Doug Stevenson

Free

Corporate Storytelling in Business Expert, @DougStoryCoach Expert

Doug Stevenson

Doug Stevenson Quick Facts

Main Areas
Storytelling in business, Corporate Storytelling, The Story Theater Method, How to Write and Deliver a Dynamite Speech
Best Sellers
Doug Stevenson's Story Theater Method, @DougStoryCoach
Career Focus
Storytelling in Business Speaker and Trainer, author, speaking and storytelling coach
Affiliation
National Speakers Association, ASTD

@DougStoryCoach

Doug Stevenson, president of Story Theater International, is a storytelling in business expert. He is the creator of The Story Theater Method and the author of the book, Doug Stevenson's Story Theater Method

His corporate storytelling, speaking, training and executive coaching clients include Microsoft, Hewlett Packard, Lockheed Martin, Oracle, Bristol Myers Squibb, State Farm, Volkswagen, Century 21, The Department of Defense, The National Education Association and many more.

His 10 CD - How to Write and Deliver a Dynamite Speech audio learning system, is a workshop in a box. It contains an 80-page follow along workbook. Learn more at: www.dynamitespeech.com

Twitter @DougStory Coach

LinkedIn: Doug Stevenson and Storytelling for Business group

Google+ DOUGSTEVENSO

Doug can be reached at 1-800-573-6196 or 1-719-573-6195. Learn more about the Story Theater Method, purchase the book or Story Theater audio six pack, and sign-up for the free Story Theater newsletter at: www.storytelling-in-business.com

Free Articles & Book Excerpts

Free Audio & Video Samples

Doug Stevenson Audio & Video Programs

Doug Stevenson Books

Articles by this expert

SelfGrowth articles and saved writing connected to this expert.

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I can remember growing up in Chicago when the year 2000 was a long way into the future. And now, in 2010, as we enter the second decade of the 21st century, I’m taking stock of how far I’ve come and what it took to get me here. As a child watching movies, I dreamed of being an actor in Hollywood. And then one day…I found myself acting on a movie set at Paramount Studios.

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One of the most common mistakes speakers make is to plaster a smile on their face and keep it there, regardless of what they’re saying. This is as true for my public speaking students as it is for my corporate storytelling students. I encountered this situation twice in the last month.

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Recently, while providing a corporate training for the top sales agents in a large pharmaceutical company, I asked the following question: “Have you ever been speaking, and you look out into your audience and see ‘screen saver eyes’? You know – that glassy-eyed look that let's you know you’ve lost their attention?” They all laughed and nodded in agreement! If you’ve ever seen “screen saver eyes,” the two most important questions to ask yourself are: • What did you do to lose them? • How do you get them back?

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At a recent corporate storytelling workshop for Microsoft, I was asked a question that I hear frequently: “How do I open my speech?” Several others in the room agreed that the first two or three minutes of a speech are often the most awkward. Is it that way for you, as well? Do you have a hard time getting started, but once you get going, you’re all right? If so – welcome to the club.

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I once had a cat named Hermione. She got sick. So I went to the vet and he gave me some pills and told me to give them to her. That sounded pretty simple until I tried to do it. Hermione did not want to take her pills. She gagged and wiggled and scratched my hand, but she would not take her pill. I didn’t know what to do. A neighbor of mine also had a cat, so I asked her what to do. “Stick it in a piece of cheese,” she said. So I did. I got some soft cheese, wrapped it around the pill, and low and behold, Hermione took her medicine.

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I recently gave the luncheon keynote speech for a state association. In the program that I presented, Emotional Eloquence, I usually tell three stories, which I call: The Oscar Story, The Chicago CEO Story and the Dagger Lady Story. Because I was speaking after lunch, I knew I needed to keep the energy high and work in a little more interaction. I decided to take out the Dagger Lady Story and replace it with my Airport Story, because the Airport Story is funnier.

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You are huge. You are enormous. You are magnificent! I’m not talking about your girth; I’m talking about your talent. I’m talking about your passion and depth of feeling. I’m talking about your potential to be an amazing speaker, communicator or leader. Have you given yourself permission to ...

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I created my Emotional Eloquence program to encourage people to think of their presentations as opportunities to engage, influence and inspire, while simultaneously conveying important information. My research shows that speakers, leaders and audiences are hungry for a return to eloquence.

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My wife Deborah and I just returned from a month long trip to London and Germany. For the first 18 days we worked: a Story Theater Retreat in London, 2 Retreats in Munich, a keynote at the German Speakers Association annual conference and finally, a speech at a human resources convention in Cologne. It was a very busy, intense and absolutely wonderful time.

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Do you want to inspire people? Do you have a burning desire to share your life experiences and tell your stories so that other people can benefit? If so, there are a number of things to consider when writing an inspiring speech. This last summer I was inspired by what I witnessed at the Beijing ...Do you want to inspire people? Do you have a burning desire to share your life experiences and tell your stories so that other people can benefit? If so, there are a number of things to consider when writing an inspiring speech.

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You can give a presentation that’s a dazzling display of information and your vast intellectual knowledge, but when all is said and done, people remember the stories. Why do people remember stories but no other information? Studies about how adults learn show that memory is formed when a ...You can give a presentation that’s a dazzling display of information and your vast intellectual knowledge, but when all is said and done, people remember the stories. Why do people remember stories but no other information?

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As the waiters cleared the dessert plates from the banquet tables, Joanne, the VP of Sales, stepped to the podium and began the annual meeting. The CEO, Jeff Carlson, could feel the heat building under his collar. He wiped his sweaty palms on the linen napkin and took another sip of water to wet ...As the waiters cleared the dessert plates from the banquet tables, Joanne, the VP of Sales, stepped to the podium and began the annual meeting. The CEO, Jeff Carlson, could feel the heat building under his collar.

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Favorite Quotes & Thoughts from Doug Stevenson

Content without connection is futile. If you have too much content and too little connection, you'll be just like everyone else who overdoes it on content...you'll be boring.

Stop it! You are not boring. You are interesting. So why do you give a boring, content thick, bullet pointless, PowerPointless speech when you could engage people with stories? Because everyone else is doing it?

My job is to show you how you can be amazing. Not competent. Not corporate. AMAZING!

I do it with keynotes, training and workshops. I train for the top corporations in the world. I work with leaders, trainers and salespeople. I help people realize their dream of becoming pofessional speakers. If I can do it, so can you.

Read my articles. Listen to my interviews. Purchase my audio learning systems. Invest in yourself.

Contacting Doug Stevenson

Doug Stevenson's Story Theater International

2504 Shalimar Drive

Colorado Springs, CO 80915

1-719-573-6195

1-719-573-6195

1-800-573-6196

www.storytelling-in-business.com

blog at: www.storytelling-in-business.com/blog

Newsletter: www.storytelling-in-business.com/newsletter

Twitter @DougStoryCoach

email: deborah@dougstevenson.com

contact Deborah Merriman, VP of Everything

How to get started

  • Read my book, The Story Theater Method. Get it on Amazon, Barnes and Noble or Borders dot com.
  • Download the Kindle version of my book, Doug Stevenson's Story Theater Method.
  • Subscribe to my Story Theater monthly electronic newsletter. It contains a substantial article on speaking, training or storytelling every month as well as information on where I will be speaking. www.storytelling-in-business.com
  • Call me for a free 20 minute consult. But before you call, know what you want to ask me. What do you need? Where do you want to go? Are you serious? Do you want to be successful and are willing to work to achieve success?

Other highlights

The Story Theater Retreat Experience. The retreat is an intensive on business storytelling held at the Peak View Studio in Colorado Springs, CO for four serious students who want to take their speaking to the next level. Doug Stevenson, the creator of the Story Theater Method for strategic storytelling in business, will guide you, in a safe and positive atmosphere, to your own brilliance. You will experience yourself as you know you have the potential to be. Over 700 people from the US, Canada, England, Ireland, Germany, Austria, Singapore and Australia have studied with Doug. From speaker wannabees to corporate executives, you will feel right at home with Doug. He will challenge you to be the powerful speaker you know you can be. Are you ready to be amazing? Go to www.storytheater.net for more information. Free 20 minute consultation.