3 Lessons from Michelle Obama about finding your voice
credit: Gage Skidmore

3 Lessons from Michelle Obama about finding your voice

This post was originally published on WomenofInfluence.ca

Michelle Obama’s memoir "Becoming"is not only a candid look at her journey from a cramped South Side apartment in Chicago to her position on the world stage today — it’s also full of lessons that any woman can learn from. Do you want to speak powerfully in public and express yourself honestly? Read on for some advice from the former First Lady.??

Obama’s memoir?quickly made headlines for revelations about her infertility treatments and unfiltered comments about Donald Trump. But I see another story that will endure now that those headlines have faded: a woman who struggled and succeeded at finding her voice.

“If there’s one thing I’ve learned in life,” she writes, “it’s the power of using your voice.”

What motivates you to use your voice? What issues do you care enough about to champion in public?

The memoir details Obama’s remarkable journey?from a cautious, self-conscious girl from a working class neighborhood in Chicago to one of the most admired women in the world. One theme she returns to again and again is her desire to speak powerfully in public and express herself honestly.

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And who among us doesn’t want to do that? Fortunately, Obama’s memoir gives us plenty of lessons to learn from.

First,?get help

In the?early days of her husband’s presidential campaign, for the first time in her life, Obama was expected to do a fair amount of public speaking. She spoke in living rooms, bookstores, union halls, and retirement homes, “energizing volunteers, and trying to win over leaders in the community.”

But she never got any guidance. “What they didn’t tell me was what my message in Iowa was supposed to be,” she writes. “I was given no script, no talking points, no advice.”

After her husband’s victory in Iowa, the crowds got bigger and the stakes got higher.?

She describes her anguish when a line she tossed out while campaigning in Wisconsin —?“…let me tell you something, for the first time in my adult lifetime, I’m really proud of my country” — became fodder for conservative radio and television talk shows.

That led to an surprise intervention with advisors Valerie Jarrett and David Axelrod, who sat her down and showed her videos of some of her public appearances with the volume turned down. That way she was able to focus on some less than flattering facial expressions that she would need to control.

This was a turning point. Afterwards, Obama insisted on getting support in the form of a communication specialist to help sharpen her message and delivery. In time, that helped her feel “a new ease, a new ownership of my voice.”?

Like Obama, you don’t have to go it alone. Sign up for a workshop or program. Get a coach. Join a local chapter of Toastmasters or the National Speakers Association. No matter what your experience level, there’s always room to improve. Help is within reach.

Next,?get ready

Obama makes it clear that even in childhood she was hyper-organized and prepared — an asset when it comes to public speaking.?

For her 17-minute speech at the Democratic National Convention in 2008, she “rehearsed and re-rehearsed until I could pace the commas in my sleep…”

She found huge comfort in preparation. She had a teleprompter set up in a corner of her office in the East Wing of the White House - and used it. She pushed her scheduler and advance teams to make sure her public appearances ran smoothly and on time.?

The truth is, rehearsing for a speaking event can be uncomfortable, even stressful. But the single biggest mistake speakers make is to skip it or wait until the last minute.?

Put aside those excuses and commit to putting in the time until you feel confident about your delivery. Enlist a friend to rehearse with, or record yourself on your smartphone. You’ll see ways to improve, just like Obama did.

Lastly,?get real

The deeper Obama got into the experience of being First Lady, the more she felt comfortable just being herself. That brought a consistency to her communication style — whether she was speaking to college graduates, the homeless, hip-hop stars or massive, prime time audiences.

She writes that she established a strict code for herself “to only say what I absolutely believed and what I absolutely felt.”?Over time, she?began to feel urgency about not wasting the precious opportunity she’d been given — so she made the most of it, with lasting resonance.?

Stumping for Hillary Clinton at the Democratic convention in Philadelphia in 2016, she wanted to deliver the message that “words matter.” She will forever be remembered for her eloquent call that night for civility in public discourse: “When they go low, we go high.”

Reading Obama’s memoir, you get the feeling she has a lot more to say. As she promotes her book and speaks to packed arenas around the country, she knows girls and women around the world will be watching and listening carefully.

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I hope she inspires more of them to step up and speak out.

What motivates you to use your voice?

What issues do you care enough about to champion in public? Define your core beliefs and the causes you care about, and learn to speak about them persuasively.

That’s power.


Go to ?????#SpeakingWhileFemale?and hit "Follow" to discover all my posts on?#womenleaders?#publicspeaking #thoughtleadership?#womenempoweringwomen

____________________________

Is your company doing everything it can to maximize the value of your female talent? Download?my free checklist?to find out.

My name is Dana Rubin, and I help women put their ideas into the world powerfully and persuasively. I’m the founder of?The Speaking While Female Speech Bank, and the editor of the forthcoming?Speaking While Female: 50?Extraordinary?Speeches by American Women?(Real Clear | Fall 2021).

I'm opening up a discussion about the role of women’s public speech in history and invite you to take part. We need to hear the best ideas from everyone to address our toughest problems — so let's improve this world together.


? Copyright 2018

Edwin Almonte

Espresso-Fueled Dad | HR & Ops Insider | 10-Min Fix ? Crush Overwhelm (↓ featured) | Engineering People Solutions & Manufacturing Results

6 年

Great article. I like the summary. Certainly, some great points. In my opinion, one of the most powerful women of this generation. #facts

Karen Grosz CPC

Team Builder. Speaker. Author Quiet Leadership. #themondayvideolady

6 年

Isn't she amazing! Thanks for sharing this.

Gina Lauria

Independent Consultant at Gina Lauria Creative

6 年

Hi Dana, I am somewhere around Chapter 12. Can't say enough about the grit and grace of my favorite First Lady. Thanks for you insights

David Mahaffey

Outside Counsel Management and Litigation Management Executive

6 年

She is the very definition of class.

Nancy Heller, CIPP/US/E, CIPM, CIPT

Corporate & Transactional Counsel Offering 10+ years of Legal and Business Experience

6 年

a true role model

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