Blog and Web Copy

Blogs can be the centerpiece of your social media program. I can write the content for your blog and freshen the copy on your website.
Read more here

Employee Engagement

I can write communications policies, newsletters, letters and feedback programs for your employee engagement programs.
Read more here

Branding

Let me help you to sharpen your brand communications to reflect the essence of your company’s value proposition.
Read more here
Mar
25

Why CEOs Think Differently Than We Do

By Jeannette Paladino

Marketing and communications executives are being challenged by their CEOs to help chart the future of their organizations. It is their skills as conceptual thinkers that enable these communicators to envision the possibilities for supporting the organization’s goals.  If this is the case, then why do so many chief executives resist the recommendations of the very people they have selected to help drive change throughout the organization?

Of course, there can be many reasons, from ill-conceived ideas to lack of budget, to the indifference of line managers. But another reason may be the real culprit. While communicators may be conceptual thinkers, their CEOs are more likely ruled by logic and hard facts. They tend to approach problem solving in a linear fashion.

Sound recommendations may fail because they aren’t organized the way CEOs think. That is why it’s so important to structure recommendations for marketing and communications programs that immediately demonstrate how they will benefit the organization because that’s the chief executive’s bottom line, especially during these tough economic times.

Here are some tips for delivering a winning presentation to get approval for important recommendations:

  • Opening: outline the broad subject of the presentation
  • Presentation objective: this is the overall statement of how your ideas will benefit the organization. This is where a lot of presentations go wrong because the presenter leads with what he or she wants. Rather, the statement should answer top management’s question: why should I listen to this presentation; what’s in it for the company?
  • Key message points: think of your message as newspaper headlines supporting the benefits outlined in your presentation objective. How will the recommendations increase sales, save money, build a brand?
  • Supporting evidence: use facts, sales projections, statistics, etc., to back up your key messages.
  • Recommendations: summarize your key points and then propose a course of action for approval. Know the decision you want in advance.
  • Discussion: This is the most important part of your presentation. As you lead the discussion, you will build commitment for your recommendations, address any objections, and refine your proposal based on the discussion so that you get a favorable decision.
  • Summary: summarize the agreed-upon desired action. Even if all your recommendations aren’t accepted, don’t leave the meeting without a commitment to some sort of action. For example, if you can’t get your entire program approved, try to come away with a pilot project.

Remember, your overall goal is to link your programs to the company’s goals. Appreciate your incremental wins and then prepare for your next presentation.

Related posts:

  1. Fortune 100 CEOs are Social Media Slackers, Says New Study
  2. Are CEOs Good at Rewarding Employees?
  3. CEO as Chief Communications Officer
  4. What CEOs Can Learn About Employee Communications From the U.S. Army Band “Pershing’s Own”
  5. Winning Media Interviews, Part III: Structuring Your Answers to a Question

Leave a Reply

Contact Us Today

Jeannette Paladino * Write Speak Sell * Contact Jeannette * Tel: 212-308-4364 *
©Copyright 2010: All Rights Reserved