Where does your 10% message live?
When we help with message or presentation design, I often ask clients this important question: Where does your 10% message live? (the 10% message is the most important that they want their own audiences to remember).
It’s important to ask this question because context (especially physical context) helps the brain remember. In the slide in the upper left corner, the main message was about the neuroscience of change management, and I placed it in a locker room. It’s specific, relatable, and emotionally charged. People know what it feels like to sit on that bench and prepare for effort (which change implies), so the context is linked to the message and triggers it later.
In the example in the upper right corner, I placed the main message in an office because that’s where the value proposition was happening. Still physical, but more generic. It works, but not as well as the first one.
What many business communicators do is choose more abstract “habitats” for their main messages. We do it too sometimes, like the Venn diagram we created on a presentation about buyer personas. Too many messages live in the template in the lower right corner: boxes and numbers: clear but floaty. This is a bit harder for memory to hold onto.
The more abstract your context, the more you’ll need a story or metaphor to anchor it.
So next time you share a key message, ask yourself not just what the message is but also where someone would feel this message. Memory is linked to meaning, of course, but also to where the meaning happens.