Whose Script Is It Anyway?
Neil Mullarkey
The improv for business fellow. Creator of the LASER method. Creativity. Collaboration. Leadership. With a side order of fun...
Most people don’t spend their lives giving #presentations. Many people spend NONE of their lives giving presentations. Lots of leaders I’ve met would rather not have to give any, ever.
More and more however, 'presentation' isn't about some distant figure onstage droning on about how exciting your KPIs are and how everyone's passionate about ROI in Q3 as we leverage synergies going forward.
It's more often about those informal, impromptu moments: networking, pitching to five people, the 'town hall' with questions coming from all quarters, or bumping into someone, dealing with clients and colleagues in unstructured interactions. Or finding yourself alone with the head honcho on a Teams call.
Somebody once said that management is ‘conversations, interrupted’.
For the majority of our lives, the ‘presentation’ we give is unprepared. We are improvising. These impromptu 'scripts' may not all be entirely novel but based on previous discussions or thoughts we’ve had. However, frequently you do actually have to think on your feet.
Leaders come to me for that ‘in the moment’ confidence. More and more, the Q & A now forms the majority of oral pitches. C-Suiters, preparing for that dreaded conference speech, often confide, 'I love the Q & A but feel flat in my prepared piece. How can I transfer some of that energy?’ They feel they can be more their true selves without a script.
On the other hand, there was that young media exec who, when I asked what was going through his mind when presenting, admitted it was, in fact, ‘Please, please, nobody ask me any questions.’
I often help leaders who glumly bring me a script and a torrent of slides put together by their eager young team, with not a single thought for their boss's performance. S/he is dreading the gig. ‘How will I remember all these words, and in the right order?’
I look through the slides and nod sagely as they read out someone else’s essay - because that's how it feels. Then we put it away and I ask what makes them excited - or annoyed. Suddenly they come alive, as they recount stories and tell me what really matters. I make them record what they say on their own smart-phone. Not everything is usable. But so much is. And they own it. We harvest what’s emerged in our chat, then create a structure around it.
So why not learn from those whose job is to improvise?
Turn the clock back many years. I was in a university revue. We wrote sketches. We performed them and then edited them, based on audience reactions. We toured. We honed our product. We knew how to deliver each line to elicit the right laugh. By end of the summer, we had a sleek vehicle ready to take the Edinburgh Festival by storm.
That's where our tour manager came back raving one night about a show she had seen. An improvised show. It was really funny, she said. No, no, I insisted. To be funny it had to be written and rehearsed.
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Two years later I met Mike Myers. This was many years before Austin Powers and Shrek. He had just arrived in London and didn't know anyone. The only work he found was selling tickets at a pub theatre for a show I happened to be in.
He opened my eyes to #Improv. It started with a social worker in 1920s Chicago.? Viola Spolin was creating exercises to help inner city children grow the confidence to speak up in class. Her son saw that these games could become a wonderful form of theatre in their own right. By 1959 he had created The Second City . I had heard of it because so many alumni went on to Saturday Night Live. I loved The Blues Brothers and Alan Alda from M*A*S*H, so found out where they had come from.
Mike Myers had been in their Canadian touring troupe. They do improv shows after the main (written and rehearsed) revue and sometimes characters and situations emerge in the improv sets that are then developed for future scripted shows.
Eight months after we had met, Mike and I were onstage together for the first night of The Comedy Store Players, an improv ensemble The Players have just celebrated our thirty-ninth anniversary at our home in London The Comedy Store, London .
Yet still people confuse improv with stand-up. Stand-ups have scripts. They may not have written them down. They may ad-lib moments along the way. But they've honed their stories and rhythms through months on the road. It's very different from ensemble improv, which explicitly sets out to create a unique show each time, based on that night's audience suggestions.
I talk about #improv, as distinct from everyday improvisation that we all do - in conversation, in and around out to-do lists and even cooking (especially cooking, amirite?)
Like any art form, improv has developed loose rules through years of trial and error. The main one is to listen to your fellow player. Treat what s/he says as an ‘offer’, something to build upon, a gift to be accepted and returned with a ‘yes and’ ethos not ‘yes but’.
The early pioneers of improv found that more interesting stories developed if they built on their fellow player’s idea rather than knocking it down (which we call a ‘block’). It's best when you take turns and give one offer at a time. You have to still your inner voice, which cannot help but plan a step or more ahead. I call this ‘intentive’ listening. We listen with intent to explicitly use the offer we have been given. We try to make our fellow player look good.
With this simple discipline, you are never short of something to say.
Apply this to life in general and it reframes our attitude. One of my fellow evangelists for bringing the improv ethos to a wider audience, Robert Poynton , wrote a book called ‘Everything is an Offer’. Whatever happens in life, acknowledge it then use it to move forward. That tricky question or even heckle (or change in market conditions) is actually an offer in disguise, giving you an opportunity to win the 'audience' over in a way that would not have been possible without it. When the tech goes wrong, don't just stand there. Impress your audience by your ability to ride the misfortune. It's a blessing in disguise, but only if you act to make it so.
Everyone knows that if you 'fail to prepare, you prepare to fail'. But let me add to that. You need to prepare to improvise.
Former Police Officer @Warwickshire Police, End of Life Companion (EOL Doula UK) & Community Volunteer & Director at Coffin Club In Margarets Memory CIC
1 周Really interesting read Neil, thank you ?? ?? ?
Partner, Director at Zuhlke Engineering Ltd Helping companies innovate their businesses through technology
3 周Great reminder of your sessions. Use everything as an offer.
Thank you Neil for such a thorough insight into what's behind your skills and how we can apply these in everyday life.
CEO | Global Business Advisor | People Centric Solutions | Turning Sustainable Visions into Operational Realities | Delivering Growth Through Innovation and Collaboration
3 周Firstly Neil, what an amazing journey you’ve had & what an inspirational presenter & performer you are. Secondly, as improv has proven time & again - probably why your book is called ‘in the moment’ - the power of being able to deal with what is offered to you at a point in time helps us deal with the multitude of ways we need to communicate. Gone are monologues, in business we are expected (required) to have real time & open dialogue.
Total Rewards Leader at The Adecco Group | Specialist in Global Compensation Design & Management | Aligning Rewards with Business Strategy to Drive Employee Engagement & Retention
3 周So true! Leaders need to adapt to various communication channels and styles to effectively engage and inspire their teams. It’s all about connecting, not just presenting.