Author: Fredrik Haren

I write this as I just found out that Hans Rosling has died. The news hit me like a punch in the stomach.

I have shared the stage with many great speakers, but for many reasons Hans Rosling is probably the one speaker I respect the most. Seeing him present in his very unique and personal style thought me so much about speaking. His approach to life, work and his mission to help people better understand the world thought me a lot about being a human.

In this post I want to honour this great man and great speaker by writing down some of the ways I respected him – and learnt from him – as a speaker. I wish more people working on other important issues would study and learn from Dr Rosling when it comes to the skill of getting a message across.

Because get his message a cross he did. His TED-talk has more than 11 000 000 views (!) and is one of the most watched TED-talks ever. He spoke so that world leaders and the common man on the street all listened.

Here are some things we can all learn from how he spoke:

1) He was on a mission.

Watching Hans Rosliing speak you can tell that he was passionate about he was speaking about and that he was on a mission to educate the world about the issues he cared about.

Passion + Mission is a very potent combination and the audience can always feel which speaker is passionate about his or her topic and which are not.

If you are not passionately on a mission around the theme you are speaking on, then stop speaking or start speaking on a topic that is in line with your mission.
2) He was genuine.

With his Swenglish English and his big stick that he carried around you could tell that Hans Rosling could not care less about what other people thought about him as a presenter. For him it was not about him: it was about people listening to what he wanted them to understand

He did not go up on stage trying to be someone else or to try to play the “guru” or the “keynote speaker”. He went up and was his genuine and authentic self – and the audience rewarded him with their love.

The audience will always prefer a speaker who is who he – or she – is over a person trying to be someone else.
3) He did not try to impress anyone – he just wanted to make an impression.

At the end of his life Hans Rosling was as close to a rockstar as a professor can be, at least in Sweden. But Hans never let the fame get to him. He was humble, curious and always willing to learn. He understood that to get a message across you can not focus on yourself – you have to focus on the message. And he also understood the power of presentation skills in order to make a message stand out and get across.

 

4) He had fun.

Watch any of his speeches and you can tell that he enjoys the stage, enjoys the art of speaking – and of getting people to learn.

Many people hate the act of speaking, and if you hate something you will not enjoy it. But the reverse might also be true: if you enjoy what you do you will start to like it.

Whenever you are asked to speak, try to look at it as something positive – as an opportunity to get your message across and then try to have as much fun as you can while doing it. I can almost promise you that that approach to speaking will make you a better speaker.

 

5) He liked to teach.

In many ways Dr Rosling was the perfect example of the “professor we all wished we had in University”. The teacher who still loved to teach.
And all speakers are teachers – we have a message we want to get a cross and we are teaching our audiences this message.

The question we have to ask ourselves as speakers is: are we teaching it in a style that will make people think about our session as one of their favourite sessions?
6) He was funny.

Ha made fun of world leaders and his students and many others in his speeches but always in a way where you always felt that he would – in an instant – also make fun of himself

Humour – and especially self deprecating humour – is one of the strongest weapons a speaker has in the speaker toolbox.

He was also an extreme optimist with a very positive outlook on life and the world – and this attitude was contagious. People are much more open to a message when it is presented in a hopeful and positive way.

 

7) He did not take himself so seriously – but took the things he spoke about very seriously.

Hans Rosling showed that you can talk about something very serious or complex (world health statistics) and still do it in a engaging and inspiring way. That is a very powerful message there that I wish more speakers would spend more time understanding.

Hans Rosling might be dead, and the world is sadly a more ignorant place. But his hopeful message will continue to spread. And hopefully many speakers will be inspired by him to improve the way they communicate their own messages to the world. I know he inspired me.

Heaven is now a more positive and less ignorant place.

ps. Hans Rosling died at the age of 68. The life expectancy of the world population today is 70. He wanted you to know that.

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This post is about the big perks of being a professional speaker that got me to experience, amongst other things, big game safari in Namibia last week.

Being a professional speaker is to have a great job. Think about it: You get paid a lot of money to work a very short time and when you are done you always get an applause. On top of that you get to learn a lot of things and meet many interesting people. It’s just an amazing job.

But the best part of being a speaker is not the work – it’s the “side effect” of getting to travel to exotic, and often luxurious, locations and experience amazing things.

Remember speakers speak at conferences that are often, in part, put together to be rewards for top managers who have worked hard for the last year. That’s why conferences are held in places like Bali, Phuket, Las Vegas and Barcelona. And that’s why companies organise outings like inviting master chef’s, going horse back riding or visiting the great wall of China.

And here is the kicker: As a speaker you are often invited to take part in these amazing experiences in these exotic locations. (Did I say that speaking was a great job?)

Here is a (tiny) sample of the things I have been invited to take part in during my 20 years of speaking:

– Snowmobiling next to a glacier on Iceland

– Whitewater rafting in Borneo

– Watching many of the big mega shows in Las Vegas

– Experiencing Barcelona on Camp Nou

– Skiing in powder snow in Nagano

and on and on.

I am telling you this because when people hear about my job as a global speaker they often get a “Oh, Sorry about you having to live your life on airplanes-look”. What they are not seeing is that, unlike many other professions, who travel the world only to see offices, airports and planes, professional speakers travel the world to go to some of the most beautiful places on the planet so experience experiences planned as rewards for the top executives of the largest companies in the world.

It means that, unlike for many other professions, traveling is a perk – not a penalty.

The last two weeks are perfect examples of this.

Last week I was in Namibia to give a speech at a business conference and also to give a speech to the newly formed Professional Speakers Association of Namibia. In their gratitude of having me come and speak, the organisers had put together a – free! – four day trip after my speeches that just blew me away.

And though not all experiences that speakers get to go on are as long or as amazing as this, I am sharing it with you to show what the life of a professional speaker is like.

(Clarification: Most posts on this blog is about how to become a better speaker, but some of the posts are about the life of a professional speaker in order to describe what your career could look like if you decided to become a global, professional speaker. This is one of those posts.)

So now, let me share with you my trip to Namibia.

After two speeches in Windhoek, the small friendly capital of  Namibia, my hosts took me on a four day tour of their country.

So my workweek last week was:

Sunday: Full day with family

Monday: Full day with family (flight at midnight)

Wednesday: Travel + evening speech for speaker association

Thursday: Speech at business conference

Friday: Safari lodge and game drive

Saturday: Ocean safari and sandboarding in the dunes of Swakopmund.

One hell of a workweek if you ask me (with still 30+ hours of family time)

My workweek this week will be:

Sunday: Desert safari

Monday: traveling.

Tuesday: skating in the archipelago (after giving my speech in the morning) in a wintery Sweden.

Wednesday: traveling

Thursday and Friday: Taking my kid to school in the mornings, working for a few hours but home ready to play with them when they come home from school at 3 PM,

Saturday: Home with family all day.

Now that is another hell of a work week if you ask me: More than 25 hours home with my kids while at the same time experiencing world class, exotic nature activities on two continents, And – give a speech for the top managers of a Swedish company.

And in these two weeks I did 3 speeches. That turns out to be 60 speeches per year – well above the number of speeches you need to deliver to be able to earn a very comfortable living as a speaker.

See now, why I went for the headline of “The best part of the job is not the job”?

I hope this post has inspired you to go all in and develop a career as a global, keynote speaker. Now read the other posts on this blog to see how to become one.

 

 

ps. If you want to copy our trip here are the links to the great hotels we stayed at (My hosts had gone the extra mile to make sure we had great accommodations!)

www.swakopmundsandshotel.com

http://www.erindi.com

http://www.minorhotels.com/en/avani/windhoek

http://www.villagecourtyardsuites.com

ps. Below  a more detailed list of the things we did in Namibia.

– We started with a safari in a private game reserve (Erindi) the same size of my home country Singapore (!) – where we saw Elephants, Rhino, Zebras, Giraffes,Crocodiles, Hippo’s and many other magnificent animals, many of them we could see at the watering hole next to our villas! Erindi game reserve has 10 000 animals…

then

– we went into the desert for 4-wheel driving, quad-biking, camel riding and sandboarding (that’s like snow boarding but from a sand dune). I even got to climb the largest sand dune known to man (it’s BIG).

then

– we took a cruise in the Atlantic and watched dolphins, seals, flamingoes and albatrosses – all with in just a few minutes from shore (and if you go out further you can go whale watching too.)

and we also had time to go to nice restaurant to eat game cuisine, experience the cultural city of Swakopmund with it’s strong German influences, as well as driving for hours though a stunning and deserted desert landscape with no other human in sight.

If I was to sum my experience of this underestimated country into a slogan it would be: “Namibia: The best of Africa (without the worst of Africa).”

And here is my point: This was a trip of a life time, that I got to do it as part of my job.

I doubt that I even would have thought about going to Namibia on vacation, now i got to experience all of this while working.

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I often get the question: “Why do you travel so much?”
To me that is a very strange question.

It’s like asking a migrating bird why it leaves in the fall, or a buffalo why it has to run across the plains.

When you just have to do something you do not need a reason.

But if I had to I could write down a long list of reasons for why make such a conscious decision to scoot around the world.

It makes me feel alive.
It makes me better at understanding the world.
It broadens my horizons.
It inspires me.
and a million other reasons.

But today I was reminded of yet another reason for my globetrotting life: It makes me better at finding alternative truths.

Because today I was the keynote speaker at the HQ of ING bank in Amsterdam. The bank has a mentoring program called “Crossings” where they take employees from different minorities and pair them with senior managers in order to promote diversity in an international bank that is still very much Dutch at the top. And the Crossings team had invited me to speak to their group.

The bank has understood the advantage of diversity amongst its employees in order to get diversity of ideas.

After the speech I sat down with Sudhanshu, an Indian national who had left India to work in the USA and now, for five years, in Holland. We talked about how he, by working in the West had picked up a different way of managing people by giving them more freedom, not micromanaging them and showing trust that his staff would do deliver what needed to get done.

But Sudhanshu’s classmates in India who had only worked in India just did not have the same understanding of how this kind of leadership style has advantages vs the more “strict” management style of many Indian managers.

Now, this is not about “Western things” are “better” than “Indian things”, this is about how exposure to alternative ways of doing something helps you more open to change – and less stuck in doing things a particular way because that’s “how it’s done”.

As speakers we are paid to tell people about the world. To broaden their understanding of something, to inspire them to learn new things – to open up their minds.

It is therefore extra important that we as speakers do do the same to ourselves, that we are open to new ideas and to change.

And traveling is a great way of doing that.

In January I have, or will be, visiting the countries of Thailand, the Philippines, Holland, Namibia and Sweden – all countries and cultures very different from my current home country of Singapore. Spending time in these diverse cultures pushes me to look at alternative ways of doing things.

And if you want to be able to speak to global audiences as a speaker then it is not enough that you are a great speaker, it’s not even enough that you have examples from all over the world – you also have to have an understanding of what people from different cultures like, dislike, laugh at and get inspired by.

And you can of course read books about it, watch movies about it or ask people about it – but we all know that the very best way to learn something is to immerse yourself into something.

And I like to immerse myself into the world.

If you want to be a global speaker I suggest you do the same.

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