What’s in it for you? Plenty, if you listen by @KristiCasey

What's In It For Me?There’s a really important question people are asking, and it’s one I’m afraid is falling on deaf ears as #eventprofs advocate a new model of engagement, education and event design.

It’s “What’s in it for me?” (WIIFM). And it comes in many forms, including: “Why should I care?”; “How is this useful?”; “Why should I invest time/money in this?” and “Why is this better than what we already do?”

If we want anything to change, WIIFM is first question we should answer when we’re pitching something new, whether our purpose is to educate, correct, consult, engage or change.

Resistance comes when you forget to mention WIIFM

Last month, I was executing an event in Sarasota for group of travel writers. Like many associations, the membership skews older. In a session on essentials for Web design, the instructor began to talk about new forms of journalism our members could use to engage audiences virtually. As she started explaining how to livestream written and recorded content through an online portal people could subscribe to and comment on in real-time, a woman in her 60s interrupted her and said: “I’m sorry, but I can’t see how this will ever be useful.”

She didn’t say, “I don’t understand this.” Or, “This technology frightens me.” (That’s what she confessed to me hours later, on the way to lunch.) But I heard her loud and clear. Others may have thought she was being rude, but I knew she was really asking WIIFM.

The instructor was a little taken aback, and it brought the session to a halt. So I answered the unspoken question.

“It may never be useful to you,” I said, “if that’s not how your audience wants to engage. And it’s not meant to replace what you’re doing. It’s just another option you can add to your bag of tricks as a writer, should you need it.”

“But,” I continued, “I know former newspaper journalists who are now hired by companies to issue real-time reports on events in this way. For those writers, it’s a new revenue stream. And it’s a way to introduce new audiences to your work. If either of those things are important for you, then this might be a useful platform and skill to learn how to use. If not, then you don’t need to adopt it.”

The difference it makes

Later in the day, a 20-something writer who’s new to the association came up and complimented me on how kind and gentle I was to the woman. In his view, she was being unreasonable. I explained that she wasn’t trying to cause trouble, she just needed to understand why it was relevant to her because it was such a foreign idea.

There are a lot of ideas we agents of change share that no longer feel foreign to us. But it’s important to remember that not everyone is comfortable with the personal/professional mix social media requires, giving direct reports the freedom and agency to try new things, crowdsourcing ideas or having beanbags in classrooms instead of chairs, to name a few trends that some find “duh” and others think are cutting-edge.

Break it to them gently

That’s why you can’t tell someone that they should start doing something new without identifying WIIFM first. In my experience, there are six main reasons why someone will take a risk:

  1. It will make them money.
  2. It will save them money.
  3. It will save them time.
  4. It will make them feel better about themselves.
  5. It will make other people look at them differently (in a good way).
  6. It will get them laid.

But since we’re strictly talking business, ignore No. 6 for the time being.

That’s why, when I educate meeting planners about creating hybrid events, I concentrate on those first three items before I start talking technology. I explain that they already have the skills they need to create a successful hybrid event. I stress the similarities: Whether the meeting is hybrid, virtual or face-to-face, you are crafting an experience that is dictated by the goals of the meeting, the budget and what works for your audience.

If you start with telling people WIIFM, you’ll find that your audience — whether it’s a client, students in a classroom, staff members, your boss, volunteers or your kids — will have an easier time understanding why change is needed and be more receptive to considering what you propose.

Realize that pushback may be coming from place of fear and be compassionate. Explaining WIIFM can help, but it takes real wisdom and maturity to be able to acknowledge when your path is not the right one for the people you’re with.

Plan well and prosper friends,

Kristi

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Kristi Casey Sanders

I'm the VP of Creative/Chief Storyteller of Plan Your Meetings (PlanYourMeetings.com), a free, award-winning educational and social resource for meeting and event planners. Everything I do at PYM is designed to educate, empower and inspire meeting and event professionals and connect them to the people and resources they need to work more efficiently. I'm one of MPI's 2012-2013 Proprietary Content speakers on the topic of meeting technology, but I also educate on the topics of proving ROI, meeting sustainably, industry challenges/solutions and cost-saving strategies. Engage with me on Twitter @PYMLive or @KristiCasey. Hang out with me on G+ in our PlanYourMeetings+ community or just read my personal musings at Things No One Tells You. Plan well and prosper, friends.

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  • http://www.eventprov.com Jenise Fryatt

    Kristi,

    You have made a very important point here that is useful to remember when sharing any new way of doing things.

    In addition to hybrid events, many people are wary of using social media. It’s often not that they don’t like it. Very often the reasons are the same as the woman in your post shared with you: they don’t understand it and the technology scares them.

    But once you explain to them that social media can be used as a tool to advance their career or business, their eyes light up and they become very keen to learn. That’s why a social media educator at conferences can add value to the attendee experience as well as help the event organizer more effectively harness the power of those tools for events.

    Thanks for reminding us all about WIIFM.

    • http://twitter.com/PYMLive PYMLive

      You’re welcome! The interesting thing about explaining WIIFM: If you just ask someone to do something, and they like you, you have a 65% chance of gaining compliance.

      If you explain why you’re asking them to do something, compliance can rise to 95%.

      And also funny that you mention social media. This post was in part inspired by a friend who had a rough reaction to a social media talk she gave, specifically from people who debated her on the importance of letting people engage with SM at work and blurring the line between the personal and professional.

  • http://twitter.com/lizkingevents/status/217264192158302208/ (@lizkingevents) (@lizkingevents)

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