Over the past two days we focused on the first two stages of the Hero’s Journey.
The first stage is the Ordinary World - this is where life is normal and comfortable.
The second stage is the Call to Adventure - this is where you help your audience learn what they didn’t realize or were unaware of.
The reality is there are people in your audience who aren’t comfortable with changing their status quo.
That’s normal - we crave comfort. As human beings we crave the predictable, comfortable, don’t-change-anything status quo.
It’s also the third stage of the Hero’s Journey, the Refusal of the Call.
If you’re familiar with Star Wars, this is where Luke Skywalker says he’s not ready to be a Jedi. He’d rather stay on Tatooine with his aunt and uncle.
What’s the driving force behind refusing the call? It’s fear. It’s the fear of the unknown, and it’s the fear of the known.
Your audience has fears, concerns, worries, questions, these are all objections and reasons why they shouldn’t answer the call.
Your job is to help your audience recognize those objections and not dismiss them. There’s a reason why your audience feels that way.
If you want your audience to have a heroic experience, you need to help them identify the source of their questions and fears, talk through them, and show them what it would look like to replace those questions and fears with answers and confidence.
The Keynote Clarity for Thought Leaders Flash Briefing is presented by Jon Cook, founder of Keynote Content. Jon and his team help thought leaders, namely speakers, coaches, and consultants, craft and share their messages to better serve their audiences. Connect with Jon and his team at Keynote Content by visiting keynotecontent.com. You can subscribe to The Keynote Clarity for Thought Leaders Flash Briefing by visiting bit.ly/KeynoteClarity and enabling it there. Then, all you have to say is, “Alexa, what’s my flash briefing?”