Title: 30 Second Elevator Message
130 Second Elevator Message
- Succinct Meaningful Communication
September 15, 2009 Joan Barnes Development
Outreach Librarian University Libraries
2Whats In it for You?
- Perfecting communication skills increases your
credibility and gets you respect - You get to communicate what you know
- Build professional relationships
- Building relationships with potential donors
could bring to the Libraries - Tell the truth in a constructive way (being
positive is in how you frame the truth -- not
telling the truth builds mistrust)
3Outline
- Review of Communication process
- On the way to the elevator (30 second) message
- Steps for a 30 second elevator message
- Examples
- Things to avoid using
- Exercise
- Questions
- Summary
4Review of Communication Process
- The process by which information (message) is
sent from one person the sender to another
the receiver and how it is received. - Includes verbal and non-verbal messages
- Nonverbal tone of voice, facial expressions,
body stance, gestures, proximity. - 90 of message is sent nonverbally.
- Long, Rob. The Art of Positive Communication.
David Fulton Publishers, 2005. - Others
5Review of Communication Process
- 2-way process -- The message has to be received
-- so someone has to listen. - Active Listening Attending to many messages at
the same time and being able to select and
respond to those most relevant - An active listener checks that she/he really
understands what is being said. - Long, 2005.
6Review of Communication Process
- Active Listening
- Involves
- Paraphrasing
- shows you understand
- Asking Questions
- tell me more
- Empathizing
- Descriptive observations
7What is an elevator message
- Originally used in business to connect quickly
with a potential client/partner used
proactively or as a response - Brief message that is customizable for you, your
listener and their goals - 4 Steps or Parts (includes talking listening)
- Powerful way to make a connection with another
person - Supposed to be memorable in a good way
- Wiskup, Mark. The it Factor Be the One People
Like, Listen To, and Remember. - AMA. 2007.
8On the way to an elevator message
- Alters the status quo.
- Every sentence, every conversation, and every
discussion is based on the premise that something
needs to change All conversation is about
change. - What change do you want? Do you want someone to
listen to your input on a project? Do you want
teaching faculty to listen to you?
9On the way to the Elevator
- You are the brand of the Libraries
- You are the business card
- And your elevator message will reflect that.
- It is not talking points or advertising slogans
- Avoid those, they can be perceived as
disingenuous, sound canned
10Building the Elevator message
- Step 1
- Describe your (business, job, project, service,
resource) using non-jargon words. -
- Jargon does not make connections because people
dont understand it. - Avoid Jargon
11Which is better?
- I am a development and public relations
professional for the University Libraries,
working with the Friends of the Libraries and
staffing events such at the Big Red Welcome and
Red Letter days. - Or
- I build relationships with all kinds of people on
behalf of the Libraries -- with Friends and
Alumni to raise money to support the Libraries
goals and with students so that they know what
resources the Libraries provide in order to
support their education.
12Building the Elevator Message
- Step 2
- Focus on Customers (user experience)
- Immediately move to how you serve your
constituents - or how that resource/project/your job impacts
students and faculty at UNL - Step 2- is the start of the why portion of the
Elevator message
13Example
- I
- I build relationships with all kinds of people on
behalf of the Libraries -- with Friends and
Alumni to raise money to support the Libraries
goals and with students so that they know what
resources the Libraries provide in order to
support their education. - I staff the online chat reference service where I
can guide distance students through some of our
information resources in real time.
14Building the Elevator message
- Step 3
- Focus on overcoming a challenge one of your
customers is facing (or faced) - You need to paint a specific picture of a single
problem you helped tackle for a single patron. - If you are going to talk features pick one
that connects with the listener
15Example of Step 3
- The NU Foundation referred a donor to me, who
wanted to honor her grandson with a plaque
somewhere on campus, but the donor did not have
the means to sponsor a room. The Friends
furniture campaign fit her needs and she was
thrilled to sponsor a study table and chair set. - Just the other day I received an interesting
question about the behavior of the dung beetle
from a graduate student working in Africa and I
was able to help him formulate the research
search terms to use in the Biological Abstracts
database.
16Describing Features
- Pay particular attention to the words you assign
to features - Feature are described with an adjective followed
by a noun dedicated staff, quaint study areas,
accessible databases, user friendly software,
large format scanners - Limit features to five words or less
- Excessive features which do not meet listeners
goals actually dilute the features and benefits
that do
17Building the Elevator Message
- Step 4
- Focus on a Happy Ending for that one story
- Illustrate the successful solving of the problem.
- This really conveys the why and benefits of the
service, resource, the libraries
18Example of Step 4
- she was thrilled to sponsor a study table and
chair set. She sent pictures of the furniture to
her grandson congratulating him on his
graduation. We were so excited that we were able
to help this donor honor her loved one through
the University Libraries and at the same time her
gift provides a place for a student to study. - The grad student was able to find a couple of
specific journal articles that answered his
question about the behavior of the dung beetle.
Even in the middle of Africa our students have
access to our research collection and expertise. -
19Benefits
- The value that a listener derives from features
that achieve their goal(s). - Described with a verb or adverb followed by a
noun or noun phrase increases efficiency or
motivates users - Like features, limit Benefits to five words or
less to ensure clarity and to make them sound
powerful and vivid
20What is the difference?
- "We are throwing away books and journals to which
we have electronic access. - Or
- The popularity of our online materials gives us
the opportunity to review the value of duplicate
print materials and make room on the shelves for
other materials and even study space, which is so
valued by students.
21Other Things to Avoid
- Sarcasm
- Humor
- Threats
- Commands
- Prophecy
- Lecturing
22Exercise
- Write down a couple of facts that describe you
what you do, or your projects, or service, or
resource (no jargon) - Write down who is impacted by you (or your
project, or resource, etc) how they are
impacted - One challenge faced by 2 and how you or your
project, resource, service helped solve that
challenge - Happy ending Successful outcome
- Put it all together Elevator speech
23Summary
- Building relationships with a concise,
customizable, memorable message - 4 steps to follow in developing a message about
you, your impact, your customer, an example and
successful outcome. - Think about the person receiving the message and
their perception - You are the Libraries
- Everyone you talk with, work with, or come in
contact with is a potential supporter of the
Libraries