Skip to content
Home » How To Make A Lasting Impression: Jeffery Keilholtz (Transcript)

How To Make A Lasting Impression: Jeffery Keilholtz (Transcript)

Read here the full transcript of Jeffery Keilholtz’s talk titled “How To Make A Lasting Impression” at TEDxRockville 2023 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Power of Lasting Impressions

In the not-too-distant past, my wife and I had to make an important decision about enrolling our daughter in school, and during the process, we encountered a remarkable phenomenon. Three people, neither of whom knew each other, all insisted with enthusiasm that we had to enroll our daughter in a particular teacher’s class, Miss Connor.

Surprisingly to my wife and I, Miss Connor’s social capital was soaring high, to the point that there was sort of a hushed, quiet waiting list for her first-grade class in a public school. Our curiosity was piqued, and my wife and I wondered why Miss Connor was held in such high regard.

It wasn’t until one day when my wife personally witnessed the stunning act of selflessness that it all became crystal clear. You see, my wife was waiting for our daughter to walk her home, and she casually observed several other teachers and how they engaged with this little girl, a little girl who had crippling anxiety. She dreaded to get on the school bus.

So my wife is watching, and the teachers are expressing irritation, frustration, exhaustion – typical. But then something incredible happened. Unceremoniously, seemingly from out of the blue, Miss Connor appeared, and she breezes right by these teachers, goes right up to this little girl, and bends down on her level. After a few moments, she reaches out and takes her hand. She stands up and walks her to her bus. She then boards the bus with this little girl, sits down beside her, fingers interlaced, and Miss Connor stayed. That little girl held a bus driver over all the way home.

That moment, Miss Connor exemplified intention, tenderness, and profound empathy, and left an indelible mark on that little girl’s heart. But not just that girl. You see, my wife, who was so compelled, deeply moved by what she just saw, rushed home to tell me about it and about 10 other people. Many of whom were parents in the same school district.

The ripple effect was profound. Parents lined up vying for the opportunity to enroll their child in Miss Connor’s class, and if you were to ask Miss Connor today, what is it that makes her so immensely popular, she’d probably have no idea why.

An ordinary teacher made an extraordinary impact through small acts, and it should serve as a testament to the power of creating a lasting impression.

The Importance of Lasting Impressions in Business

So, folks, how can we be more like Miss Connor? More importantly, why should it matter?

Well, if we pivot to business, according to CNBC, seven out of 10 jobs that are available are never posted online. Of those that are, three out of four resumes are never read by a human being. At the end of the day, 80% of the jobs we will ever have will come through the ripple effect of our social network.

The strength of that ripple effect will be about how many individuals we’ve created enduring personal lasting impressions with. And again, that’s not just in business.

So how can we, in our professional and personal lives, create lasting impressions that make people feel more inspired, uplifted, and deeply moved? Spoiler alert, it’s not LinkedIn. It’s not social media, and it is absolutely not about how many people stand up and applaud us for our face.

ALSO READ:  Cam Adair: The Surprising Truth About Rejection at TEDxFargo (Transcript)

It’s about what those same people say about us behind our back. It’s about our unseen reputation, our bedrock reputation. It’s about the small, idiosyncratic things we do and choices we make, and our everyday interactions, precisely when we think no one else is paying attention. That is the secret sauce to making us memorable.

The Entertainment Industry Perspective

But there’s a catch. In entertainment, I’ve had the unique privilege of working on both sides of the table, as they say. On one side, as the actor, the performer, the writer, trying to get noticed, hoping to stand out. And on the other side, as the casting director, the producer, the decision maker.

In an industry flooded with faces dying to stand out, you have to make a lasting impression. But regardless of whether you’re an actor trying to land a role, an applicant trying to get a job, an executive trying to raise capital, or just a leader trying to lead a team, it is not only about the words we say or about the merit badges we puff out on our chest.

The Science of Lasting Impressions

So, with lasting impressions, what is that? Well, according to the National Library of Medicine, lasting impressions are triggered by two things in our brain: heightened sensation and emotional arousal.

Lasting impressions are pictures of our sensory DNA. They’re snapshots. Most likely, people aren’t going to remember the words you say. They’ll remember the tone in which you said it. They’re not going to remember the clothes you wore. They’re going to remember how you physically engage.

In fact, science tells us that the element of surprise is a key component to the snapshot. Surprise is such a key component that there’s a term for it: flashbulb memory. You probably remember when you heard that Princess Diana had died, or when you first saw Michael Jackson do the moonwalk, or where you were when 9/11 happened.

While those were large-scale public events and the details over time can get fuzzy, it’s the stickiness of emotional surprise that glues itself to our senses.

The Peak-End Rule

The peak-end rule validates this very idea. Peak-end is the notion that we evaluate our experiences based predominantly on how the experience felt at its peak, at its most intense point, and at the end. Now, the peak can be positive or the peak can be negative.

I’ll give you an example. We plan all year to go to the beach. We go to the beach.