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Content provided by Clay Scroggins and Adam Tarnow, Clay Scroggins, and Adam Tarnow. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Clay Scroggins and Adam Tarnow, Clay Scroggins, and Adam Tarnow or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
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What Every Speaker is Afraid to Hear (But Needs Most)

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Manage episode 523255613 series 3285330
Content provided by Clay Scroggins and Adam Tarnow, Clay Scroggins, and Adam Tarnow. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Clay Scroggins and Adam Tarnow, Clay Scroggins, and Adam Tarnow or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Public speaking is one of the most vulnerable things a leader can do. You’re exposed, you’re being judged in real time, and the stakes feel high — which is why most speakers either avoid feedback altogether or settle for vague encouragement like, “Great job!” In this episode, Clay and Adam unpack why that’s a problem and how the right kind of feedback is the fastest path to becoming a better communicator.

Clay opens with the classic Seinfeld line about people preferring to be in the casket rather than giving the eulogy — a reminder that speaking triggers deep vulnerability. Adam follows by naming the trap: if we don’t seek real feedback, we end up believing we crushed it when we may have simply survived it.

The conversation explores three big ideas:

  • Why speakers need feedback: You’re too close to your own message to see what the audience sees. Your last talk is your best teacher — but only if you know what to listen for.

  • Why feedback feels so hard: Speaking ties into identity, vulnerability, fear of rework, and the awkwardness of unsolicited critiques.

  • How to get better feedback: Ask better questions, ask multiple people, and use tools like recordings, surveys, and time-stamped comments to see what you missed.

The episode closes with one simple takeaway:

Growth = vulnerability + curiosity.

The quickest way to get better is to ask for the feedback before the feedback finds you.

Call to Action:

Before your next talk, line up three people and ask,

“Will you give me honest feedback after I speak?”

  continue reading

195 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 523255613 series 3285330
Content provided by Clay Scroggins and Adam Tarnow, Clay Scroggins, and Adam Tarnow. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Clay Scroggins and Adam Tarnow, Clay Scroggins, and Adam Tarnow or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Public speaking is one of the most vulnerable things a leader can do. You’re exposed, you’re being judged in real time, and the stakes feel high — which is why most speakers either avoid feedback altogether or settle for vague encouragement like, “Great job!” In this episode, Clay and Adam unpack why that’s a problem and how the right kind of feedback is the fastest path to becoming a better communicator.

Clay opens with the classic Seinfeld line about people preferring to be in the casket rather than giving the eulogy — a reminder that speaking triggers deep vulnerability. Adam follows by naming the trap: if we don’t seek real feedback, we end up believing we crushed it when we may have simply survived it.

The conversation explores three big ideas:

  • Why speakers need feedback: You’re too close to your own message to see what the audience sees. Your last talk is your best teacher — but only if you know what to listen for.

  • Why feedback feels so hard: Speaking ties into identity, vulnerability, fear of rework, and the awkwardness of unsolicited critiques.

  • How to get better feedback: Ask better questions, ask multiple people, and use tools like recordings, surveys, and time-stamped comments to see what you missed.

The episode closes with one simple takeaway:

Growth = vulnerability + curiosity.

The quickest way to get better is to ask for the feedback before the feedback finds you.

Call to Action:

Before your next talk, line up three people and ask,

“Will you give me honest feedback after I speak?”

  continue reading

195 episodes

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