Financial Behavior Thought Leaders

The Speaker’s Success Toolkit: Mastering the Art of Presentation with Justin Hunsaker

33 min · 22 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio The Speaker’s Success Toolkit: Mastering the Art of Presentation with Justin Hunsaker

Descripción

[embed]https://youtu.be/14YnHs3dQBE?si=9g5rRwRceYc26gDe[/embed] In this episode of The Speaker’s Success Toolkit, host Dr. Mary Bell Carlson is joined by presentation coach Justin Hunsaker to explore how visual design can elevate, or undermine, a speaker’s message. Building on the foundation of a clear, compelling talk, the conversation focuses on how slides act as a multiplier, reinforcing key ideas and strengthening audience engagement when used effectively. Justin shares his unconventional journey from software engineering to communication expert, highlighting how his experience at Capital One shaped his approach to teaching presentation design and storytelling. The discussion dives into common pitfalls speakers face, including overloading slides with text and repurposing mismatched content, which can dilute clarity and impact. Justin introduces the concept of storyboarding as a critical first step, before slides or scripts, allowing speakers to map their message, visuals, and delivery in a flexible, low-pressure way. He emphasizes the importance of aligning visuals, body language, and storytelling, explaining that audiences retain information best when all elements work together cohesively. Listeners will gain practical insights into using big, bold visuals, simple “so what” slide titles, and frameworks to make ideas more memorable. The episode also explores how humor, images, and storytelling can create emotional range, while data should be used sparingly to support credibility rather than drive the message. Justin closes with actionable tips for improving slides immediately, making this episode a valuable guide for speakers looking to enhance both their visuals and overall delivery. 5 KEY TAKEAWAYS   1. Slides should support the speaker without saying what the speaker says verbatim.The purpose of slides isn’t to duplicate what the speaker says. Instead, they should reinforce the message and help the audience understand and remember key ideas. 2. Visual storytelling improves how audiences absorb information.Effective presentations use visuals to clarify concepts, highlight important points, and guide the audience through the narrative rather than overwhelming them with text. 3. Text-heavy slides are one of the most common presentation mistakes.Many professionals, especially in data-driven fields like financial services, pack slides with information, which can distract audiences and dilute the speaker’s message. The less words the better! 4. Aligning visuals with the story can transform a presentation.When slides are redesigned to match the flow of the speaker’s message, presentations become clearer, audiences engage more deeply, and speakers often feel more confident. 5. Small changes to slides can make an immediate impact.Speakers can start improving their presentations by simplifying slides, reducing unnecessary content, and asking whether each visual truly supports the message they want the audience to remember.

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26 episodios

episode Nudge 2.0: How AI Shapes Financial Behavior with Dr. Michael Thomas artwork

Nudge 2.0: How AI Shapes Financial Behavior with Dr. Michael Thomas

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episode The Irreplaceable Advisor with Ashley Quamme artwork

The Irreplaceable Advisor with Ashley Quamme

[embed]https://youtu.be/pMiNkdNrAsU[/embed] Ashley Quamme is a licensed therapist and behavioral finance expert, and she is one of the few people working at the intersection of mental health and financial advising in a genuinely practical way. In this episode, she lays out seven relational competencies that separate the advisors who will thrive in an AI-driven industry from those who will struggle to explain why clients should still choose a human. The short version: AI and technical knowledge are now table stakes. They are what gets you in the room, not what keeps clients there. What keeps clients there is something AI cannot replicate—the ability to recognize behavioral patterns, navigate emotionally charged conversations, and make people feel genuinely understood. Ashley walks through each of the seven skills with the kind of specificity that makes this episode immediately usable. This is not a general case for soft skills. It is a concrete, practitioner-level conversation about what these competencies look like in real client interactions, how to develop them deliberately, and what you risk if you keep treating relationship-building as an afterthought. A few things worth pulling out from the conversation: the distinction between sympathy and the kind of empathy that actually moves a client relationship forward, how small targeted shifts in how you show up in a conversation can change the entire dynamic, and why these skills matter just as much in your personal relationships as they do in your practice. If you are a financial advisor who is paying attention to where the industry is heading, this episode is one you will want to come back to. Key Topics Covered: * Why relational skills are now the primary differentiator in financial advising * How to recognize and work with behavioral patterns in your clients * Navigating sensitive and emotionally charged conversations * Building trust through collaborative decision-making * How to practice and integrate these skills intentionally * The cost of staying in a purely technical approach * Why ongoing education in financial psychology is no longer optional Timestamps: 00:00 - Introduction to the future of financial conversations 01:20 - Ashley shares how relational skills became a differentiator 03:19 - Clients’ desire for emotional support, not just financial advice 06:31 - The risk and cost of ignoring relational skills 10:38 - The origins of the Beyond the Plan framework 16:22 - The importance of collaborative decision-making 19:46 - Practice as a contact sport: applying skills across all relationships RESOURCES & LINKS: * Beyond the Plan - Ashley Quamme [https://www.beyondthefp.com/] * More about Ashley Quamme's Speaking [https://financialbehaviorkeynote.com/ashley-quamme/] * Mastering the Seven Skills that AI Cannot Replace [https://www.canva.com/design/DAGRCdIEV4E/rYMZuqv83gKq-e9VzskNwQ/view?utm_content=DAGRCdIEV4E&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link&utm_source=viewer] CONNECT WITH ASHLEY QUAMME: * LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashley-quamme/]

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episode The Speaker Success Toolkit: Turning Speaking Into Visibility with Allie Zendrian artwork

The Speaker Success Toolkit: Turning Speaking Into Visibility with Allie Zendrian

[embed]https://youtu.be/Aq7gaykLsdU[/embed] In this episode of The Speaker’s Success Toolkit, Dr. Mary Bell Carlson is joined by PR strategist Allie Zendrian to explore how speakers can extend their impact beyond the stage through strategic visibility. As the founder of A to Z Communications and a former journalist, Allie brings a unique perspective on how thought leaders can turn their expertise into credibility, helping them get featured, quoted, and invited into larger opportunities. The conversation unpacks what public relations actually is, how it differs from marketing, and why it plays such a critical role in building a sustainable speaking career. Together, they emphasize that a great talk is only the starting point; what matters is how that message continues to live on. The discussion offers a behind-the-scenes look at how PR works in practice, from leveraging conferences as full ecosystems of opportunity to understanding why many talented speakers remain “best kept secrets.” Mary and Allie dive into the mindset shift required to move from waiting to be recognized to proactively creating visibility. Allie shares how speakers can repurpose their existing content into articles, media pitches, and thought leadership, while also highlighting the importance of aligning expertise with timely, relevant topics. The episode also addresses common misconceptions, including the belief that PR delivers instant results, instead framing it as a long-term strategy built on relationships and consistency. The conversation closes with practical advice for speakers at any stage, encouraging them to rethink how they use their content and consider how even one presentation can open the door to far-reaching influence.

6 de may de 202626 min
episode The Speaker’s Success Toolkit: Mastering the Art of Presentation with Justin Hunsaker artwork

The Speaker’s Success Toolkit: Mastering the Art of Presentation with Justin Hunsaker

[embed]https://youtu.be/14YnHs3dQBE?si=9g5rRwRceYc26gDe[/embed] In this episode of The Speaker’s Success Toolkit, host Dr. Mary Bell Carlson is joined by presentation coach Justin Hunsaker to explore how visual design can elevate, or undermine, a speaker’s message. Building on the foundation of a clear, compelling talk, the conversation focuses on how slides act as a multiplier, reinforcing key ideas and strengthening audience engagement when used effectively. Justin shares his unconventional journey from software engineering to communication expert, highlighting how his experience at Capital One shaped his approach to teaching presentation design and storytelling. The discussion dives into common pitfalls speakers face, including overloading slides with text and repurposing mismatched content, which can dilute clarity and impact. Justin introduces the concept of storyboarding as a critical first step, before slides or scripts, allowing speakers to map their message, visuals, and delivery in a flexible, low-pressure way. He emphasizes the importance of aligning visuals, body language, and storytelling, explaining that audiences retain information best when all elements work together cohesively. Listeners will gain practical insights into using big, bold visuals, simple “so what” slide titles, and frameworks to make ideas more memorable. The episode also explores how humor, images, and storytelling can create emotional range, while data should be used sparingly to support credibility rather than drive the message. Justin closes with actionable tips for improving slides immediately, making this episode a valuable guide for speakers looking to enhance both their visuals and overall delivery. 5 KEY TAKEAWAYS   1. Slides should support the speaker without saying what the speaker says verbatim.The purpose of slides isn’t to duplicate what the speaker says. Instead, they should reinforce the message and help the audience understand and remember key ideas. 2. Visual storytelling improves how audiences absorb information.Effective presentations use visuals to clarify concepts, highlight important points, and guide the audience through the narrative rather than overwhelming them with text. 3. Text-heavy slides are one of the most common presentation mistakes.Many professionals, especially in data-driven fields like financial services, pack slides with information, which can distract audiences and dilute the speaker’s message. The less words the better! 4. Aligning visuals with the story can transform a presentation.When slides are redesigned to match the flow of the speaker’s message, presentations become clearer, audiences engage more deeply, and speakers often feel more confident. 5. Small changes to slides can make an immediate impact.Speakers can start improving their presentations by simplifying slides, reducing unnecessary content, and asking whether each visual truly supports the message they want the audience to remember.

22 de abr de 202633 min
episode The Speaker Success Toolkit: Writing the Talk That Gets Remembered artwork

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[embed]https://youtu.be/8s7toj0-rmU?si=O5v8HCAmPJyG1rBb[/embed] In this episode of The Speaker’s Success Toolkit, host Dr. Mary Bell Carlson is joined by speaker coach and storytelling expert Deirdre Van Nest to explore what truly makes a talk memorable and impactful. Kicking off the series, the conversation centers on a foundational truth: great speaking doesn’t start on stage; it starts with how a talk is written, structured, and designed to connect. Deirdre shares her personal journey into speaking, highlighting how coaching helped her overcome fear and ultimately shaped her approach to helping others develop powerful, memorable talks. The discussion emphasizes that strong content alone isn’t enough; structure is the missing link that transforms information into an engaging, persuasive experience. Through examples and client stories, Deirdre explains how speakers can take the same core content and dramatically improve results by restructuring it to better capture attention, create emotional connection, and inspire action. She introduces the idea that a signature talk should feel like an experience rather than a lecture, blending stories, analogies, audience interaction, and intentional design to keep energy high and audiences engaged. Listeners will gain practical tools, including Deirdre’s CETA framework, which focuses on being conversational, creating engaging experiences, prompting audience thinking, and providing clear application. The episode also reinforces the value of coaching, showing how an outside perspective can elevate speakers from good to great. Overall, this conversation sets the foundation for building a talk that not only resonates in the moment but leads to lasting impact, referrals, and opportunities. 5 KEY TAKEAWAYS 1. A strong talk is built around transformation, not just information.A memorable talk clearly communicates how the audience will think, feel, or act differently afterward, not just what they will learn. 2. Many speakers try to pitch before their talk is fully developed.Without a clear, compelling message, even strong delivery won’t lead to referrals or repeat bookings. 3. Clarity is more powerful than complexity.Overcomplicating a talk dilutes its impact. The most effective speakers simplify their message so it’s easy to understand and remember. 4. Coaching provides an outside perspective that speakers can’t access on their own.Working with a coach helps identify gaps, refine structure, and elevate how a message lands with an audience. 5. A signature talk is the foundation of a successful speaking business.Before marketing, video reels, or promotion, speakers need a talk that is clear, compelling, and repeatable.

8 de abr de 202630 min