Talks Offered
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Peter is offering a series of eight talks that cover some of the central topics of leadership and communication in business. These can be delivered as lectures, seminars or interactive workshops, and they can be presented either singly or as a series.
Embodied Leadership
Leaders need to have vision, commitment and the desire to lead. But these qualities, in themselves, are not enough to guarantee effectiveness, because a leader also needs to look and sound like the kind of person that other people are willing to follow. In this seminar we investigate the outward trappings of leadership, including those aspects of language and body language that aspiring leaders need to adopt if they are to have any hope of encouraging others to follow them. We focus on “power talk” – the use of certain words, expressions and vocal qualities – that make someone sound like a leader, as well as “power walk” – those aspects of gait, posture, gesture, gaze and facial expression – that enable someone to look like a credible leader. We discover that it’s possible to project an image of leadership by producing certain dominance signals, and that in the process one is likely to actually become more dominant. We explore the competing demands on leaders to appear both dominant and approachable, and then discuss ways that these competing demands can be accommodated by male as well as female leaders. To be effective, every aspiring boss needs to understand the impact that their behaviour has on others, and to project a convincing image of themself as a leader.
Image: Wikimedia Commons TCY - Tour de France landmark on a "Les Pyrénées" aire of the French Motorway A64
Image: Wikimedia Commons TCY - Tour de France landmark on a "Les Pyrénées" aire of the French Motorway A64
Reading Other People
Effective leaders need to be able to read other people – to work out what they’re thinking and feeling and what they’re likely to do next. Leaders need to be sensitive to what board members, clients, colleagues and subordinates expect of them, what they’re personally trying to achieve, and what they really feel when they offer an opinion. Here we explore the giveaway clues that people produce – most of which happen to be unintentional. We examine the use of certain phrases and expressions, how people modulate their voice, and the signals that are present in their body language. Special attention in given to body language signals which show when people are feeling anxious or threatened. We also focus on lying and deception, identifying which types of clues to look out for when someone might not be telling the truth, as well as the signs to look out for when people are faking their emotions. Finally, we look at some of the interpersonal strategies that people resort to in their attempts to manipulate and persuade others, particularly those that are used when they are trying to impress people who are more important than them. We discuss the use of ingratiation, flattery and conformity as techniques for currying favour, and the best ways to deal with them.
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Laitr Keiows – Left Eye of a Girl
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Laitr Keiows – Left Eye of a Girl
Embracing Change
In his famous treatise on evolution, Charles Darwin concluded that, “It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change”. The same is also true of individuals and organisations. Those people or firms that are overly dependent on a particular strategy are more likely to be threatened by change than those that which have a broad range of strategies at their disposal and which are therefore able to modify their responses as circumstances demand. In a steady-state situation, tried-and-tested responses may offer an advantage, but when things start to become unpredictable it’s adaptable people and organisations that are more likely to prosper and survive. In this seminar we begin by looking at the concepts of “niche fitness” and “adaptive fitness” as they apply to individuals and organisations. We then explore the distinctive characteristics that are linked to adaptive fitness, like pragmatism, action-orientation, realistic optimism, creativity, resilience, social support, humour and the use of forward thinking. Finally we identify a range of procedures that individuals and organisations can employ to make themselves more adaptable and therefore more effective in a rapidly changing world.
Image: Wikimedia Commons: NASA – View of EVA during STS 41-B
Image: Wikimedia Commons: NASA – View of EVA during STS 41-B
Meeting Challenges
How individuals and organisations respond to challenges is critical to their success and survival. Every organisation has to deal with set-backs, delays, frustrations, financial squeezes, supply problems and aggressive competition. How they react to these challenges can affect not only their sales and their brand, but also morale and relations within the organisation. Like animals, people have three basic responses to threat – freeze, flight or fight. In this session we look at how these three basic responses are activated when organisations are threatened – how one organisation, for example, might “freeze” by doing nothing while another “takes flight” by retreating into a fantasy world where problems don’t exist. When facing challenges it’s important for organisations to adopt an upbeat, but nevertheless realistic attitude, avoiding the extreme, doom-laden views of the catastrophists and the rosy-tinted spectacles and equally dysfunctional attitudes of the Pollyannas, and to focus throughout on practical solutions. The crucial role that emotions play in colouring people’s perceptions needs to be recognised, both within and outside the organisation, along with the important role that management can play in keeping things calm and providing a sense of stability and direction.
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Julianne Showalter – USAF airmen of 720th Special Tactics Group jumping out of Hercules aircraft
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Julianne Showalter – USAF airmen of 720th Special Tactics Group jumping out of Hercules aircraft
Humanizing Business
Because we’re such a social species, we humans invest enormous amounts of time and energy in other people – endeavouring, for example, to figure out what other people are like and what kind of relationship, if any, we want to have with them. Since these psychological processes are hard-wired into our brain, it’s hardly surprising that when we come to deal with organisations we apply much the same criteria. For one thing, we impute personality to brands, much as we do to other people. The challenge facing organisations therefore is how to humanize their brand by cultivating and projecting a personality that’s distinctive, sincere and exciting, and which meets with clients’ expectations. In this seminar we explore the external as well the internal features of brand personality, as well as the psychological archetypes on which organisations can model themselves. We examine how organisations react when their brand faces a challenge and the crucial impact that this can have on their future success. We discuss the twelve cardinal rules that organisations need to follow in their attempts to humanise their brand, to enhance their “relatability”, and to consolidate their relationship with their customers and the people who work in those organisations.
Image: Wikimedia Commons: The Creation of Adam by Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel
Image: Wikimedia Commons: The Creation of Adam by Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel
PRINCIPLES INTO PRACTICE
There’s a strong connection between the ethical values that a firm espouses and the way that it behaves towards its customers and stakeholders, and this in turn can have a dramatic impact on the firm’s reputation and its commercial success. It’s therefore very much in a firm’s interests to embed a culture of integrity, trust and cooperation within its organisation. There are seven steps that a firm needs to take to achieve this goal – the so-called “seven pillars of wisdom”. The first is to decide which values the firm wants to champion, and the second is to find out whether, and in what ways, the new values conform or clash with the firm’s existing ones. The third step is to articulate the practices that are linked to the selected values – in other words, to connect words to deeds. The next step is to create a storyline that persuades the firm’s workforce to adopt the new values, as well as the practices that express those values, and following that to get the workforce to buy into the scheme. In the process it’s important to recognise that there are bound to be pockets of resistance and to deal with these with openness and understanding. Once a new regime of values takes root it’s essential to spread the good word, so that everyone knows what the firm has achieved and the workforce can feel justifiably proud.
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Eduardo Paolozzi’s Newton
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Eduardo Paolozzi’s Newton
DEEP PSYCHOLOGY OF WEALTH
This seminar introduces a novel way of thinking about the psychology of the wealthy – one that explores the "deeper", inaccessible motives that encourage people to accumulate and display wealth and to surround themselves with luxury. We begin by looking at the principles that underpin displays of evolutionary fitness in the animal world and how they can help us to understand displays of wealth. We then go on to examine how wealth is linked to wellbeing and reproductive success, and why people try to get rich so that they can avoid the horrendous consequences of poverty. We look at how luxury is defined by rarity, at the overwhelming power of conspicuous waste, the natural processes that lead displays of wealth to become ever more extravagant, and the way that wealth encourages resentment and envy, against which the wealthy often feel the need to defend themselves. We explore how the rich use their wealth to elicit favourable responses from others, and how they then utilise these reactions to construct a positive view of themselves and to reinforce their feelings of entitlement. Knowing their deep, often unexpressed desires enables us to understand wealthy people better, to communicate with them more effectively and to design financial products and services that meet their psychological needs.
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Victor Dubreuil “Barrels of Money”, c. 1897
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Victor Dubreuil “Barrels of Money”, c. 1897
GLOBAL EFFECTIVENESS
Do you want to be a truly global manager – someone who understands the hidden codes in different business cultures and who can move effortlessly from one international business meeting to another? How can you expand your mental horizons and learn how to interpret foreign business practices while projecting an image of confidence and calm authority? This seminar helps you too see the world through the eyes of foreign businessmen and women – you’ll learn how to interpret their conventions, actions and body language so that you can understand what they think and feel and what they’re trying to achieve. In the process you’ll acquire a new pair of “cultural spectacles” that enable you to understand the strategies and responses of the foreigners you meet, and to read them like an open book. You’ll discover which behaviours to look out for, what these behaviours mean, what offends other people and which behaviours you should therefore avoid. We also focus attention on the subject of interpersonal skills, enabling participants to develop their own personal skills, to become more relaxed and confident, and to convey essential business messages about openness and trust in different cultural contexts. This sets participants on the road to becoming truly global managers.
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Cruikshank, “Anglo-Parisian Salutations”
Image: Wikimedia Commons: Cruikshank, “Anglo-Parisian Salutations”