Designing Meetings that Excite, Enlighten, and Empower your Audience - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Designing Meetings that Excite, Enlighten, and Empower your Audience

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Designing Meetings that Excite, Enlighten, and Empower your Audience Presented by Dr. Lawana Gladney Emotionally Healthly Leaders * Emotionally Healthly Leaders * www ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Designing Meetings that Excite, Enlighten, and Empower your Audience


1
Designing Meetings that Excite, Enlighten, and
Empower your Audience
  • Presented by Dr. Lawana Gladney

2
Session GoalsE? Excite Enlighten - Empower
  • Discover how the brain works and what works for
    the brain
  • Discover how to design meaningful content
  • Learn how to make your meeting more memorable
  • Understand how to impress the brain

3
Ultimate Meeting Goals
  • List your top three goals for your meetings and
    prioritize them.
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • What is the number one take away for all
    attendees?

4
How about that brain!
  • Our brain is bombarded with millions of bits of
    visual, verbal and other sensory data daily. How
    does it decide which data to process and which
    data to ignore?

5
How the Brain Works
6
Brain Goal
7
Sensory Registry
  • The brain relies on the sensory register to sift
    out the important data from the unimportant data
    in order to avoid burnout from the overload of
    information.
  • Any information that doesn't make it through this
    register is gone for good and has no chance of
    being remembered.
  • If the information is unimportant to you it is
    lost and gone for good.

8
Short Term Memory
  • The short term memory can retain information
    for up to approximately 30 seconds. Long enough
    to look up a phone number and dial it. If the
    information is important it will get passed to
    the next level.
  • 832-9754

9
Working Memory
  • Data in the working memory, it is being
    deliberately and consciously processed. It is
    limited both in the amount of information it can
    deal with at one time and in how long it can
    remain focused on it. We can only deal with 7
    pieces of information simultaneously.

10
Demonstration
  • Chunking - A technique used to get around this
    limitation and increase the amount of data that
    can be worked on at the same time.
  • You have 10 seconds to memorize the following
    letters.
  •    XIBMSATMTVPHDX
  • X IBM SAT MTV PHD X

11
Long Term Memory
  • Once the brain has assigned sense and/or meaning
    to the information it moves into the long term
    memory, and once it is in, it is there to stay.

12
Brain Stress
  • The brain learns best when there is a balance
    between stress and comfort high challenge and
    low threat.
  • The brain needs some challenge, or environmental
    press that generates stress as described above to
    activate emotions and learning.
  • Stress motivates a survival imperative in the
    brain. Too much and anxiety shuts down learning.
    Too little and the brain becomes too relaxed and
    comfortable

13
eonvrye taht can raed tihs rsaie yuor hnad  
  • Cna yuo raed tihs? Olny 55 plepoe out of 100
    can. i cdnuolt blveiee taht I cluod aulaclty
    uesdnatnrd waht I was rdanieg. The phaonmneal
    pweor of the hmuan mnid, aoccdrnig to a
    rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it dseno't
    mtaetr in waht oerdr the ltteres in a wrod are,
    the olny iproamtnt tihng is taht the frsit and
    lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. The rset can
    be a taotl mses and you can sitll raed it whotuit
    a pboerlm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos
    not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as
    a wlohe. Azanmig huh? yaeh and I awlyas tghuhot
    slpeling was ipmorantt! if you can raed tihs
    forwrad it.

14
Brain Puzzle
  • Three people check into a hotel and pay 30 to
    the manager and go to their room. The manager
    suddenly remembers that the room rate is 25 and
    gives 5 to the bellboy to return to the people.
    On the way to the room the bellboy reasons that
    5 would be difficult to share among three people
    so he pockets 2 and gives 1 to each person. Now
    each person paid 10 and got back 1. So they
    paid 9 each, totaling 27. The bellboy has 2,
    totaling 29. Where is the missing 1?

15
Brain Puzzle 2
  • Matthew Shelborn frequently has to travel for his
    company, which gives him a chance to meet many
    people from all parts of the USA. In April,
    Matthew flew to five different US cities on
    business and he flew a different airline each
    time. During each trip he chatted with the person
    next to him, and no two people he talked to were
    in the same profession.From the information,
    can you determine the date Matthew made each
    flight (each was on a Monday exactly one week
    apart starting on April 2nd), the airline he
    flew, his destination, and the profession of the
    person who sat next to him on each flight?

16
Enlightening Content
  • Use acronyms and chunking techniques
  • Less is more
  • Use pictures and graphics anywhere possible
  • Write content with learning styles in mind
    visual, auditory, and kinetic
  • Include activities
  • Content has to be relevant to audience
  • Use humor

17
Understanding Information Overload
  • Yourbrainwillgointooverloadwhenthereistoo
    muchthatispresentedinashortperiodoftimeor
    whentheinformationlookscomplicatedandboring.
    Itislikereadingabunchofwordstypedtogether-Yourbrai
    ndoesnotgetachancetoprocessanythingorputinfoincate
    gories,sobasicallyyourbrainwillshutoffandplaceatte
    ntionandinterestelsewhere.Thusreallearningdoesnoto
    ccur.

18
Tips to Avoid Brain Overload
  • Avoid cramming information into meetings
  • Avoid scheduling too many learning sessions at
    conferences
  • Keep information light not heavy
  • Make it fun
  • Encourage session overview
  • Create action plans

19
To Excite the brain- you have to touch emotions
  • Emotions are critical to learning they drive
    our attention, health, learning, meaning and
    memory.
  • Emotions A mental state that arises
    spontaneously rather than through conscious
    effort and is often accompanied by physiological
    changes a feeling.

20
How Emotions Work in the Brain
  • Emotions are encompassed in the part of your
    brain called the limbic system. The hippocampus
    is important in memory and learning, while the
    limbic system itself is central in the control of
    emotional responses.
  • Emotions you want to elicit in a meeting.
  • acceptance, admiration, amazed, amused, awed,
  • calm, certain, cheerful, compassionate,
    comfortable, convinced, content, determined
  • ecstatic, elated, enlightened, enthusiastic,
    excited, empowered
  • festive, happy, hopeful, inspired, joyous,
    jubilant, lighthearted
  • peaceful, playful, pleased, secure, smart,
    optimistic, positive, proud, relaxed, relieved,
    respectful, trusting, satisfied, , sharing,
    tender, thrilled, understanding, warm

21
Igniting the Five Senses
  • Sight lighting, décor, props, color
  • Touch- centerpieces, manuals, paper, trinkets
  • Smell- aroma fans, plug ins, air filters, meals
  • Hearing- music, AV, Sound bites, speaker
  • Taste- meal, centerpieces

22
Color your Meetings
  • There is power and emotion wrapped into color.
    It is a powerful psychological tool. By using
    color psychology, you can send a positive or
    negative message, encourage sales, calm a crowd,
    or make an athlete pump iron harder.

23
Red
  • Physiological Effect Red has been shown to
    increase blood pressure and stimulate the adrenal
    glands. The stimulation of the adrenals glands
    helps us become strong and increases our stamina.
    Pink, a lighter shade of red, helps muscles
    relax.
  • Psychological Effect While red has proven to be
    a color of vitality and ambition it has been
    shown to be associated with anger. Sometimes red
    can be useful in dispelling negative thoughts,
    but it can also make one irritable. Pink has the
    opposite effect of red. Pink induces feelings of
    calm, protection, warmth and nurture. This color
    can be used to lessen irritation and aggression
    as it is connected with feelings of love.

24
Orange
  • Physiological Effect Orange has proven to be a
    stimulus of the sexual organs. Also, it can be
    beneficial to the digestive system and can
    strengthen the immune system.
  • Psychological Effect Orange has shown to have
    only positive affects on your emotional state.
    This colour relieves feelings of self-pity, lack
    of self-worth and unwillingness to forgive.
    Orange opens your emotions and is a terrific
    antidepressant.

25
Yellow
  • Physiological Effect Yellow has proven to
    stimulate the brain. This stimulation can make
    you more alert and decisive. This color makes
    muscles more energetic and activates the lymph
    system.
  • Psychological Effect Yellow is a happy and
    uplifting color. It can also be associated with
    intellectual thinking discernment, memory, clear
    thinking, decision-making and good judgment. Also
    aiding organization, understanding of different
    points of view. Yellow builds self-confidence and
    encourages optimism. However, a dull yellow can
    bring on feelings of fear.

26
Green
  • Physiological Effect Green is said to be good
    for you heart. On a physical and emotional, green
    helps your heart bring you physical equilibrium
    and relaxation. Green relaxes our muscles and
    helps us breathe deeper and slower.
  • Psychological Effect Green creates feelings of
    comfort, laziness, relaxation, calmness. It helps
    us balance and soothe our emotions. Connection
    with nature Yet, darker and grayer greens can
    have the opposite effect and remind us of decay
    and death and can actually have a detrimental
    effect on physical and emotional health.

27
Blue
  • Physiological Effect Blue proves to lower blood
    pressure. Blue can be linked to the throat and
    thyroid gland. Blue also has a very cooling and
    soothing affect, often making us calmer. Deep
    blue stimulates the pituitary gland, which then
    regulates our sleep patterns.
  • Psychological Effect We usually associate the
    color blue with the night and thus we feel
    relaxed and calmed. Lighter blues make us feel
    quite and away from the rush of the day. Like
    yellow, blue inspires mental control, clarity and
    creativity. However, too much dark blue can be
    depressing.

28
Purple
  • Physiological Effect Violet has shown to
    alleviate conditions such as sunburn due to its
    purifying and antiseptic effect. This color also
    suppresses hunger and balances the body's
    metabolism.
  • Psychological Effect Purples have been used in
    the care of mental of nervous disorders because
    they have shown to help balance the mind and
    transform obsessions and fears. Indigo is often
    associated with the right side of the brain
    stimulating intuition and imagination. Violet is
    associated with bringing peace and combating
    shock and fear. Violet has a cleansing effect
    with emotional disturbances.

29
Brown
  • Psychological Effect Brown is the color of the
    earth and ultimately home. This color brings
    feelings of stability and security. Sometimes
    brown can also be associated with withholding
    emotion and retreating from the world.

30
Black
  • Psychological Effect While comforting and
    protective, black is mysterious and associated
    with silence and sometimes death. Black is
    passive and can prevent us from growing and
    changing. Can be associated with authority.
  • In the western hemisphere black is associated
    with grieving. Black is a serious color that
    evokes strong emotions it is easy to overwhelm
    people with too much black.

31
White
  • Psychological Effect White is the color of
    ultimate purity. This color brings feelings of
    peace and comfort while it dispels shock and
    despair. White can be used to give yourself a
    feeling of freedom and uncluttered openness. Too
    much white can give feelings of separation and
    can be cold and isolation.

32
Gray
  • Psychological Effect Gray is the color of
    independence and self-reliance, although usually
    thought of as a negative color. It can be the
    color of evasion and non-commitment (since it is
    neither black nor white.) Gray indicates
    separation, lack of involvement and ultimately
    loneliness.

33
Review
  • KIS- Keep it simple Chunks
  • KII Keep it interesting and
    challenging
  • KIR- Keep it relevant
  • KIC Keep it colorful
  • KIM Keep it moving
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