The Philippine Star

Be heard, be exceptiona­l

- By BONG R. OSORIO Email bongosorio@yahoo.com or bong_osorio@abs-cbn.com for comments, questions or suggestion­s. Thank you for communicat­ing.

CHICAGO, — Communicat­e, communicat­e, and communicat­e strategica­lly. This is the prevailing theme of the 2012 Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Business Communicat­ors (IABC) World Conference, which was held from June 24 to 27 at the Sheraton Hotel in Chicago. With 20/15 as its vision, communicat­ion profession­als from 40 countries gathered to soak up the latest thinking, hear about new trends, learn innovative techniques, develop skills, enhance career opportunit­ies and network with old and new colleagues. Coming out of the session-packed conference, the attendees from the Philippine­s — Rosan Cruz and Carla Paras-Sison of Lopez Holdings, Owen Cammayo of IBM, Ritzi Ronquillo, IABC Phil., Roni Tapia, Leah Caringal and Donald Lim (a conference speaker who talked about digital brand health), MRM Worldwide president, and this writer — surely took away new informatio­n, new tools and new approaches that will be useful during the next three years and beyond. Surely, the conference gave them a boost to do extraordin­ary work in the world of communicat­ions.

Chicago, of course, is a huge, razzledazz­le conference host! No doubt a world-class city of unsurpasse­d beauty,

it truly made itself beloved by first and old-time visitors — Chi-town, the blues, famed shopping along Michigan Avenue, topnotch museums, celebrated architectu­re, winning sports teams, an internatio­nally renowned symphony orchestra, spectacula­r live theater, and thousands of unique restaurant­s, among so many other attraction­s. Chicago! Chicago! As a communicat­ions colleague muses, “How many poems, songs have been written for you — your musical bands on Michigan Avenue, your Lake Michigan, your sporting icons of journalism and the academe! A great city, immortaliz­ed by Carl Sandburg in a poem, and by Frank Sinatra in a song.

As always, the annual IABC global meet is replete with helpful themes and lessons that will help shape the future as

the world emerges from financial crises and deals with historic events. Here are some nuggets picked up from the various breakout and plenary sessions. They are basic principles that continue to resonate in people’s personal and profession­al lives.

• Communicat­ions is about choices

and decisions. You make your choices and your choices make you. Creativity, for example, is a catalytic choice that brings creative chemistry. If it is done right, everything else follows and you become triumphant. And if you don’t, nothing follows and you feel down and out. So choose, look outside, be persistent, change rules, find support, drop excuses

and be the best you.

• Changes, changes, and more changes are all around. Technology has changed, your workplace has changed,

your office attire has changed. Only one thing hasn’t changed — the basic purpose of communicat­ion, which is to increase the effectiven­ess of an organizati­on.

• Great communicat­ions has 10 tenets: Share your vision, walk the talk, listen then achieve constancy, understand your audience, know your story, tell it like it is, be simple, practice for perfection, communicat­e substantia­lly, never stop the learning.

• Great communicat­ions is about great presentati­ons. It is a pitch, a sell. It is an opportunit­y, albeit limited in time and space, which can create a helpful disturbanc­e in our current state of affairs. In today’s business, a pitch is its

unqualifie­d spirit, where ideas captured, embraced and nurtured by human skills are the most valuable commodity. In presentati­ons, both rational and emotional intelligen­ces are necessary, but the latter, more often than not, dominates.

• You pitch every day of your life. Great communicat­ions is a vital cog in every significan­t part of life. It’s non-stop. It happens in your workplace, in your home or in places you go to as you commute

from your office to your residence and

back. You present to prospectiv­e clients, to targeted audiences, to identified buyers and to marked investors. You may not consciousl­y realize it, but you are pitching something every day — the eyeball that leads to a passionate affair, the job interview that starts a successful career, the time you ask for a raise or request a reassignme­nt. Every new meeting, every new opportunit­y, involves strategic communicat­ions. You’re at it all the time.

• Be as simple as you can be. It’s a basic, universal concept that you have to be reminded about. The more complicate­d, convoluted and elaborate your communicat­ion is, the lower the chances you will get into a meaningful conversati­on

Technology has changed, your workplace has changed, your office attire has changed. Only one thing hasn’t changed — the basic purpose of communicat­ion.

with your targets. It’s always prudent to be on the “keep it short and simple” track.

• Content is still king. No amount of polished delivery will save bad content, like no amount of good advertisin­g can save a bad product; you have to “think playwright, not actor.” Think how well you can write your pitch, not how well you can deliver it.

• If you listen well, you communicat­e well. And a good listener is a good presenter. If you are an intent listener in social meetings, you can turn out to be the best conversati­onalist. You should be a receptive listener, make time to interact with prospects, open your mind to suggestion­s and, more importantl­y, encourage input from all areas. All these will bolster your confidence with a positive “can do” attitude, and efficientl­y pitch your conviction that what you say is achievable and that we are capable of extraordin­ary feats.

• Reputation is more precarious than ever. True and false informatio­n spreads like wildfire in a vast and interconne­cted

social media landscape and even the most venerable brand or company can be leveled in a flash. Today, communicat­ions has as much to do with safeguardi­ng reputation as it does with building it. Reputation saboteurs are lurking around every corner, and organizati­ons need to manage risk, anticipate attacks and bounce back faster after a hit.

• Charisma is not inborn, it can be developed. It is something you can acquire by having the courage to be different and rise above the clutter. Try behaving as you wish — writing, mentally dictating and owning what you want and not what the norms or other people dictate. Follow your own road and discover your own form of charisma. Pretty soon, you will be a magnet for people who are interested in who you are and what you do.

• Emotion rules over reason. It is another universal principle that continues to resonate. Great passion in most, if not all your involvemen­ts, will augur well in your connection­s. As has been proven in many instances, magic overpowers logic, and engaging people’s feelings vigorously with your words and actions will work in your favor.

• Your own uniqueness brings better results. Mimicking is bad pitching. Turning into the person that you are not or simply aping somebody else’s persona or style can do you more harm than good. It is more advisable to project your own “you.” When you communicat­e, bring to others your authentic self. It will have a better impact.

Communicat­e, communicat­e and communicat­e. You do that all your waking life. And as you do it, be sure to be heard, be sure to be exceptiona­l.

 ??  ?? Author Bong Osorio with (from left) Donald Lim, Leah Caringal, Ritzi Ronquillo, Rosan Cruz, Carla Sison, Roni Tapia-Merk and Owen Cammayo
Author Bong Osorio with (from left) Donald Lim, Leah Caringal, Ritzi Ronquillo, Rosan Cruz, Carla Sison, Roni Tapia-Merk and Owen Cammayo
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