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THIS MOMENT COUNTS · ISSUE 07 Why persuasion has always felt unambitious to meWednesday, June 3, 2026 · by Dr. Michael Gerharz I don’t want the ability to talk people into things. I really don’t. Persuasion is often considered the gold standard in communication. Getting people to do what you want them to do. What more could you want … in a pitch, a strategy announcement, a keynote, or any of the moments that count? Well, a lot more, if you ask me. Persuasion has always felt unambitious to me. You get the yes, but do they mean it? Will they wholeheartedly support you? Will they fight for it when you’re not around to push it? But it also focuses you on solving the wrong problem. If an idea only works because I framed it cleverly, I don’t trust the idea. If people only agree because I found the right psychological hack, I don’t trust myself. And when it works, it’s often a hollow win. That’s not the kind of communicator I want to be. Three values guide my work: Honesty. Honesty means there has to be a real point underneath your words. Not a beautified version of the truth. Instead, something that feels so undeniably true that once people see it, they can’t unsee it. That’s a much higher standard to hold yourself accountable to: If they knew everything you know, would they still say yes? Persuasion is about saying things better. I prefer saying better things. Empathy means you no longer get to start with yourself. You stop assuming people see what you see. Instead, you do the work. You see the situation from where they stand. So you can say something that makes them think: “Damn. That’s exactly where I am. Finally someone gets it.” And then comes the hardest one of all: Trust. Because trust means letting go. No pressure tricks. You trust the audience to decide. Which sounds noble and idealistic until you realize what it actually demands from you: If people are truly free to choose, then what you’re offering had better actually be a good choice for them. So, what makes it one? What do they need to see so that you can genuinely trust them with the decision? Can you clearly articulate that? The higher the stakes, the more tempting it becomes to manipulate. To not leave it to chance. But if your idea is as good for them as you say, why would you need persuasion? What is persuasion adding that the truth isn’t? That’s a much higher ambition than getting to yes through persuasion. Because when you finally get their yes, it will be with full conviction. Let’s put it that way: Honesty forces me to find what’s worth saying. Empathy forces me to make it worth hearing. Trust forces me to stand behind it. That’s the communication strategy I believe in. I’d rather light the path than push people down it. Keep lighting the path, |
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What the Best Leaders Say Issue 16 There’s a finding in psychology that ought to be required reading for anyone who needs others to care about a problem. But almost no one in business has heard of it. It explains that frustrating moment when something clearly urgent gets ignored. Today’s issue is about that finding, and how to use it to get your people to care when it counts. Table of Contents Essay PDF Version Readers’ Corner Action Guide Essay:This is a serious problem There is a widespread...
THIS MOMENT COUNTS · ISSUE 09 I hated that talk. So why did it work? Wednesday, June 17, 2026 · by Dr. Michael Gerharz Oh man, how I hated that talk.Though it seemed like I was the only one. The guy (let’s call him Buzz) got standing ovations. He had landed one joke after another. He was charming, had great presence, and clearly, as they say, owned the room. But 10 minutes into the talk, I sat there like the one guy who didn’t get the memo. I just couldn’t find the point. I mean there were...
THIS MOMENT COUNTS · ISSUE 08 The best talk of the whole conference Wednesday, June 10, 2026 · by Dr. Michael Gerharz I don’t often write about client projects. So, this one’s a little special. I’m grateful for Kathy Letendre and Dell Anderson for agreeing to publish their thoughts on our collaboration. Both of them belong to a very rare group of people: generous, humble, and at the same time incredibly ambitious. They came to me with a message that deserves to be heard loud and clear:...