Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySophia McCormick Modified over 9 years ago
1
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Communication with the C-Suite November 16, 2010 Southeastern Pennsylvania Chapter of AHRMM Philadelphia, PA Thomas Skorup Vice President, Applied Solutions tskorup@ecri.org 610-825-6000 ext. 5160
2
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Communication counts 2
3
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 When bad words happen to good people “Devices’ sterility may be compromised as evidenced by a loss of package integrity” (Rita Medical, October 28, 2005) “There is a possibility that the pouch Tyvek header to foil longitudinal seal was not properly sealed, prior to sterilization. Therefore there is a potential for compromised sterility of the devices” (Linvatec Corp, February 23, 2005) 3
4
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 When bad words happen to good people “The calibrations on the reamers may lead to inaccurate reaming depth when used…” (Zimmer, Inc., September 30, 2005) “Uncommanded motion of the urological table is possible…” (GE OEC Medical, May 12, 2003) “Slides may exhibit random, elevated imprecision of results” (Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, March 26, 2003) 4
5
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Make It Stick. Memory Matters The fundamentals of effective communication. 5
6
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 What makes a message stick? Simplicity Unexpectedness Concreteness Credibility Emotional Stories Chip Heath and Dan Heath, Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die (New York: Random House, Inc. 2007) 6
7
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 7
8
Simplicity How do you strip an idea to its core without turning it into a silly sound bite? Just Do It It’s the economy, stupid 8
9
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Lost In The Trees 9
10
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Unexpectedness How do you capture people’s attention…and hold it? 10
11
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Change Happens 11
12
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 12
13
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 How many people take Lipitor? 13
14
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Concreteness How do you help people understand your idea and remember it much later? Create “reader-based prose” not “writer-based” prose Turn technical and clinical details into understandable chunks 14
15
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 How do you make statistics interesting? 15
16
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Proton beam radiation therapy vs conventional photon beam ►No appropriately designed studies completed or currently underway directly comparing the efficacy of proton therapy to other modes of radiation therapy ►To date, superior comparative effectiveness of proton beam therapy has not been demonstrated ►In U.S., 6 proton therapy centers are operational now, 15 by 2013 16
17
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Credibility How do you get people to believe your idea? 17
18
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Emotional How do you get people to care about your idea? Tailor your message to your audience Create an emotional reaction to improve impact Create a dialogue by active listening 18
19
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2007 19
20
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Stories How do you get people to act on our idea? 20
21
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 What makes a message stick? Simplicity Unexpectedness Concreteness Credibility Emotional Stories Chip Heath and Dan Heath, Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die (New York: Random House, Inc. 2007) 21
22
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 Five Rules to Remember Make it quick ― Keep your pyramid inverted Make it stick ― Create a memorable experience Make it count ― Create credibility Make it clear ― “Make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler” Make it live ― Don’t bury the lead 22
23
©Montagnolo.ECRI Institute.2010 “The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and the lightning bug.” --Mark Twain 23
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.