Executive Presence in the person of Steve Forbes
Posted by Suzanne Bates on 06 Aug 2008 at 11:31 am | Tagged as: Communication, Leadership, Politics, Presentations, economy, executive, executive presence, government, public speaking
This weekend at the National Speakers Association convention in New York, www.nsaspeaker.org Steve Forbes took the stage. He had 1,800 professional speakers on the edge of their seats as he shared his insights about the future of the US economy. Forbes, President and CEO of Forbes, and Editor-in-Chief of Forbes Magazine, www.forbes.com as well as a former Republican candidate for President, can actually be a little awkward on stage, yet people who get paid a lot of money to speak to corporate audiences were mezmerized; in a room full of people who love to talk, you could hear a pin drop. Why? Forbes was funny and smart –he made economics accessible to all. And, even more important he told us things we really really didn’t know.
What’s the real state of the US economy? Not bad at all! But don’t ask the media, says Forbes. They would rather stand in front of a gas pump talking about $4 a gallon gas than actually do research on the the dry stuff that matters, like US monetary policy. And he’s right. (Full disclosure, as many of you know, I was a reporter for 20 years. I know how it really works.)
Forbes spoke eloquently about the real drivers of our economy, and I was convinced after he spoke–we still have the largest most resilient economy in the world. He pointed out that as voters we’d better start asking better questions of the people running for office. For example, how will they approach monetary policy? Because according to Forbes, it wasn’t oil companies or mortgage lenders that brought this on, but by the Fed, which four years ago, and again last year, started printing money like there was no tomorrow. In an overreaction to the credit crisis, both times, it did more harm than good.
But back to executive presence. What makes Forbes so powerful on stage? Wit, intelligence, and the ability to explain something that dry and dull and make it fascinating. What else did we like about him? Smart as he is, he didn’t swagger onto the stage or lord his fortune or his smarts over us. He was hilarious really, as well as respectful. He treated his audience as the intelligent citizens they want to be.
Something else– he obviously wasn’t reading someone else’s talking points. He walked away from the podium five minutes in, and stood center stage for the better part of an hour, speaking eloquently. If you’ve seen him speak, you know that sometimes his gestures seem slightly out of sync with his message. Yet he transitioned beautifully from gas prices to the mortage crisis, tax policy to monetary policy, government to politics, all without notes. He even threw in several funny lines about the speaker who had immediately preceded him on stage. That’s confidence.
You also can’t argue with Forbes success, even if he did inherit the company started by his grandfather. Forbes is still on the cutting edge. In 1977 they entered the new media arena with the launch of Forbes.com. The site now attracts over seven million unique visitors a month and has become the leading destination site for business decision-makers and investors.
For a copy of his speech, contact the National Speakers Association at www.nsaspeaker.org - I highly recommend you watch it, and take notes.



