Episode 143
How to Not Let Words Get in the Way of Sounding Human with Terri Trespicio
No matter what the activity - whether it is when we are writing an email, putting together a bio, giving a speech, starting a conversation at a networking event - it’s always the first word that is the hardest to utter - but then from there the opposite happens - we let the words take over - we go on without making the point - we use words we don’t need and cover up what we are really trying to say with superfluous language.
Listen to this week's episode as I talk with Terri Trespicio, (a repeat guest) to discuss how to connect with anyone - by not letting words get in the way of sounding human.
Drink of the week….Andaz Hot Mess
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Julie Brown:
Terri Trespicio
From Unread to Riveting Workshop
Transcript
Friends.
Julie:You asked and I answered.
Julie:I'm bringing you back a listener favorite.
Julie:It's been 84 episodes since my friend Terry PCO first joined the podcast.
Julie:Back then we discussed her new book and follow your passion.
Julie:Which came on the heels of her viral Ted talk, stop searching for your passion.
Julie:And now the two of us have new things to talk about.
Julie:Welcome to episode 1 43 of this shit works.
Julie:A podcast dedicated to all things, networking, relationship
Julie:building and business development.
Julie:I'm your host, Julie Brown.
Julie:Speaker author and networking coach.
Julie:And today, as I mentioned, I am joined again by my friend, Terry, just PCO
Julie:to discuss many things, including how to unleash your best ideas.
Julie:How to look at your work differently and how to not let words get
Julie:in the way of sounding human.
Julie:I think the first word is always the hardest, no matter what
Julie:activity, whether it is when we are writing an email, putting together.
Julie:Bio giving a speech, starting a conversation at a networking event.
Julie:It's always the first word that is the hardest to utter.
Julie:But then from there.
Julie:The opposite happens.
Julie:We let words take over.
Julie:We go on without making a point.
Julie:We use words we don't need and cover up what we are really trying
Julie:to say with superfluous language.
Julie:There are a number of reasons why we do this.
Julie:We aren't prepared.
Julie:We aren't confident.
Julie:We don't know where to start.
Julie:We think our words might fail us.
Julie:In business and in life, one of the skills we should be consistently working
Julie:on is the ability to convey what we do.
Julie:Why we do it and who we do it for?
Julie:We should also be able to put into words what we need in order to do
Julie:those things that we need to do.
Julie:Well, Good for us.
Julie:My guest today is a wordsmith, a skill user of words.
Julie:If you will.
Julie:I have worked with Terry multiple times.
Julie:Years ago, we worked together on my branding and tagline.
Julie:She also helped me describe my core idea in two sentences,
Julie:that I tell the audience.
Julie:In every community would I give.
Julie:Those two sentences being the people you meet will change your life.
Julie:Networking is how you meet those people.
Julie:When I wanted to create a TED-like talk, meaning a talk that delivers an idea
Julie:with sharing in less than 10 minutes.
Julie:I reached out to Terry and her speaker intensive program was one of
Julie:the tools I use to hone that skill.
Julie:I don't know where this episode will go.
Julie:I haven't scripted out my questions, but I can guarantee.
Julie:It will be fun.
Julie:Terry, welcome back to the podcast.
Terri:Thank you.
Terri:Thanks for having me back.
Julie:Um, of course, I mean, I'm sure the listeners are like, yes, I'm so excited.
Terri:Oh, I'm sure.
Julie:Uh, Terry, we're you and I both have email newsletters and I know, I
Julie:know you read my newsletters because you always respond to them, and I always
Julie:read every single one of yours because honestly, they're beautifully written
Julie:and I think they are thought provoking.
Terri:This is our art.
Terri:Some people write sonnets and other people write letters.
Julie:right.
Julie:I mean, what I think was so amazing is today I opened up your email.
Julie:It was serendipitous because your email was about networking and I
Julie:don't know if you planned that out.
Julie:You're like, oh, I'm gonna be on Julie's podcast today.
Julie:I'm gonna
Terri:No, that that was synchronicity.
Julie:Yes.
Julie:And you said something in the body of the newsletter about networking.
Julie:You said that networking does not require confidence.
Julie:That confidence is a side effect of networking.
Julie:And I know that I have had so many people reach out to me and say, how do you
Julie:have the confidence to do what you do?
Julie:And I don't think of myself as being an uber confident person.
Julie:I think of myself as doing things with repetition and with
Julie:repetition come comes confidence.
Julie:Is that what you mean?
Julie:Okay.
Terri:Yes.
Terri:Guess what?
Terri:You need to network a pulse.
Terri:Like you don't actually need confidence.
Terri:I, I got a real bug up.
Terri:My hoo-ha about confidence because
Julie:you can say Ass on this podcast, right?
Terri:Yeah, of course.
Terri:I was funny.
Terri:I thought hoo-ha was funny because hoo-ha is like suggestive.
Terri:You don't, you don't know which who, I mean,
Julie:Yeah.
Julie:Cuz it could be the front of the back.
Julie:I.
Terri:that's right.
Terri:Either way, there's a bug up there about confide.
Terri:Because I cannot stand it, mainly because what I hear outta people's
Terri:mouths again and again is that they think they need it to do anything.
Terri:Um, and the way I think about confidence is confidence is cash
Terri:and you don't get paid first.
Terri:You know, I don't ever have cash on me, barely.
Terri:And yet you still go out and live your life.
Terri:You can still go get a coffee, you can still go do stuff, and then, you
Terri:know, cash kind of balances it out.
Terri:I mean, this is not a, an advertisement for a credit card, but the truth is a
Terri:lot of my life is funded on credit cards and I know a lot of other people are too.
Terri:So I don't worry about having the cash to be confident to do a thing.
Terri:Uh, we can't, we don't have enough time.
Terri:So I say, don't worry about confidence.
Terri:Think of it as a nice, uh, it's one of those gifts they
Terri:give you at the end of the.
Terri:But you gotta be at the party first.
Julie:It's this, what is that bag called?
Julie:The stuff, swag stuff.
Julie:We all
Terri:flag stuff.
Terri:We okay.
Terri:Uh, and the confidence thing, I just think we have to get out of our
Terri:heads about needing confidence cuz it's holding too many people back
Terri:from doing things that would really actually help them be more confident.
Julie:Yeah.
Julie:Um, I wanna talk about communication with you.
Julie:I know, I mean, I know you're doing a lot
Terri:meta.
Terri:That's very meta.
Terri:That's very meta.
Terri:We're gonna talk about communi.
Julie:I wanna talk about podcasting with you on a podcast.
Julie:Um, no, but.
Julie:I, I, I think what I said in the beginning is true.
Julie:We don't, we know we, that words are the way in which we're gonna build
Julie:relationships, in which way we're gonna communicate what we do, in
Julie:which way we're gonna have people follow us and be a part of our brand.
Julie:Um, but I think a lot of people are paralyzed either by a blank
Julie:page or by starting a conversation.
Julie:And I would, I would ask you, Because I don't, I've never heard you be
Julie:at a loss for words, for anything.
Julie:And I have sat and listeners, I have sat in so many of your sessions and webinars
Julie:and been through your speaker intensive and gone to your How to Speak conference.
Julie:Um, you always seem to know exactly what to say, and, and
Julie:I was wondering if you have.
Julie:Advice or tips for the listeners so they can feel more confident on saying the
Julie:first word, getting the first word out.
Terri:Well, let's look at the two.
Terri:Let's look at two different media.
Terri:There's the talking and having the words on the spot in person
Terri:when you're having a conversation.
Terri:And then there's words on paper.
Terri:And since we're gonna get to that, let's start with the in conversation.
Terri:First you mentioned a few things for which I was very prepared
Terri:because those were my courses, my live events, people are paying.
Terri:Good money to be there, and so I better have my ducks in a row.
Terri:But the idea, but there is, um, you said you seem to know, and I think
Terri:that is pretty critical because I don't always know, but I feel like
Terri:I talk so damn much and I write so much that they're the first tool.
Terri:So I've had practice of doing it and doing it.
Terri:Um, so that's one thing.
Terri:The second.
Terri:Conversation.
Terri:I think we're putting too much emphasis on having the right words when really
Terri:we're just having a conversation.
Terri:Because when someone goes, so what do you do?
Terri:They're really just trying to get something going here with you.
Terri:You talk about anything, it doesn't mean they're like, God,
Terri:let me go into my LinkedIn file.
Terri:Let me pull up my LinkedIn.
Terri:They don't actually wanna know that, so, For one, I sometimes, I'm sure
Terri:I do ask people, what do you do?
Terri:But I, I try to vary it and I will ask the questions You wanna
Terri:feel at home in a conversation?
Terri:You, you're worried about being nervous.
Terri:I'm sure you've taught this many times.
Terri:Think of yourself as the host.
Terri:When you take interest in someone else, you not only make them feel at
Terri:ease and feel seen, but you're kind of in control of the conversation.
Terri:And then you can end the conversation when you need to.
Terri:But like starting that conversation be like, so what do you all sometimes say?
Terri:So what are you working on?
Terri:Or what has most of your attention lately?
Terri:Because it doesn't mean, well, here's my job and they have to trot out their
Terri:job title, which I will forget in a second if they're like, well, I'm trying.
Terri:Plan this trip I'm taking.
Terri:Then we can dig into it because the way you get to know someone is
Terri:through a conversation about anything.
Terri:I could talk to you, Julie, about writing about dogs, about our favorite
Terri:cocktails, and in any of those parallel universes where I asked you a different
Terri:question, we would find ways to connect regardless of the topic, which tells me
Terri:that this topic doesn't really matter.
Terri:So in the case of on the spot networking, I will.
Terri:I don't always know what to say.
Terri:I'll just talk to them or I'll compliment them on something
Terri:or be like, tell me this.
Terri:I often, I have, uh, my own insecurities, uh, one of which is I don't know anything.
Terri:I don't know anything about how the world works.
Terri:Sometimes I think I, I just don't know anything.
Terri:And so I go in a little bit ignorant and I'll just, no, I'll
Terri:be like, so what do you mean?
Terri:What, what does that mean?
Terri:Explain that to me.
Terri:I'll just ask people cuz I don't know anything and that's how I learn stuff.
Terri:So the idea that I should go in knowing and have this idea and be so super
Terri:swa, oh, I don't know it goddamn damn.
Terri:And so I ask a lot of questions.
Julie:I have two responses to what you just said, sofa.
Julie:First.
Julie:I love that question, and I am not gonna remember it exactly the way you said
Julie:it, but what is taking your attention,
Terri:What is, what has got the most of your attention?
Terri:What do you, yeah,
Julie:Because that doesn't implicitly mean we're gonna talk about work
Terri:Anything?
Terri:It could be a book you're reading.
Julie:Yeah, it could be a book you read.
Julie:It could be the fact that I can't stop watching succession, you know,
Terri:gosh, no spoilers.
Julie:No spoilers.
Julie:No spoilers.
Julie:Um, but I can't stop watching like that has my, like, I think
Julie:about, I'm like, oh my God.
Julie:And I think it's because I'm one of three children, so I am, I'm the middle
Terri:And you're like a media empire
Julie:You are too, right?
Julie:You're one of three, right?
Julie:Yeah.
Julie:Um, so I think that that dynamic between siblings is something that's
Julie:got me and I also had shitty parents.
Julie:So that also is, uh, I mean ever, I'm not telling the listeners anything they dunno.
Julie:Um, but I also love that you say, I don't know much about anything cuz
Julie:I find that sometimes I sit in this chair and I talk to people and at
Julie:the end of it I'm like, okay, thanks so much for being on the podcast.
Julie:And I get off, I'm like, wow, I'm a fucking dumb ass.
Julie:Like, Just happened to me where I interviewed, uh, you know, a, a speaker
Julie:friend of mine who is a tech futurist.
Julie:Like, and I mean, she knows everything about technology and artificial
Julie:intelligence and the future of the world and future of jobs.
Julie:And like I literally got off and I'm like, no, that's all I could
Julie:manage for the rest of the day.
Terri:No, I get it.
Terri:And I think that's good.
Terri:I don't wanna be the smartest one in the room all the time.
Terri:How boring is that?
Terri:I want to be learning, and this is another thing though, Julie, because people
Terri:will say, well, it's hard to network cuz I, I'm trying to impress people.
Terri:Don't go into impress.
Terri:That's, that's a douche move right there.
Terri:Like, I'm not trying to impress anyone.
Terri:I'm trying to be like, so like I'm gonna be impressed by someone.
Terri:Like once say you're talking to someone and you're like, oh, we're gonna get in
Terri:discussion about succession cause it's the newest, biggest episode just came out.
Terri:Go do you watch succession?
Terri:They go.
Terri:Now you're like, shit.
Terri:Like what?
Terri:And you say, you say, oh really?
Terri:What are you watching?
Terri:Let's get into and then say they're watching a show that you don't know.
Terri:Cool.
Terri:Time to learn about that show.
Terri:What do you like about it?
Terri:Oh, what's that?
Terri:What do you mean?
Terri:Then they just talk and talk because that's something they know about.
Terri:So now you've put them at ease.
Terri:Uh, if they're smart, they'll say, I don't watch succession.
Terri:Should I tell me why?
Terri:I should?
Terri:And then I love to tell them why I love it.
Terri:But you can really make a conversation about anything.
Terri:So if that's the goal, and the point is just to connect, they will remember you
Terri:for being the person who did something like, oh, you're planning a trip to Italy.
Terri:Next time you see 'em and go, where are you going?
Terri:To Italy or,
Julie:Yeah.
Terri:That's, as you know, that's you're entering into
Terri:hopefully a longer conversation.
Julie:I mean, and I love this because I talk about this a lot in my speeches,
Julie:is having these conversations in which you're not just talking about
Julie:works, gives you ease of follow up
Terri:Yeah.
Terri:Cuz there's other stuff to talk about rather than what
Terri:you want from them or whatever.
Julie:Yeah.
Julie:So if you said to me, oh, I'm going to Italy, I could say, oh my gosh,
Julie:my husband used to live there.
Julie:You know, we've visited, can you know,
Terri:Where are you going?
Julie:are you going?
Julie:Can I give you restaurant recommendations?
Julie:Yada, yada, yada.
Julie:Um, like that is ease of follow.
Julie:I mean, that's a very human
Terri:human,
Julie:way of conversing.
Julie:And so that gets me to the question that I said, you, you, you said you, we often.
Julie:We, we let words, or we have the ability to get, have words,
Julie:get in the way of being human.
Julie:Is that what you mean?
Julie:Like when we're trying to like act like somebody we're not, or not like
Terri:Oh.
Julie:questions we think we're supposed to be asking.
Terri:Don't try to be smart.
Terri:Don't try to impress people.
Terri:Just like let people see who you are.
Terri:I know that's easier said than done, especially if you're not
Terri:sure they will like who you are.
Terri:But most people aren't worried about whether you're a, you know
Terri:what kind of person you are.
Terri:They're worried about what you think of them.
Terri:It's just like a hall of egoic mirrors.
Terri:Uh, but.
Terri:Yeah, the words, the thing is, I said is the, the worst thing to happen to,
Terri:the worst thing to happen to networking is the word networking because it
Terri:presupposes I'm going in with an agenda.
Terri:I'm going in to get something and it feels weird.
Terri:So I just go in saying, Hmm, I wonder what, who I can maybe help tonight
Terri:or what, what I can offer tonight and just think you're gonna a potluck
Terri:and I'm bringing, I don't know.
Julie:I'm bringing this spicy dish
Terri:I'm bringing a bag of Slim gyms.
Terri:I don't know.
Terri:Like I'm just coming in with something and maybe someone needs it and I can
Terri:help you go in with that feeling of, Hey, I'm just here to kind of participate.
Terri:I'm not, I'm not life or death hanging on to every conversation
Terri:because people smell that desperation
Julie:Oh.
Terri:it.
Julie:I gotta tell you, this is, this is neither here nor there, but I was at
Julie:a conference and I love conferencing.
Julie:I love conferencing as I love networking at conferencing is one of my biggest
Julie:builders of my brand and always has been.
Julie:When I was working for other companies with conferencing
Julie:and I was at a conference and I can't even remember where it was.
Julie:I think it was in.
Julie:Um, Virginia and a bunch of us had gone out afterwards for like late
Julie:night drinks and we were in this like tiny little restaurant with these big
Julie:windows, and a guy we knew from the conference literally walked by, saw us
Julie:sitting at the, at the windows, put his one pan on the window and like snapped
Julie:into a slim gym with the other hand.
Terri:Really.
Julie:like, did that Tom just snap into a slim gym?
Julie:Like he must have been like 20 cocktails in like, I don't know.
Julie:But he was like,
Terri:Oh my God.
Terri:And now you're seeing him for who He is.
Terri:Hilarious.
Julie:I mean, I just love it.
Julie:I mean, in conferencing is like, it's like a top to bottom activity.
Julie:It's like you see them in the morning, you see him in the
Julie:afternoon, you see him at night.
Julie:You see him late
Terri:you'll never see them for the whole day like that again.
Julie:No,
Terri:You're seeing a full
Julie:conferencing is a very, You, you're there for multiple days.
Julie:You're ex, it's a shared experience.
Julie:You're doing things together for multiple days.
Julie:I had this conference that IED and in West Bayden, Indiana, um,
Julie:last fall and after my keynote, we all went skeet shooting together.
Terri:Oh
Julie:come on.
Julie:I sucked at from Boston.
Julie:I don't have any guns.
Julie:It was the first time I shot a gun, but it was so fun.
Terri:But these are like experiences you share with humans, and that
Terri:is, and that is, and that is how you build those relationships.
Terri:I actually paid and attended a conference.
Terri:I wasn't speaking there, nothing.
Terri:And I went, and I, the whole way, I was like, why am I doing this?
Terri:Why did I, six months ago, this is a great idea, and now I'm g I'm on my
Terri:way to the airport and I'm like, blah.
Terri:But I ended up.
Terri:Being like, this might be fun.
Terri:And it was fun cuz you know, we're speakers.
Terri:We often go and speak at a thing and then you're half speaking, you're busy.
Terri:But to just ride into a conference and go along for the ride, eat the free tacos,
Terri:go to the open bar night, whatever.
Terri:Uh, I got to meet some new people and cluster a little group together and
Terri:we shared several meals together and we had some really meaningful convers.
Terri:I got to, I got new ideas.
Terri:I got to learn about people I would never have met otherwise, and it was special.
Terri:It's just not like everyday life as I think of conferences as.
Terri:Summer camp for adults because you're going away sleepovers, you know,
Terri:sometimes people do bad things.
Terri:I mean, who knows?
Terri:But it's it, it is really fun.
Terri:So if you get the chance, if you really wanna level up networking, say, what
Terri:conferences are happening this year?
Terri:Where do I wanna go?
Terri:And just go.
Terri:In fact, go by yourself because when you go with a little group,
Terri:you won't talk to anyone else.
Terri:When you go alone, then you're gonna have to meet new.
Julie:Yeah.
Julie:What inside of you, when you were in the car on the way to the
Julie:airport, when you had that moment of like, why am I doing this?
Julie:Like, where do you think that came from?
Julie:Because you knew it was a good idea, you knew you should be.
Julie:Like, where do you think that little sort of hesitation came from?
Terri:Uh, I think it comes from the fact that I don't wanna leave my house.
Terri:I don't want to go like, first of all, I've become a nervous flyer.
Terri:I was never a nervous flyer and now I'm very afraid of like being
Terri:caught in turbulence and da da da, and I'm just like, oh, why
Terri:am I putting myself through this?
Terri:The worst thing in the world could happen or the best thing in the world,
Terri:but nothing happens unless I cross my threshold and leave my apartment and I,
Terri:I drag myself kicking and screaming over.
Terri:Cause I'm like, oh, cuz I put my hands on the back of a dining room chair and I.
Terri:Is there a chance I'll make it back here because I really wanna come home.
Terri:Like I really wanna come back.
Terri:Like I'm about to go on a trip, a big trip abroad for like two weeks
Terri:and I planned like I'm, I signed up to do these things and now I'm
Terri:like, oh, can't someone else go?
Terri:Why do I have to go?
Terri:I just don't wanna go.
Terri:It's gonna be exhausting, but once I get there, I will have a great,
Terri:it will be the most wonderful thing, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Terri:But I don't know what horrors could happen.
Terri:I have a little bit.
Terri:Generalized anxiety, like a lot of people.
Terri:So it's not afraid of meeting people and all that because you know who's friendly
Terri:People at conferences, they're so nice.
Terri:They're so, it is just the night you're catching people at their level best.
Julie:Yeah.
Julie:I used to,
Terri:I don't wanna leave home.
Terri:I don't
Julie:funny you mentioned this.
Julie:I was never afraid of flying until I got married,
Terri:What,
Julie:then, yeah.
Julie:And so I got married when I was 28.
Julie:I was never afraid of Fri flight.
Julie:Let me just try that, try that again.
Julie:I was, I just said I was never a afraid of flying.
Julie:Sorry.
Julie:Okay.
Julie:I
Terri:I was never afraid of frying
Julie:never afraid of frying.
Julie:I love frying.
Terri:anything fried,
Julie:I was never afraid of flying until I got married.
Julie:And I got married when I was 28.
Julie:And then once I got married, I felt sort of like responsible
Julie:for somebody else's happiness.
Julie:And that's when my fear of flying kicked
Terri:really?
Terri:So what's, what are we afraid?
Julie:I was afraid of like leaving him a widow.
Julie:Like is it a widow or a widower?
Julie:Is it a
Terri:be a, he'd be a widower.
Julie:He'd be a widower.
Julie:I was afraid of like,
Terri:dead.
Julie:yeah, I'd be dead.
Julie:I'd be fine cause I'd be dead.
Julie:Um, I, I suddenly had this horrible fear of flying and I
Julie:was flying all the time, like,
Terri:Yeah, you do.
Julie:Well, this was even in my previous career where sometimes I was flying more.
Julie:I mean, I had conferences and I went to everything and I had the
Julie:worst verifying, and I took like an online course to get over it.
Terri:Did it help?
Julie:Yes.
Julie:And now I fly so much that I just don't even.
Julie:I don't even think I know what every, so here's the thing.
Julie:Fear comes from the unknown and from not having a loss of control.
Julie:And I didn't know what all the sounds the plane was making, and I obviously didn't
Julie:have control of the plane, but once I learned what every single sound was like
Julie:for me when I was flying, it was like every time they moved the flaps on the
Julie:wings, I was like, oh, we're going down.
Terri:oh, I see.
Julie:because it was a weird noise.
Julie:But now that I know every single noise that happens from takeoff
Julie:to landing, I'm assured because I know what all of those noises mean.
Terri:I'm not afraid of dying in a plane.
Terri:I know that it's safer than crossing the street in Manhattan.
Julie:You're
Terri:is safe.
Terri:I'm afraid I'll live, I'm afraid I'll live through it and be shaken up like a salt
Terri:shaker in the air and I'm afraid I'll be sick or I won't, cuz I don't like rides.
Terri:Like, and I trust me, uh, I take every medica I'm on
Terri:everything when I go up there.
Terri:I, I feel it's a fear of loss of control.
Terri:Some people have that same fear when they walk into a room of
Terri:strangers when they get up on stage.
Terri:Everyone's afraid of, so, That's kind of what makes me nervous, but I'm
Terri:always glad that I went and did the
Julie:Mm-hmm.
Terri:I'm just a bit of a homebody.
Terri:I do a lot of my networking sitting right here.
Terri:I love to get on Zoom, calls with people, write to people.
Terri:I mean, well, writing to people is what we're getting into next.
Julie:Yeah.
Julie:Yeah.
Julie:Okay.
Julie:So yes, you, I, I wanna tell you said the perfect thing.
Julie:You can network right from your office chair.
Julie:You don't have to, you honestly don't have to leave your desk.
Julie:I, prior to the pandemic, I would've been like, no, you have to be out at events.
Julie:You have to be shaking hands and kissing babies and like doing all that stuff.
Julie:But I don't believe that anymore.
Julie:I believe your world has changed.
Julie:I believe the way we build relationships have changed and.
Julie:I think that there's a number of different ways we can connect with people.
Julie:Part of it is going out to the traditional networking events and conferences.
Julie:Some of it is LinkedIn networking, but some of it is using words, and
Julie:that's what we're gonna talk about.
Julie:Um, I think an avenue for success for anybody is to think about
Julie:how we can communicate differe.
Julie:Whether we can communi, how we can communicate differently by email.
Julie:By voicemail.
Julie:You and I, we voice memo each other so we don't text each other.
Julie:We send voice memos to each other all day long, which I think is great.
Julie:Cause you, there's intonation, which you don't get in a text
Terri:Oh, absolutely.
Julie:intonation in a text message.
Julie:Um, you know, changing the way we communicate just on one-on-one.
Julie:You know, conversations like, how do you think we can.
Julie:More creative in all of the ways and all of the mediums we have
Julie:to communicate with each other.
Terri:I use like you, lots of different ways to communicate and
Terri:it's, it's very much determined by, The personality of the other person,
Terri:what they will and will not communicate on what they tend to respond on.
Terri:Like if you email me, it's gonna take a while cuz I, my email is
Terri:just like a snake pit of stuff.
Terri:Uh, but there are relationships I have built completely on Voxer.
Terri:Voxer is voicemail voice messages back and forth.
Terri:It's a m walkie-talkie slash.
Terri:Trading voicemails, right?
Terri:Asynchronous conversation, which is like my favorite because you
Terri:can leave it at any time of day.
Terri:And one of my friends, you know, we had met and knew each other for
Terri:years, but once we got on Voxer, the relationship deepened because I could
Terri:talk to her whenever, like I could be laying in bed at midnight and say,
Terri:you know, I was just thinking, do you worry about this kind of thing?
Terri:I said to, uh, this friend, I feel like I'm always passing notes
Terri:with her in the back of the room, and that's what it feels like.
Terri:So that's an intimate, the audio only intimate, you're not worried about how
Terri:you look and blah, blah, blah, blah.
Terri:So that's for people that I work with, but who are also friends.
Terri:That's one thing.
Terri:But then the other one, which even fewer people will go on
Terri:with me is Marco Polo, which.
Julie:Yeah.
Terri:Right.
Terri:You know Marco Polo, if you haven't tried it, try it.
Terri:I'm on there.
Terri:My entire family, including my like 83 year old dad is on there.
Terri:And so we get to see him and he gets to see us and you know, all that.
Terri:A lot of my friends, this is like a generation thing, so I'm Gen
Terri:X, my friends who are Gen X and A and who are a little older than.
Terri:I cannot get them to go on it.
Terri:I have tried.
Terri:I have tried.
Terri:They will not.
Terri:The excuses, and this is idiosyncratic, the excuses are, um, I don't want another.
Julie:Hmm.
Terri:Uh, I don't like how I look.
Terri:I said, well, so when you meet me for coffee, you're
Terri:gonna put a bag in your head.
Terri:Cuz I'm gonna see how you look there too.
Terri:This is not, but there's a confusion because since we're not, uh,
Terri:internet natives, putting yourself on a video camera looks like the
Terri:world can see you, but they can't.
Terri:Only the other person can.
Terri:So I have built relationships that way and maintained them because for
Terri:me, I can maintain it at my pace, which means when I feel like it,
Terri:I don't wanna get on a phone call.
Terri:Uh, no.
Terri:Like that.
Terri:So, to your.
Terri:It.
Terri:Each relationship has a tenor of its own, and I make sure I respect that.
Terri:So the fact is the people who don't communicate with me via an instant, uh,
Terri:audio or video messaging thing, I just don't talk to as much, and I've noticed.
Terri:They have fallen out of orbit with me.
Terri:So I'm noticing that the tech is very much impacting who I talk to, who knows what's
Terri:going on and who my closest friends are.
Terri:So yeah, it matters.
Terri:Now the tricky thing is you can't make someone go on there,
Terri:especially if they're a new contact.
Terri:So I often offer Voxer as service to someone who's like, Hey, would it be
Terri:easier for you if you could talk to me about stuff when you need to as we plan
Terri:this event or as we talk about this thing?
Terri:And I invite them to do.
Terri:Uh, but you can't kind of make someone, I think texting is still the most personal
Terri:because that is the thing you answer.
Terri:Don't you
Julie:Yeah, it's funny because my voicemail on my phone, I don't answer the
Julie:phone, which is weird for separate Gen X because I literally grew up with the,
Julie:the receiver ti, you know, attached to my ear talking to all my girlfriends in high
Julie:school, like, you know, taking that long cord from the kitchen into the bathroom
Julie:and closing the door, like I literally
Terri:didn't know who was calling you and you had like three friends, right?
Terri:So like now I don't
Julie:so it's very safe.
Julie:So now I don't answer the phone.
Julie:And if you actually let the phone ring, I mean, most people don't
Julie:let the phone ring to voicemail.
Julie:But if you let the phone ring to my voicemail, it says, hi,
Julie:you've reached the voicemail and Julie Brown hang up and text me.
Terri:What are you doing leaving a message?
Terri:What is it?
Terri:1989.
Julie:not.
Julie:And it, I think it actually says, I'm not gonna listen to your message, like text
Terri:That's aggressive and I love it.
Julie:And I am probably one of the most aggressive
Terri:Yeah, but who's leaving voicemails?
Terri:You know
Julie:And it's funny cause people still leave them.
Julie:People still leave them.
Julie:But now most people leave like voicemail messages for me and I just not voice.
Julie:Voice audio, voice texts.
Julie:Yeah.
Terri:I think it's just like we need to hear the voice, the
Terri:actual voice is so important.
Terri:We need to hear tone.
Terri:It's still real hard to get it in words, as you were saying.
Terri:Do words get in the way?
Terri:Sometimes they do because we're writing it quickly and it's not really there.
Terri:So yeah, I think, I think those real, not real time, but the more you can
Terri:include, uh, who you are and how you sound, the closer to you, someone.
Julie:Well, let, let's be honest, email is still the preferr.
Julie:Form of communi communication for most people, for like 75% of of
Julie:business professionals email is the preferred form of communication.
Julie:And I can't remember, I did a podcast on, on this recently and
Julie:it was like, it's preferred over voicemail, it's preferred over text,
Julie:it's preferred over like whatever.
Julie:So we have to get good.
Julie:Using words and language and, and communicating and, and
Julie:creating a point by email.
Terri:Well,
Julie:I think that's hard for a lot of
Terri:I think it's really hard, but you're right.
Terri:Email is, we don't have everyone's text permission.
Terri:Email is like the front door.
Terri:You still have to go up and knock.
Terri:Text is like the back door, you know what I mean?
Terri:Mark poll's like throwing shit at someone's window.
Terri:Um, but yes, we have to be able to do it quickly.
Terri:Uh, I would say not succinctly, like you can only have 10 words cuz
Terri:there's not enough context that I, I'm not paying attention either.
Julie:All right.
Terri:Being able to craft an email, even though you and I do it as part
Terri:of our business and our outreach it letter writing is an art form and you
Terri:don't just dash it off just cuz like now everyone's in this like quick
Terri:send things quickly, kind of culture.
Terri:Putting some thought behind what you say in an email is, uh, it
Terri:deserves your time and attention.
Terri:Like I take.
Terri:With an email, whether it's to my whole list or whether it's to a person.
Terri:Like I sit down and say, now I'm gonna do some emailing, some
Terri:letter writing, and it's personal.
Terri:Even when that email goes out to a lot of people.
Julie:Yeah, I think, and I think what you just said there is the key point.
Julie:I take time.
Julie:I think so many people think of email as this very quick medium
Julie:and we send things off without doing the amount of research or,
Terri:Rereading them, rereading them out loud, um, saying them and
Terri:making sure you're doing it quickly.
Terri:When I said quick, I don't mean you do it quickly, but you
Terri:have to get someone's attention
Julie:Yes.
Julie:I mean the, I mean, that's the point of the subject line, like the subject
Julie:line is, are you gonna open this?
Julie:Like
Terri:And that's everything because
Julie:an interesting subject
Terri:is this urgent?
Terri:Is it urgent or is it not urgent?
Julie:Or am I gonna enjoy it?
Julie:Am I interested?
Julie:Is it, you know, um,
Terri:I'm just like looking down my own, um, email box, which.
Terri:Is just a trash pit of stuff.
Terri:And the most exciting thing is a message from the building saying you have an
Terri:Amazon package in the package room.
Terri:Uh, I love seeing the reco when it's a subject line.
Terri:I remember, because that means it's a response directly to me.
Terri:Um, I really hate a general subject thing that doesn't tell me anything.
Terri:The problem is, Julie, you're so good at subject headings, and I like to think that
Terri:I've really honed my art around that too.
Terri:It's hard to know if this is something personal or something
Terri:that's going to a list.
Terri:I know not everyone's writing to a list, so this is very specific.
Terri:But I have gotten complaints from people who said, I thought
Terri:this was just to me, and then I realized, I was like, but it was to
Julie:Trust you.
Julie:I
Terri:But people get like, wow, this is just a a, a ma a A mass.
Terri:A mass.
Terri:It's me on my couch.
Terri:I spent an hour on that thing.
Terri:There's no mass production involved here.
Julie:Yeah, I, I do reme.
Julie:I mean, I do love a subject line and yes, you are correct.
Julie:My subject lines are crazy, but I have a 78% open rate of my emails, which is
Julie:like of my, of my newsletter emails.
Julie:Um, I'm sure my other emails are a higher rate, we would hope, but
Terri:they come to expect something from you and they want that.
Julie:Yep.
Terri:So the question is, are people, let's not, let's even like go away
Terri:from email list emails cuz that's a different kind of communication
Terri:when you're writing to someone that you want to connect with in a real
Terri:way and you don't know each other.
Terri:That's to me, I actually, I get excited.
Terri:When I see an email in my myself, who's that?
Terri:And if it looks businessy or professional, I figure it isn't really to me.
Terri:And sometimes I read, I go, this isn't for me.
Terri:But I recently got an email from a woman who said, Hey, You know,
Terri:I really love what you're doing.
Terri:I love this.
Terri:And it really like, it was an actual, like, she contacted me via email.
Terri:She'd contacted me via, via LinkedIn.
Terri:She was very clear about what she was about.
Terri:When I wrote her back, she wrote back a slightly longer email.
Terri:I liked that.
Terri:I don't want someone to dash something off to me.
Terri:She took time to really explain who she was and, and why she was a real person.
Terri:In fact, the uh, woman on my team goes, Hey, this seems like a real person.
Terri:You should talk to her.
Terri:That was the deciding factor.
Terri:And turned out she is a, a booking agent who is just starting her business.
Terri:So she's new and not pretending to be something she's not.
Terri:She's like, I'm starting out.
Terri:I wanna represent more women.
Terri:Uh, I'd love to talk to you.
Terri:And I was like, uh, okay.
Terri:And I really liked her.
Terri:Now she's a person in my life.
Terri:Where before she was just a stranger.
Terri:And that leap from stranger to someone who has a reco at the
Terri:beginning of the emails is a big jump.
Terri:And I really liked her and I introduced her to you and I introduced
Terri:her to several other people.
Terri:But see, I just grew her network and she's gonna grow mine.
Terri:This is something we put ourselves into heart and soul.
Julie:Yep.
Julie:I wanna, I'm so glad you mentioned that because you made the
Julie:introduction to her, to me via email.
Julie:Um, this morning or last night?
Julie:This morning or last night.
Julie:I, I, I got the email this morning and.
Julie:Listeners, this is, this is how you take an introductory email, a strategic
Julie:introductory email, and you make it something in which you are both.
Julie:Both parties are super excited to move it off of the email platform, so you made
Julie:the introduction, and so what I could have done is just responded to that email.
Julie:Oh, so and so it's, I'm so glad Terry connected us.
Julie:Looking forward to connecting to you and learning more about your business,
Julie:blah, which is what most people would do.
Julie:But what I did was I went to her email, saw her domain name, her name
Julie:at her company, went to her company.
Julie:Realized that she owned three dogs and I obviously am a dog mom as well.
Julie:Learned about her company and who she was, um, repping.
Julie:And the dog's names.
Julie:So the dog's names.
Julie:Two of the dogs' names were Unna and Lily.
Julie:And I have a cousin Unna and a niece Lily.
Terri:Oh my gosh, yes.
Julie:And I wrote back and I was like, from one dog mom, solopreneur,
Julie:entrepreneur to another who loves human names for dogs, like, and wrote all this.
Julie:And I was like, you're never gonna believe this.
Julie:I have a niece, Lily and a, and a cousin Unna, and you have two
Julie:dogs, one named Unna and Lily, and then the other one, Baya.
Julie:But I didn't have anybody in my family anyways, just said how, like,
Julie:look at how connected we already are and we don't even know it.
Julie:And she wrote back and she.
Julie:Holy shit.
Julie:Like that's the response you want from your email.
Julie:Now, I never would've gotten that response.
Julie:She never would've felt as connected to me if I hadn't done that tiny
Terri:Little extra little bit of extra.
Julie:and been okay letting her know all of those different little pieces of
Julie:my life being okay with being a human being okay with bringing the human aspect
Julie:into our, you know, business convers.
Terri:Because it's a relief to her too.
Terri:She doesn't, she's like excited to talk to.
Terri:A potential new prospect who could gain more business for her.
Terri:And she might be, I don't know how she feels, but she could either be
Terri:like, oh, here's another person.
Terri:Or why she could be intimidated or excited.
Terri:She's obviously very excited, but now when you get on a call with her
Terri:and you get off the email, right, it'll be like a real conversation
Terri:with a real person like, this is you.
Terri:You could change each other's lives.
Terri:Who knows?
Terri:But you know, it's very rare to make it to that.
Terri:Not everyone gets to the worst is, and I know you know this and
Terri:everyone listening knows this.
Terri:When you get these emails from strangers either in your inbox or on LinkedIn, and
Terri:they're like, it appears you're, I love what you're doing, and they give you
Terri:some bullshit line, like, it appears you might did a, do you think you need this?
Terri:Here's a link for my calendar.
Terri:We should talk.
Terri:I'm like, uh, what?
Terri:Like, now you want me to sign up for, I'm sorry.
Terri:Get the hell outta here.
Terri:I don't know why people think that's a good idea,
Julie:Oh.
Julie:Yeah, so I think this would be, cause again, I'm just so glad that this
Julie:email interaction happened today because it just goes to show the
Julie:power of email in building a network, in building a business, and just
Julie:building relationships and friendships.
Julie:So I think today would, today, right now would be a good time
Julie:to talk about this special thing that you and I have coming up.
Terri:Yes, when we were talking about words and how to, uh, how to actually
Terri:break through the noise, um, this is a real sweet spot for me and you because
Terri:we're both speakers and writers and creators and communicators who basically
Terri:communicate for a living and you know, we.
Terri:We walk our talk, we put the time in to ensure that connections are real
Terri:and this, as we know, could and does change other people's lives too.
Terri:So we took, you and I were thinking, let's take one piece of this that
Terri:we could dive into and really teach and allow people to practice.
Terri:And so da, da, da.
Terri:We're doing our first workshop together, um, which I of course love the title.
Terri:It's called From Unread to Riveting, how to Email Cold Leads Without Being
Terri:a Hot Mess, which this is just so, it's so Julie and I love it so much.
Terri:I love it.
Terri:And the idea is it's a 90 minute workshop and we're gonna dive
Terri:into exactly this, the craft.
Terri:The draft.
Terri:Right.
Terri:How do you get into really thinking about how to write?
Terri:Because as, as you and I know and everyone else, when you go to sit down
Terri:to write it, there's a moment of pause over a blank page and you had asked me,
Terri:how do you deal with that first moment?
Terri:I try not to hover too long, cuz the longer I hover, the harder
Terri:it is to land on that page.
Terri:So I, I have an approach to it that I take that just involves.
Terri:Actually, um, using language to get at the idea rather than trying to figure out
Terri:what I'm gonna say and find the words.
Terri:That actually doesn't help, I find.
Terri:Mm-hmm.
Terri:I'm gonna teach a different approach and you are gonna talk to us about some
Terri:of the, the things you've seen work and not work, including some really
Terri:bad, some really bad emails, right?
Julie:Yeah.
Terri:Yeah.
Terri:Some of the things we're cover.
Terri:How long should it take you?
Terri:What are you gonna tackle in an email?
Terri:You can't become someone's best friend in a first email, right?
Terri:This is the first of a long conversation, uh, the subject line.
Terri:What are people saying in the first line of an email that is killing
Terri:their chances of a real connection?
Terri:Uh, what length has to do with it?
Terri:How long should you go on people?
Terri:Oh, people don't read.
Terri:Hmm?
Terri:They don't read everyth.
Terri:But something that's just to them, oh, you better believe they do read it.
Terri:Uh, the surprising power of emojis and, well, you might say gif.
Terri:I say gif
Julie:I say Jiff, I
Terri:you say gif.
Terri:Okay.
Julie:the peanut butter,
Terri:Like the peanut butter and how to follow up.
Terri:You say, well, I don't wanna bother people.
Terri:Well, if you could sit there and not bother anyone, and no one will ever talk
Terri:to you ever, that's not the, you'll die being polite and having no one to talk to.
Terri:Uh, so this is what we're doing.
Terri:It's happen.
Terri:On May 24th.
Terri:It is an happy hour time.
Julie:hour.
Terri:Five to six 30
Julie:up with a, I think we're gonna come up with a cocktail
Julie:that everybody can make, right?
Terri:Yep.
Terri:That's, I leave that to you because that is your department.
Terri:We're gonna do a cocktail.
Terri:You'll come, uh, and you can come do it.
Terri:It is a, we'll have more information.
Terri:You'll love the website.
Terri:I know that my name is not as easy to spell, but Google knows me.
Terri:She'll send you up my way.
Terri:It's uh, terry sio.com/hot.
Terri:word, hot mess.
Terri:And then we will direct.
Terri:Then you'll build able to see like, what is this saying?
Terri:Well know what does it cost?
Terri:It's, it's basically a one-off.
Terri:And the reason, and I think it's important to say this, there's a
Terri:lot of free workshops and webinars.
Terri:If you want to deliver something of value, it requires a commitment.
Terri:And when you pay for someone's time and you pay for a workshop,
Terri:chances are you show up.
Terri:I know I do.
Terri:So we are looking for people who really wanna dig into this
Terri:cuz you're gonna get the chance.
Terri:Try it out to learn a different approach and to actually apply it.
Terri:Right.
Terri:Am I missing anything?
Terri:Yes.
Julie:And this is not a web.
Julie:I mean, yes, it is a webinar, but it's on Zoom.
Julie:Like it's
Terri:No, it's real live.
Terri:It's live
Julie:We'll be able to see everybody.
Julie:You'll be able to talk to us.
Julie:You'll be
Terri:is not a canned, it's not a canned thing.
Terri:This is, we're gonna be giving you personalized feedback and talk about
Terri:what you're working on, you know?
Terri:Absolutely.
Terri:I, I can't wait because this is, this is a special thing and it could change everyth.
Terri:I
Julie:what, I know what I mean.
Julie:I know I have examples in my books of emails that changed my business.
Julie:So
Terri:Oh, and we gotta look at those again
Julie:this is an important, it, it, it's just so important.
Julie:It's so important.
Terri:There's another reason you were saying, uh, earlier,
Terri:why do people feel worried?
Terri:Of course they're worried what someone will think.
Terri:Are they bothering them?
Terri:Will they be impressive or interesting enough?
Terri:But there's also that fear that people have around language.
Terri:And as, uh, Gloria Stefan said when she was part of Miami Sound Machine,
Terri:the words get in the way and they do.
Terri:And so I'll give you one tip of how I, you said, how do you keep
Terri:words from getting in the way and here's my tip for you for the day.
Terri:And there's more of.
Terri:There's more where this is coming from.
Terri:Uh, use words as a utensil, not an orna.
Julie:Mm-hmm.
Terri:rather than trying to dress up an email with fancy adjectives and and
Terri:extraneous information, think of the sharpest, most useful use of words.
Terri:And how I do that is by writing a rough draft to no one where I just bang
Terri:out everything I think I wanna say, and I don't care what it looks like.
Terri:I just write it.
Terri:I go, I think I'm trying, and I'll actually write, I'm
Terri:gonna write to this lady.
Terri:Here's what I think I'm trying to say.
Terri:Here's what I'm worried about, what I want to ask.
Terri:And I write my way into it.
Terri:Because once you're writing, you're writing and then you can get at
Terri:the things that you most wanna say.
Terri:So that's my, that's my old tip for the day.
Terri:What is, what do you think is.
Julie:well, I think for me, I mean, again, I come from a res, I
Julie:mean, I have a degree in biology.
Julie:I come from a research background.
Julie:Everything I do begins.
Julie:With research, and by research I mean understanding the person
Julie:that I'm trying to reach out to.
Julie:It's not about me, it's about them.
Julie:How much can I learn about them and then how do I use what I learned
Julie:in a way that is not creepy?
Terri:I saw that in, uh, April of 2020, you were having a rash
Terri:of some kind on your elbow.
Terri:Yeah, I love it.
Julie:Facebook page that you have shingles.
Julie:No,
Terri:Oh God.
Julie:not what
Terri:Yeah.
Terri:There's a, the line there.
Terri:I love that.
Terri:I always forget that you were a bio.
Terri:Person.
Terri:It's so interesting.
Terri:We could not come from more different backgrounds and yet
Terri:we are singing the same song.
Terri:But that is what makes this kind of a fun, um, exploration of what
Terri:we do together as, as co-teachers.
Terri:Because you come from do your homework place, like know the metrics, measure
Terri:it, know what you're dealing with.
Terri:And I have a master's in poetry, so that is what we're gonna do.
Terri:It's gonna be a blend of everything.
Julie:gonna be great.
Julie:I mean, cuz I think everybody thinks networking is this amorphous
Julie:thing that doesn't have structure and it has so much structure,
Terri:If you absolutely.
Terri:That's like saying a cre, that's like saying any creative endeavor.
Terri:Uh oh.
Terri:It's just creative.
Terri:It's ushi.
Terri:Gushy or it's just no.
Terri:Creative endeavors have rules.
Terri:They have boundaries.
Terri:They have form and structure.
Terri:Yeah, and it's not like there's one magical thing, a madlibs thing where
Terri:you can fill this in for everyone.
Terri:The whole point is you should not be using a madlibs format.
Terri:You should be reinventing it each time.
Terri:And if you say, well, that's too much work, then how important is it for
Terri:you to connect with people because.
Terri:I want you to be able to enjoy that work, to sit down and go, now I'm
Terri:going to give this person my attention.
Terri:I'm gonna show them that I care about them and I'm interested in learning more.
Terri:Uh, and that is the gift that you took time to do it.
Terri:If you think you're too busy to network, then I hope that you're,
Terri:that you're, let me do that again.
Terri:If you're too busy to network.
Terri:What you're saying is you don't really need new business.
Terri:You don't really wanna grow and you don't really need any new friends.
Terri:And if that's true, then I'm glad you're independently wealthy.
Terri:But for the rest of us, our livelihood depends on the strength and
Terri:endurance of long-term relationships.
Terri:In fact, I will quote Dory Clark on this who is very talk about networking.
Terri:The woman is so ca everyone in the world knows her, I believe.
Terri:And if you don't check her out.
Terri:She's a brilliant author and uh, a marketing expert and.
Terri:She says, her rule of thumb is when she meets a new person, a new contact.
Terri:It is a full year before she asks for anything.
Terri:She's like, because she's burned herself before, where she went in and
Terri:said, what do you think about this?
Terri:Can you help me with this?
Terri:And it was like, whoa, slow your role.
Terri:So she gives and gives and gives and just engages and allows that to happen.
Terri:And a year, maybe she'll ask, and if you say you don't have time, I say, well,
Terri:what the heck are you doing a year from?
Terri:Would you like to have a relationship that you don't have yet?
Julie:Yeah.
Julie:I mean, that just goes to show you can't, I mean, there's no
Julie:Hail Mary passes in networking.
Julie:What if you need a Hail Mary pass?
Julie:You are too late.
Terri:You are too late?
Terri:That is correct.
Terri:You not allow that to happen?
Julie:I mean, we could go on.
Julie:I mean, we should, I mean, I just, we can't, we can't because this podcast
Julie:has an ending, but we could go on and we'll go on on May 24th at five o'clock.
Julie:And again, it's,
Terri:tosio.com/hot mask.
Julie:it's not a webinar, it is a meeting of the mines, so just know that
Terri:get to stay home.
Julie:you will be with.
Julie:In the Zoom rooms.
Julie:It is not a webinar, it is a meeting of the minds.
Julie:Um, and I can't wait.
Julie:I think it's gonna be so amazing.
Terri:Yeah, it's gonna be real fun.
Terri:And you're gonna leave with something you didn't walk in with.
Terri:You're gonna come in, you're gonna do, that's workshop means you make something
Terri:and when you leave, you have something.
Terri:And also you have a new perspective.
Terri:So you can rinse and repeat and uh, you know, change the
Terri:way you approach communication.
Julie:Right.
Terri:And not be a hot mess,
Julie:And not be a hot mess.
Julie:I mean, maybe in other parts of your life, but not
Terri:maybe, but not here.
Julie:Not in your email.
Julie:All right, girl.
Julie:Thanks so much.
Julie:We will, uh, we'll see each other again on May 24th.
Terri:Yeah.
Terri:I'll talk to you.
Terri:Thanks, Julie.
Julie:This upcoming collaboration with Terry blossomed out of discussions I
Julie:had after I published the episode on why your emails suck and how to fix them.
Julie:Which is actually one of my most listened to episodes.
Julie:And it's no wonder, I mean, even though it is the preferred form of communication,
Julie:The average person spends nine seconds or less looking at your email.
Julie:You want an even more disappointing statistic?
Julie:30% of people will spend less than two seconds looking at your email.
Julie:If you want to get noticed, make a point, build connections.
Julie:You need to know how to effectively use email to communicate in network.
Julie:And wouldn't be teaching this class if I didn't have proven ways of
Julie:breaking through those emails, stats.
Julie:My mass emails, meaning my newsletter emails have an average open rate
Julie:of 70%, which is on heard of.
Julie:And my one-to-one cold emails.
Julie:If you will have an even better open rate.
Julie:This is an important tool and we cannot wait for this interactive workshop.
Julie:With you.
Julie:Like, it's going to be so much fun.
Julie:So remember.
Julie:May 24th.
Julie:5:00 PM to 6:30 PM.
Julie:Bring a cocktail and your creativity because we're going to smash some
Julie:of these email stats together.
Julie:The link to register is www dot Terry Tris BCO.
Julie:dot com slash hot mess.
Julie:If you don't know how to spell her name, don't worry.
Julie:There's a link to it in the show notes.
Julie:Okay.
Julie:Onto the drink of the week, which is the Andaz hot mess.
Julie:Um, so the Andaz is a restaurant in San Diego.
Julie:So this is a drink they have called the Haas hot mess.
Julie:Here's what you're going to need.
Julie:Strawberry puree, one part St.
Julie:Germain, and then we're going to have champagne to finish off the cocktail.
Julie:What you're going to do is you're going to take a cocktail glass.
Julie:And fill it with ice and then add the strawberry puree and the St.
Julie:Your bane stirred combine.
Julie:And then, you know, fill that glass up with champagne and they garnish
Julie:it with blueberries on the top.
Julie:And, you know, I'm super excited for this workshop, which is online, but if
Julie:you want to see me and Terry speak live, we will both be presenting at the how
Julie:design live conference in Nashville, Tennessee, the first week of June.
Julie:The conference is June 4th through the seventh.
Julie:I'll include a link to the conference in the show notes.
Julie:All right friends, that's it for this week.
Julie:If you like what you heard today, please leave a review
Julie:and subscribe to the podcast.
Julie:Also, please remember to share the podcast to help it reach a larger audience.
Julie:If you want more, Julie Brown, you can find my book.
Julie:This shit works on Amazon or Barnes and noble.
Julie:You can find me on LinkedIn at Julie Brown BD.
Julie:Just let me know where you found me when you reach out.
Julie:And I am Julie Brown underscore BD on the Instagram, or as always, you
Julie:can just pop on over to my website, Julie Brown, bd.com until next week.