As our clients and their participants now are inclusive of four generations, understanding your audience is even more imperative. Here's a story about my "big lady clothes" to drive home my point.
Many years ago, I made a life-altering decision.
I was obese and self- conscious, so I signed up for gastric bypass surgery.
Vanity and health-related issues like diabetes influenced this decision, but in
all honesty, vanity was the primary contributor. My reason: Just once in my
life I wanted people to look at me and say, “My, she has a nice figure.”
I was a size 22/24. Yep, obese. I’ll skip the details, but the result was that I lost almost 100 pounds and was not only “normal” but better than normal. Clothed, I had a great bod. Unclothed, another story. But I later fixed that, too, though it has nothing to do with this story.
Now between sizes six and eight, I had a lot of “big lady” clothing in my closet. It was designer stuff (Yes, they have designers for large sizes) and expensive. If you don’t know me well, I should tell you that my great love is, and always has been, shopping.
I was a size 22/24. Yep, obese. I’ll skip the details, but the result was that I lost almost 100 pounds and was not only “normal” but better than normal. Clothed, I had a great bod. Unclothed, another story. But I later fixed that, too, though it has nothing to do with this story.
Now between sizes six and eight, I had a lot of “big lady” clothing in my closet. It was designer stuff (Yes, they have designers for large sizes) and expensive. If you don’t know me well, I should tell you that my great love is, and always has been, shopping.
This information is important to my story
because my medical group offered support meetings every week, and part of its
routine was to have people bring in the clothes that they had outgrown so that those
losing weight wouldn’t have to buy new clothing as they down-sized. Some of the
ladies were almost 400 or 500 pounds, and I decided to bring them my clothes,
thinking that by the time they got to my size 22s they could have a glamorous
wardrobe.
So, I attended one of these meetings with
bags filled with my lovely offerings. To kick the meeting off, the facilitator
asked, “So what’s the best part of losing weight?”
One lady responded, “I can walk into K-Mart
and buy anything I want now.”
I should have grabbed my bags and run at that moment, but I didn’t. At the end of the meeting, the various bags people had brought were opened, and clothes started being passed around. I happily anticipated the joy of watching women seize my designer clothes, ranging from evening gowns to business suits.
It didn’t happen.
These women were almost repelled as they
handled my clothing. They snickered at the evening wear …” Where they hell
would I wear THAT? When I shoveled horseshit?” Business suits were almost as
denigrated.
I was aghast. I knew I (and my clothes)
didn’t belong there.
So, how does this relate to business? Any business?
Andrea Michaels is the founder and president of Extraordinary Events, an international, multi-award-winning event agency based in Los Angeles. She is the author of Reflections of a Successful Wallflower: Lessons in Business; Lessons in Life. She may be reached at amichaels@extrarordinaryevents.com.