|
MUST
the CEO Make A Speech?
Alternative Techniques for Executive Appearances
download
the article in Word
At many business events it remains common to see a corporate
executive -- often the same corporate executive year after year
-- delivering a 45 or 60-minute address. This despite the fact
that in the great majority of cases everyone knows the audience
is hardly enjoying the experience.
In addressing this problem, there are two issues to consider:
- (1)
Is it really necessary for the CEO or other senior executives
to be onstage at all?
- (2)
If executive appearance onstage is imperative, is speechmaking
really the best way for company leaders to present themselves?
MUST
the CEO (or any other executive) Make A Speech?
Lawson Software is a provider of best-of-breed enterprise resource
planning systems to mid-sized corporations, and one of America's
fastest growing large companies. As Lawson's revenue surged from
$20-million to over $400-million in just five years, the company's
user conference and other events grew to become magnets for corporate
chief information officers and their senior staff.
Lawson Software CEO Bill Lawson took the decision that he and
his fellow senior executives would play no role whatsoever onstage
at their events, believing that there were better ways to position
their company and meet the needs of their user event guests.
Instead Bill ordered the creation of sector specific events
for CIOs in the company's targeted industries, healthcare, professional
services, and retail. Bill and the senior team sit in the audience,
side-by-side with the customers. They stay off the stage completely.
There is no Lawson presence onstage at all except for a single
logo.
These Lawson Software Summits consist of session after session
of topical discussions relevant to the CIOs in the audience.
Each 75-minute session of the all-day conferences features five
or six Lawson customers (CIOs) and industry analysts seated
in discussion of the topic with Scott Shuster of BusinessWeek
magazine. It is a full day of business discussions with no speeches
whatsoever.
As the discussion leader, Shuster raises issues for discussion
and frequently enters the audience with a microphone to enable
the full involvement and participation of anyone who cares to
become involved in the conversation. Over the course of the
one-one-and-one-half day programs nearly everyone in the audience
becomes a participant.
These events are immensely popular: Lawson Software has conducted
12 of them in just 5 years. The format works well for several
reasons:
- Attendees
say it is important to them to know they will never be subjected
to a Lawson sales pitch from the stage. This is a major differentiating
factor of the Lawson events.
- Attendees
also know that the content of the meeting will be 'objective,'
in that Lawson execs never set foot onstage so all content,
including the conceptual framework of each discussion, flows
from the CIOs themselves, as prompted by the questions from
the journalist, who is also independent.
- Anyone
in the room can draw the conversation in any direction at
any time.
- Attendees
are aware that they will not only meet their peers at the
Lawson Summits, but also learn from their peers. Many events
bring peers together without a specific mechanism for the
exchange of knowledge among them. The Lawson Summits achieve
this in easy-to-program, easy-to-manage plenary sessions (there
are no working groups).
The benefits for Lawson Software are enormous:
- The
company is seen to be taking a very "high-road" approach to
their event. There is no CIO gathering that offers better,
more relevant content, and less sponsor promotion.
- The
cost of onstage presentation is extremely low. No fancy set,
no expensive motivational speakers. The discussion leader
from BusinessWeek is the only paid person.
- The
content alone drives the appeal of these meetings. Everyone
present feels good about that.
- Easy
programming, staffing, and management. As an all-plenary conference
there is only one 'track' to program.
- With
no working groups to arrange, hotel costs are much lower and
onsite staffing requirements are minimal.
- Fewer
event development staff onsite means there is more money available
to bring more Lawson Software account executives to the meeting,
where they can enjoy face time with the attendees over dinners,
golf, and recreational activities -- as well as learn themselves,
by sitting in on the plenary sessions.
If
executive appearance onstage is imperative, is speechmaking really
the best way for company leaders to present themselves?
At
many meetings it is a must that the CEO or other senior executives
present themselves onstage. The normal way to do this is to
simply have the CEO step onstage and deliver an address from
the lectern. Some CEOs who are particularly good at extemporaneous
speaking will 'walk-and-talk,' -- Larry Ellison of Oracle commonly
does this. Bill Gates frequently conducts a demonstration of
a recent Microsoft product innovation, sometimes operating two
computers at once.
In all of these examples, the CEO is engaging in a one-way address,
in which in which it is apparent to the audience that the individual
alone onstage is setting the full agenda of their session's
content. No matter how good they are at the lectern or in at
their chosen technique of speaking, this type of address does
not position the executive as 'open to discussion,' 'listening,'
or 'approachable.'
Q&A sessions after a speech can address this, but most corporate
audiences are reluctant to stand up and address the leading
figure of their organization right in front of all their peers.
When the CEO or other senior figures must speak, the best way
to do that is in a relaxed, seated conversation with an objective
third party who will ask questions that give shape to the discussion,
and actively encourage the audience to participate as well --
helping the most forthright in the group to overcome their hesitation
and speak up.
Here again, BusinessWeek's Scott Shuster sets the example. Shuster
has interviewed literally thousands of corporate executives
in this manner, both at BusinessWeek events as well as at events
sponsored by the speaking executives. For example, when Maurice
Greenberg, chairman of insurance giant AIG wanted to meet with
commercial insurance brokers in 5 cities, he booked Shuster
to interview him live in front of groups of over one-thousand
brokers in every town. After the interview of Greenberg Shuster
turned around and conducted similar discussions with each of
the chairman's nine direct-report executive vice presidents.
In each case, Scott had had conversations prior to the event
with each executive, to ensure that he asked questions that
would enable each individual to make the points they absolutely
needed to make before the gathered brokers. But once that was
done, in each case Shuster was also able to ask other questions
of his own formulation, ensuring that the event had the dynamism
of a real journalistic interview -- which is exactly what it
was.
By approaching their appearance in this way, the chairman and
senior executives of AIG were able to position themselves as
open, listening, thoughtful and approachable individuals, responsive
to questions and completely accessible -- the goal of most CEO/senior
executive appearances. The DISCUSSION-DRIVEN session format
addresses that goal more effectively than a lectern-based speech.
|