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Julian Treasure

How to be Heard

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A leading Ted Talk speaker shares the secrets to being a better communicator in this accessible and informative guide.
Have you ever felt like you’re talking, but nobody is listening? Renowned five-time TED Talk speaker and author Julian Treasure reveals how to speak so that people listen—and how to listen so that people feel heard. As this leading sound expert demonstrates via interviews with world-class speakers, professional performers, and CEOs at the top of their field, the secret lies in developing simple habits that can transform your communication skills, the quality of your relationships, and your impact in the world.
How to be Heard includes never-before-seen exercises to help you develop communication skills that are as effective at home as in the boardroom or conference call. Julian Treasure offers an inspiring vision for a world of effective speaking, listening, and understanding.
Secrets of communication skills and tips discussed in How to be Heard include:
·       How to make sound work for you
·       Why listening matters
·       The four cornerstones of powerful speaking and listening
·       How to avoid the seven deadly sins of speaking and listening
·       How to listen and why we don’t
·       The power of your vocal toolbox and tricks of great speakers
·       Exercises and methods to achieve clarity, precision and impact
·       How to deliver a great talk
HuffPost 20 Best Business Books of 2017
2019 Audie Award Winner for Best Audio Book in Business and Personal Development
Winner of the Best Voiceover-Audiobook Narration at the 2018 Voice Arts Awards
Perfect for readers of Talk Like TEDSimply SaidJust Listen, or How to Win Friends and Influence People

This book is currently unavailable
312 printed pages
Original publication
2017
Publication year
2017
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Quotes

  • Caro Calvochas quoted5 years ago
    Whether you’re standing in front of one person, a room of eight people or an auditorium of 800, you own it to them (and to yourself) to be fully conscious.
  • Caro Calvochas quoted5 years ago
    you talk about a problem with a left-hand gesture when you have just indicated the future with the same hand, though of course the specifics of what you anchor, where, are entirely up to you.
  • Caro Calvochas quoted5 years ago
    You will make people rather uncomfortable if you retain your natural timeline and talk about the future with a gesture to your right (which will be their left). I am so used to this now that I’ve essentially reversed my own timeline, and instinctively indicate to the right when I talk about past and the left when I talk about future.

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