Thanthi TV
Thanthi TV @ThanthiTV ·
"டீம் இந்தியா" "அனைவரும் டீம் இந்தியாவாக செயல்பட வேண்டும். ஒன்றிணைந்தால் இக்கட்டான சூழ்நிலையை வெற்றிகரமாகக் கடந்துவிடலாம். இந்திய நாட்டின் குடிமக்களை பாதுகாப்பதே அரசின் முன்னுரிமை" மத்திய கிழக்கு போர் குறித்த ஆலோசனையில் பிரதமர் மோடி பேச்சு #IranWar‌ #pmmodi #speech #thanthitv
17
64
5.5K
Krista Lynnette
Krista Lynnette @krista_lynnette ·
#Speech #Communication
Jaynit Jaynit @jaynitx ·
In 2019, MIT professor Patrick Winston gave a legendary 1-hour lecture called “How to Speak.” It has 18M+ views for a reason. His frameworks: • Your ideas are like your children • The 5-minute rule for job talks • Why jokes fail at the start 15 lessons on communication:
7
Farhan Choudhry - Yappatron
Farhan Choudhry - Yappatron @Farhan2IT ·
I am certainly watching this lecture on the weekend. #communication #speech #course #free #MIT
Ihtesham Ali Ihtesham Ali @ihtesham2005 ·
A MIT professor taught the same lecture every January for 40 years, and every single time it was standing room only. I watched it at 2am and it completely rewired how I think about communication. His name was Patrick Winston. The lecture is called "How to Speak." His opening your success in life will be determined largely by your ability to speak, your ability to write, and the quality of your ideas in that order. Not your GPA. Not your pedigree. Not your IQ. How you speak is what separates people who get heard from people who get ignored. Here's the framework he drilled into MIT students for four decades. He said never start with a joke. Start by telling people exactly what they're going to learn. Prime the pump before you pour anything in. He called it the "empowerment promise" give people a reason to stay in their seats within the first 60 seconds. Then he broke down the 5S rule for making ideas stick: Symbol, Slogan, Surprise, Salient, and Story. Every idea worth remembering hits at least three of these. The part that floored me was his "near miss" technique. Don't just show what's right show what almost looks right but isn't. That contrast is when the brain actually locks something in permanently. His final rule before any big talk: end with a contribution, not a summary. Don't recap what you said. Tell people what you gave them that they didn't have before they walked in. I've used this framework in pitches, interviews, and presentations ever since watching it, and the results are not subtle. Patrick Winston passed away in 2019, but this lecture is still free on MIT OpenCourseWare. One hour, watched by millions, and it costs absolutely nothing. The most important class MIT ever put on the internet isn't about code or math. It's about how to make people actually listen to you.
33
Jai Garrett 🇺🇸
Jai Garrett 🇺🇸 @MrPopShit ·
There are things that simply cannot be said, boundaries inherent to our identity. Some concepts belong to us, and we to them. It’s a complex discussion about expression and belonging. #Speech #Identity
1