hear
that I work with clients on, it is littered with that. And I posed the challenge to a group of trainees I had
a little while back. There were six people and everybody was going to get their opportunity
to get up individually, give their presentation, have me recorded, playback, feedback. And I laid down this challenge and I said,
I will buy dinner for anybody who can get through
their practice presentation without saying,
so I wanna talk a little bit about this
or I wanna unpack or walk you through that.
And the third one was, so as we think about this,
these cliche expressions that I hear
in every single presentation,
if you can avoid saying any one of the three,
or let's unpack that, let's double click on that,
let's drill down on that,
if you can avoid saying all of those things,
I will buy you dinner.
Even with advanced warning,
my credit card never came out of my wallet.
Nobody could do it. It's so ingrained in people,
and that's what makes you sound like everybody else.
The goal when you get up to talk is you should sound different.
You shouldn't sound like everybody else,
because then you just blend into this noise, which takes us back to
your earlier question.
I do toastmasters and one of my favorite program by the way. Oh,
yeah, program. And one of my favorite exercises that they do
is the table topics, because you never know.
It's kind of like force gump.
You never know what you're going to get out of the box of chocolate.
Yeah.
And some of the people ask the most witty scenarios, but one of the things I
love about the tabletops is that no matter what question you get, so if they
give you one that really stumps you.
What a lot of people don't know about
Toastmasters is you don't have to answer that question. So there have been times that I get up
there and they'll ask me a question I really don't want to understand, I don't want to answer or I
don't think I've got a great answer for it and I'll segue into something completely different.
But what I found is that there's definitely an art to finding that
magical 90 seconds to you don't want to exceed two minutes of talking, where
you can be pretty profound in that amount of time with, in a way that I
think most people don't think you could be in that short a period of time.
And I think that's where you were going at the beginning with brevity.
You don't realize how much importance you can say in a succinct period of time.
So that's why I like that exercise is it helps with it.
Well, it's interesting because I just finished a project with Angela Duckworth, who wrote
Grip.
I'm sure you're familiar with that book and her.
She's a brilliant behavioral psychologist
from the University of Pennsylvania at Wharton.
And she was teaching an MBA class at Wharton.
And she and I stay in regular touch.
And I was telling her about the book.
And there's a bonus chapter
that I make available to people who pre-order.
And the bonus chapter is on how to tell your life story
in 60 seconds.
And because the hardest question that people get
is something they mistakenly think is the easiest question.
And that's, John, tell me about yourself.
More people stumble and fumble around
with this long winded, circuitous,
say nothing response to that,
or they mistakenly think,
I guess I should start reciting my CV now.
Where I was born, where I went to school,
was my first job.
That's not what your 60 second life story
is supposed to be about.
So we created this project for her students
in the MBA class and she had all of them record
their 60 second life story.
And I gave them parameters about what should be
in that 60 second life story. What's the basic
structure of it? And so she sent them off and they all submitted their recordings and she picked
the seven who she thought were best out of I don't know dozens I guess who take her course.
And then we had a virtual session where I screened all seven videos and then I gave
feedback to her students on what I thought was working, what I thought could use a little
tweaking.
And it was a great exercise because a friend of mine told me that his daughter was applying
for a graduate program at New York University and they required this as part of her application.
Submit your 60-second life story. And so it's my belief that this is going to be
more and more important as time passes. That may very well be a requirement in
college admissions, graduate school admissions, and it comes up in your first
job interview. Tell me about
yourself. The last thing you want to do is go off haywired, taking somebody on a long rambling road
that doesn't really have anything interesting in it. Yeah, so I want to double down on that just
for a second because I'm glad you brought this up because it's something I've struggled myself with. How do you answer? I typically lean, I think too far into
the professional aspects of my life.
Do you recommend that people keep a balanced view
and bring in their family life as well
when they're answering the question?
I think it depends what's important to you in life.
My recommendation to these students structurally is
see if there is a story about a point in time where perhaps you had an epiphany or a revelation
that something was supremely satisfying for you
and how you were able to perhaps parlay that into now what you
do or explain how that is now the driving motivation
for why you're pursuing a certain something.
For me, I had to give them an example
of what a 60 Second Life story was,
so I did my own to give them.
And I started with a story about how,
when I was a producer at CBS, I had a couch in my office.
And people would come and plop down on the sofa
and spill their troubles to me about a conversation,
a difficult conversation they needed to have with somebody.
And inevitably, people were seeking my advice on,
so what do you think I should say to this guy?
I really need to resolve this,
but I just don't have the right words.
And I didn't realize at the time I was message developing
and media training for them.
I was a producer in television.
And I would give them my advice on what I thought
was the right thing to say.
And they would bounce up from the couch and leave feeling buoyed and renewed and confident.
And I realized, hey, I'm pretty decent at this. I'm good at recommending to people what's going to be most effective
and what you can say that's going to generate the best outcome. And so that was the story that led my 60-second life
story as a prelude to, how did I get into this line of work
that I find tremendously satisfying and rewarding?
So if you went back and you might not
be able to remember them all, you probably
can't because you're a busy guy.
But if you think about those seven MBA students
and the stories that they were providing you,
was there commonality across all of them
or was there one that really stood out to you?
The commonality, I would say,
was suffering from the curse of knowledge.
You have to empathetically really understand
what can I reasonably assume this audience knows.
I may eat, sleep, and breathe a certain topic.
I may know it backwards and forwards.
But is this perhaps the first time
they're hearing about this idea or this concept or this program?
And if so, you need to be really basic in how you explain it.
And I find the majority of them lose the audience because they are talking about a program or maybe the name of somebody they're familiar with.
The audience has no idea who it is.
And that is a surefire way to lose people.
So the curse of knowledge, I would say, is one of them. And the second one is just too many details
in telling a story. Think about telling a story like you tell a joke. There's a setup and there's
a punchline. And one of the big pitfalls of telling jokes
is when the setup becomes interminable
and then the person you're telling the joke to,
you can see them in their mind going,
yeah, I get it, just get to the punchline.
And you never wanna be that person either.
So it's the old William Faulkner quote,
learn how to kill your darlings.
And that was his advice to writers,
which is now you don't need all of that in there.
You think you do, but you don't.
And the same applies to communicating.
So I just wanted to sidebar for just a second
on Angela Duckworth.
I've had her on the podcast.
I also call her a friend,
although I speak more frequently to her partner, Katie Milkman than I do with
Angela, but I remember when I had Angela on the podcast, I was actually wanting
to confront her about part of her research about grit.
And for those of you who have never met Angela, she is a beautiful human being.
She's very kind very nice
but one of the most intelligent people on earth you will ever
meet and so I knew when I was going to have this discussion
with her. I had to come and prepared because she is the
first that if she doesn't agree with you. She's going to just
say it if she disagrees with you. She's very gentle in her
contradiction.
She did. Well, basically, I was telling her in grid, I think she missed a side of the triangle and that side of the triangle, you mentioned it earlier, is intentionality, which is the same
thing I would say it is. We did get to this discussion that she views intentionality
that she views intentionality in scientific terms as the research of self-control, and that you obviously need to have self-control in how you're utilizing passion and perseverance, or it's not
going to be aimed at the right thing. And that's basically where I was trying to go with it. But
then on typical Angela form, she also says, but those aren't the only ingredients you need to look at.
You need to look at X, Y, Z, and et cetera.
So you're right, she did do it in a very kind way.
Well, I find that story very timely
because I just worked with her
on a commencement speech she gave at that dates.
And it's obviously predicated
on a lot of the research she's doing currently.
And one of the big takeaways from her speech was that willpower is overrated.
And it's just a really dynamic concept as only Angela can put forward.
And it's not about just denying yourself the things you feel like you shouldn't have or
shouldn't do. It's about situationally removing those things. Because even if you say you have
a cup of coffee nearby and you decided, I want to cut down on my coffee consumption,
it's not enough to just deny yourself that cup of coffee that's
sitting there. Because even that saps your attention is now
making you think too much about that. Just take out all the
coffee from your kitchen. Just don't make it even within arm's
reach or available. And that clears it from your mind.
You know, obviously her examples were much more academic and much more scientific,
but willpower is overrated.
I love that thesis that you came to.
I hear she's working on a new book.
I can't wait to read that one.
And I hope it's as good, if not better than grit.
So I wanted to go in a couple of different directions, Bill.
The first is I had mentioned Bo Eason earlier, who I think is
one of the better public speakers.
Another one that always comes to my head is Eric Edmeads.
And I've been fortunate to have conversations
with both of them about speaking.
And one of the things that they both say that people do
is they tend to lean into the highlights from their life,
like the highlight reel, instead of going
into the deepest, darkest moments that they've had.
And the way I remember Bo bringing it up since she's a former NFL athlete is he's
no one wants to hear the highlight reel about Tom Brady winning seven Super Bowls.
They want to hear the story of the University of Michigan when he almost gave
up being a quarterback at all.
And it was through his perseverance that he decided he was going t
made the commitment that
Michigan and make a shot
one quarterback. Do you a
saying? Pointing to some
building moment that repre
point in somebody's life is a lot more interesting
than the highlight reel.
For instance, there's a great story.
Everybody admired Derek Jeter while we're talking about Michigan.
Everybody admired Derek Jeter as a baseball player and as a sportsman.
He embodied what we hope all professional athletes act a gentleman,
somebody who's gracious and generous
in his acknowledgement of other people.
They don't even necessarily have to be on his own team.
And you can tell a lot of stories
about his accomplishments on the field,
but the story I really love about Derek Jeter was when he was nine years old. And he wasn't the calm and controlled Derek Jeter we know today. He was a little bit of a hothead kid. And he had something happen in Little League. And his father had advised him and warned him and urged him to be a sportsman.
Don't pop off.
Don't act in an unprofessional and dignified way.
And something went wrong, and he threw his equipment, he threw his mitt, had a little
temper tantrum on the field, and his father took his baseball mitt away for a week.
And from that moment on, it was torture for him
not to have his baseball mitt for seven days.
But from that point on,
he was the consummate sportsman on the field.
It was the lesson that he learned that shaped who he is.
And so to me, that is a lot more interesting
than talking about all of his World Series rings
and his, the record book accomplishments.
So yeah, something that represents a turning point
or as a lot of people like to say, a tipping point
and explains how somebody's character was shaped.
Those to me are the better stories.
When you were describing that,
because I also wrote about Derek Jeter in my book,
and I also brought up his work ethic
that people don't realize how hard he worked,
not only on himself, but he was always there acting
as a secondary coach to his teammates, trying to pump them up, which is something
that you don't really hear a lot about.
But it reminded me of a little bit of both Emmett Smith and Barry Sanders in
that these two were incredible running backs.
And one of the things that you don't see with either of them was you never really heard
them complaining about their team, teammates or the outcomes or anything like that.
They were focused on bringing their best to every single game.
And I think all of these stars that we're bringing, talking about right now share that
humility in common with each other.
And I think that's something that I find is extremely important that you bring to the
stage as well, because I personally feel an audience responds more to someone who's humble
about their experiences rather than someone who's a large ego.
But I'm interested in your perspective on if ego plays into it or being humble
plays into how you deliver your speeches.
I don't think you need to be egotistical
to come across confident and professional
and have gravitas.
I think they're different things.
And it's usually the very secure, confident person
who feels the license to express humility.
But one of the things I really urge clients not to do
is push it too far because there's nothing more distasteful
than false humility that I absolutely have no tolerance for and I
think it's one of the things that people really bristle at. So I'm always very
aware of making sure that people don't tread into that territory. So earlier you
were talking about how you were coaching a number of people and how you were telling them not to say drill
down on this or I'm going to go into more on this.
However, today we have so much data that's around us and oftentimes people want to put
data into their speeches, but there you describe that there's importance to have data
with context as a difference between a number
and a narrative.
In this age where we've got dashboards and AI
and KPIs all around us,
how do you teach leaders to turn raw data
more into felt insight,
something that doesn't just inform but ends up moving people.
Numbers alone don't really tell the story as you just mentioned. It's what the number represents
to people in real human terms. So my co-author, Juliana Silva, was working with an author who had written a book on Taylor Swift as a business phenomenon.
And one of the interesting data points in the book was that in the Eris tour that she
had brought in $3 billion from that tour.
And rightly, she pushed it and said, listen, 3 billion is an impressive number.
But if we put it into some context,
it's going to be even more impressive.
So she did some investigation.
And she found that over the course of their entire careers
as a band and musicians adjusted for today's dollars,
that the Beatles did not make close to $3 billion
in their entire lives, forget about one tour.
So to be able to say to somebody
that Taylor Swift made more from one tour
than the Beatles made off of live performances
in their entire careers.
I think it adds more weight
and that context bolds and underlines that number.
We work with companies all the time
that are incorporating data into their presentations.
And if you're working with one of the wireless companies, they like to boast 100 megabits per second speed on 5G.
And the average person has no idea if that's good, is that bad?
Give me some idea of whether I should be wowed by that.
And so we push them and we say, what can I do with that?
What does that tangibly mean to me?
And we say, what can I do with that? What does that tangibly mean to me?
And when pushed, they'll tell you,
well, you can download a high-def movie in three minutes.
I said, okay, now we got something.
Now what you need to say in your presentation
is in the time it takes you to go to the kitchen
and get your popcorn ready, your movie's ready.
That's what holds meaning for people.
Practical application in real life, not just the number.
I completely agree with you.
So thank you for sharing that.
I wanted to go into another area you talk about in the book.
You quote Francis Ford Coppola's storytelling formula, where you end with your best moment,
but you start with your second best.
And so as you've been coaching a speaker
or someone who's potentially listening to this episode,
how do you help them to identify what those moments are?
Sometimes we're not the best judge.
Sometimes you need to have the ear of a trusted colleague, friend, advisor, and let them know,
here's what I plan to talk about.
And let the person say, wow, that's really interesting.
You may be underestimating its importance or its interest, but try to gain and put together your own
small unofficial focus group and bounce it off a few people and ask them, what did you
find most interesting in there?
And this is what we do professionally.
We sit and we talk to people who have to give a presentation or a speech and we hear what
they have to say and oftentimes what we feel they should lead with or what they should
close with is something that they had as a throwaway. They didn't even really showcase
it and clearly they didn't see the value in it.
And sometimes that outside set of ears and eyes
are really important to say,
no, that's really interesting, start with that.
And it's a great story and metaphorically,
you can connect that story to the body of your speech
or your presentation.
So don't create something in a vacuum
because sometimes you just have blinders on
and you're not really aware of what's going to play
and resonate with an audience.
It also reminds me of something that you also bring up
in the book, which is the primacy, ressonancy effect,
where I'm sure, and I've done it myself, you can
have brilliant content and you end up burying it instead of placing it in areas that would
really catch people's attention either at the beginning or the end of a speech.
How do you, in those occasions, if you're working on your speech, restructure it so that you can find those hidden moments
and put them in places that actually land.
The primacy recency effect is fascinating
because it doesn't just apply
to the broad overarching story.
We feel it applies equally well
to each and every slide of your presentation.
And so when we coach people on how to give a professional presentation in a work environment,
we tell them that there are three things that they should know by heart, backwards and forwards. The first one is, what is
the simple punchy declarative line
that gets me into this slide?
The second one is,
what is the big idea in this slide?
The classic, if you remember
nothing else from the slide, remember this,
although never ever say that.
And third is, how do I, what's the finish line
of this slide look like and sound like?
What is the closing declarative punchy sentence?
Or what is the line that helps me segue
from one slide to the next slide?
And those three things should be simple declarative sentences
and you should memorize those.
Everything in and around those three things
can have a little bit of conversational wiggle room.
You don't need to be locked into a verbatim script.
As long as you know what the concepts are,
you can freely talk about those. But
when you know those three components and you deliver them with conviction, it gives your
presentation a really well-produced, crisp feel to it. And when I see people struggle
with telling a story or giving a presentation, it's often
how they get out of the starting blocks and how they cross the finish line.
I'm sure we've all seen and heard a colleague who gets to the end of a slide and says, and
yeah, so that's what that is.
It's almost like this running out of gas, rolling stop that they come to,
which is not very dynamic and memorable for all the wrong reasons.
And also, the beginning of a slide should never be,
okay, now if we look at this from a macro perspective, never ever.
Again, don't warn people about what you're going to do.
It's all just inviting them to drift and start fantasizing about what they're going to have
for lunch.
So I want to keep going on a couple more areas that you introduced to end the episode.
And I want to introduce the verbal diet chapter with something that we all end up doing
when we speak. And that is we use too many filler words, or as you say, empty calorie words.
And that's going back to Toastmasters, one of my favorite exercises that they do is they have
someone who's counting how many times you say so kind sort of those types of things.
Why is it so imperative that people kick the junk word habit
when you speak cleanly without filler you appear more
thoughtful and more intentional about what you're saying.
filler words dilute the impact of what you're saying.
Recently, I had to work with an executive
who had attained this new position.
And I thought to myself, wow,
he's using a lot of filler words, it seems.
And so I ran it through our AI tool that we use
and the analytics of the AI tool tallied them all up
and he had said 320 times in an hour and a half,
which seems almost impossible to achieve.
But what was very interesting was
what also stood out
from the analytics and that was his speaking pace. I realized as I was listening to him,
this is a breakneck speed he's going at.
And so I ran that through the analytics
and the uppermost range of what's acceptable is
about a hundred and seventy words per minute. He was at 235, so he was
completely in sixth gear. Speed and filler are directly correlated because
when you speak really fast you're giving your brain less opportunity to navigate out ahead down that conversational road that you're about to go down and make careful and intentional selections about what you say.
When you're speaking fast, you're putting too much pressure on your brain to make those selections.
And we know that we don't always make those selections
cleanly and efficiently.
Sometimes we stop.
Maybe we're looking for a particular word that's not
coming to us.
Or maybe we're second guessing ourselves
about going down this road as opposed to this road.
There are lots of reasons why our brain comes
to these intersections and stops.
If you're speaking fast, think of it
as your mouth tailgating your brain.
And when your brain stops, your mouth has to do something while it's waiting for the next set of
instructions. And that's what filler is. Filler is what your mouth does while it's waiting for
your brain to make the next call. So if you want to try to rid yourself of filler,
first record yourself and understand what is my brand of filler. I never knew I said the word so,
so many times. That may be the revelation you come to. Record yourself, understand what's my
brand of filler, and then I am going to implement this strategy of the less certain I am about how this next
sentence gets articulated because I am thinking it through in real time, the slower I'm going to go,
and the more I'm going to pause. Sometimes even pausing in the middle of sentences and being
comfortable with a beat or two of silence. Most people are totally uncomfortable with pausing in the middle of sentences and being comfortable with a beat or two of
silence.
Most people are totally uncomfortable with pausing.
So you need to grow more comfortable with pausing and you need to acknowledge what am
I perhaps saying for the first time?
There are no reference points here for me and I am ad liblibbing so I need to take this slower. When you
get to a section where you say something that is common to you, you've said it a
million times, then you can step on the gas and be nice and brisk and
conversational but not if you're thinking it through in real time and are
never the first two words of any sentence. But unfortunately today they are
universally the first two words of every sentence. When I was first starting this podcast, as I told
you before we came on, I used to edit every single episode because I was noticing I was doing too
many filler words. And so I started going through this very granular
painstaking process of doing just what you were advising
the audience to do, which was looking at the words
I was using the most as fillers.
And then the more you recognize yourself doing them,
you start eliminating them.
So, Bill, I wanted to end by going into this topic because I think it's an important one for people. And in the book, you write that there's a study by the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania and the School of Communication at the Ohio State University that supports the idea that in public speaking, you have a choice. You can be funny or you can be forgettable. And you write that for years, presenters have been told,
start off with a joke, they'll love it.
And you say that this is the single worst piece of advice
you can get, even worse than picture the audience
in their underwear.
Why is that?
And what would you recommend people do?
I've worked with a lot of executives
who do think that's their trademark,
that starting off with a random joke works.
And if it's completely disjointed from the content
of what you're there to talk about,
it doesn't really have a well put together feel.
And I've been urged by the heads of communications
at these firms, can you please tell this guy
to stop telling jokes?
I know he loves it.
I know he thinks it's his trademark,
but it really needs to stop.
And I feel as though standup comedy
is the ultimate high wire act of communication. It is so much harder
than people think it is and we should leave it to the professionals. What I recommend in the book
is try to find the humorous lens through which you can view the topic you are discussing with your audience.
There's a big difference between that and telling jokes.
And a lot of people do it really well
and they're good at it because they don't overshoot.
They don't try to take on more
than their skill level permits them.
But there are lots of studies that show
that humor has a physiological effect on you,
on the audience.
It can release the right kind of hormones
that make your audience feel happy.
It can release the kind of hormones
that actually cut stress,
relieve pain. So it's an incredibly pleasurable experience for your audience.
And when you sense they're having a good time, it relaxes you. But think about the risk you're running about telling a random joke.
the risk you're running about telling a random joke. If that thing bombs and you don't get the laughs
you think you're gonna get, you're never gonna recover.
You're never gonna get your feet under you again.
Well, Bill, I'm gonna end with a fun question.
You advise warming up like a pitcher in the bullpen,
literally speaking the first five minutes out loud
before taking the stage. What has been the strangest bullpen, literally speaking the first five minutes out loud, before taking the stage. What has been the strangest bullpen
ritual you've ever seen from a top communicator?
It's interesting because I often coach people in advance of doing
the real thing, but I don't attend the real thing. And I
don't know if that makes any sense or not, but I can work with people for two or three days
of rehearsals before a big conference
where everybody has to go on stage.
But once the rehearsals are over,
it's okay, Bill will try to do exactly what you told us.
And I know you're on to the next thing.
I don't often see people in the real setting,
but I will tell you that a few common exercises like standing in a champion's position with your
arms up in the air like you would in victory, totally debunked, that has absolutely no value,
no benefit, and maybe people,
maybe it's a attitude placebo for some people
and they think they're feeling more confident,
more powerful from it, but it does absolutely nothing,
physiologically for you.
The best thing you can do is find a quiet place,
hear yourself say the first two minutes out loud
when you're going to be the most nervous
and try to just make sure you know that section
backwards and forwards.
And oftentimes when I have to get up to present,
that's what I work on a presentation the most.
How do I connect what I would consider the pleasantries?
Good morning, everybody.
It's great to see you.
I so appreciate it for the invite to be here today
and the content of my first slide.
There is a gaping hole between those two things
that I call the presentation chasm
that is about 30-40 seconds long that
people just decide, hey, winging it and saying the first thing that pops into my head here
between the pleasantries and the presentation, that's what I'm going to do. And your audience
is making its most important judgments and decisions about you in that time. S
most people leave to wing
it up on the fly to that
is the worst possible tim
a iron clad plan about ho
a to point D. Bill, it was such an honor to have you today.
I'm passionate struck.
Congratulations on your new book.
I highly encourage all the listeners to go out there and buy a copy and they
will be just as impressed as they were with pitch perfect.
Thank you so much for being here.
Thanks, John.
I appreciate it.
That's a wrap.
I hope this conversation with Bill McGowan left you as energized as it left me
because we often think of communication as it left me, because
we often think of communication as just talking clearly.
But what Bill reminds us is that memorable communication is about resonance.
It's not just what you say, it's what people carry with them after you leave the room.
That kind of impact doesn't happen by accident, it happens by design.
And when we become intentional with our words, our presence,
and our stories, we don't just inform, we transform. That's the heartbeat of this Connected
Life series. Moving beyond scripts and surface talk and stepping into the communication that
feels human, grounded, and real. If you found value in today's episode, send it to someone
who's trying to lead more courageously, speak more clearly, or just reconnect with their voice.
Let's grow this movement
one meaningful conversation at a time.
If you got value from today's episode,
here are two simple ways to support the mission.
Leave a five-star rating or review wherever you listen.
It's one of the best ways to help others
discover these conversations that truly matter.
Second, bring the message to your team or organization.
I speak to companies, conferences, and communities about intentional leadership, human connection,
and the behavior science of change.
You can learn more or book a talk at johnrmiles.com slash speaking.
And before we go, next week's episode is one you don't want to miss.
I'm sitting down with Dr. Michael Morris, one of the world's top social psychologists and a leading expert on how culture shapes cognition. We're going
to explore why our beliefs often feel so right even when they're wrong and what it takes
to update our thinking in a polarized world. It's one of the most thought provoking episodes
I've recorded all year and I can't wait to share it with you.
Every generation thinks things are falling apart. It's incumbent on us to not despair and not engage in mystical fatalism about our problems
instead to try to understand them as best we can and understand what levers we have and how we can
go about remediating the problems. And at the same same time problems are dramatic and they dominate our
attention. The good things that happen as a result of our tribal motivations happen at a more tacit
implicit level and we don't stop to think about them very much. Until then remember if you got
value share it and more importantly live it because ideas don't change lives action does. Live life passion-struck.