profile

Ravishankar Iyer

#SOTD 71: Make big numbers relatable (S Jaishankar interview)

Published almost 2 years ago • 1 min read

How do you make big numbers relatable?

The Indian External Affairs Minister, Mr. S Jaishankar is winning a lot of fans for his clear, data-backed and (let's admit it) combative responses to challenging questions about India's foreign policy.

In this recent interview at the GLOBSEC Bratislava Forum, Mr. Jaishankar was asked (among other things) to paint a picture of where India was right now (from the point of view of the economy and national security).

Now, on this topic, there are many challenges that one can speak about... but there are also many bright spots. Incidentally, as I've blogged last week, even the Economist did a cover issue where they praised some of the social welfare initiatives by the Indian state.

Mr. Jaishankar did speak about a lot of these achievements. But what was noteworthy was the way he framed it, the way he presented it.

Here's his (lightly edited) response - specifically from around 1:50 to 3:00 in the video. (Bold emphasis mine):

Over the last 8 years what we have done is to build a social welfare society at a speed and a scale that the world has not seen:
- We are giving food support to 800M people - that's like the population of the US and EU put together
- We have a publicly supported house ownership program which has 115M beneficiaries - which is almost like building houses for Japan
- (We have a) campaign to replace firewood with gas cooking - it's impacted 80M people. That's like changing Germany's kitchen in the space of a few years

Three interesting storytelling lessons there:

  • Make big numbers relatable for your audience: Easier to relate to 'changing Germany's kitchen' than saying 80M households
  • Discern patterns and craft big-picture takeaways: Mr. Jaishankar reasons inductively from the above three achievements and derives the higher insight - 'India is building a social welfare society at a speed and a scale that the world has not seen'
  • Use the Pyramid Principle approach to state the big insight first and then follow up with the three supporting points

Disclaimer: So, to be clear, this is a diplomat/politician speaking - and political content can generate extreme reactions. My attempt is to only parse out interesting storytelling lessons from extracts of such leaders' communication... and not in any way ratify its accuracy or pass a value judgement on the message.

(Don't worry - using that logic I won't be citing extracts from Hitler's speeches. We all know where to draw a line).

Having said that, #SOTDs are not endorsements!

#SOTD 71

Ravi

PS: Here is the context for #SOTD and the 'Ultimate Guide to Storytelling Techniques' framework I use - in case you joined this series late! Here is the archive of previous posts. Click here to subscribe.

Ravishankar Iyer

A Storytelling Coach More details here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ravishankar-iyer/

Read more from Ravishankar Iyer

Welcome to the sixtieth edition of '3-2-1 by Story Rules'. A newsletter recommending good examples of storytelling across: 3 tweets 2 articles, and 1 long-form content piece Let's dive in. 𝕏 3 Tweets of the week Source: X I think everyone - not just entrepreneurs - should study philosophy. (Reid Hoffman is the founder of LinkedIn) Source: X Heartwarming example! Also great to see medical facilities in India realise the importance of better communication with patients. Source: X This is super...

about 10 hours ago • 7 min read

Welcome to the fifty-ninth edition of '3-2-1 by Story Rules'. A newsletter recommending good examples of storytelling across: 3 tweets 2 articles, and 1 long-form content piece Let's dive in. 𝕏 3 Tweets of the week Source: X This would be a great resource for authentic data on India. Source: X I saw this statistic in the Indus Valley 2024 Report too - Indian corporates need to up their R&D spend! Source: X Don't wait for inspiration to begin writing. 📄 2 Articles of the week a. 'Selling...

7 days ago • 6 min read

Welcome to the fifty-eighth edition of '3-2-1 by Story Rules'. A newsletter recommending good examples of storytelling across: 3 tweets 2 articles, and 1 long-form content piece Let's dive in. 𝕏 3 Tweets of the week Source: X Democrats in the US just need to look for the right norm - global leaders - to feel better about their President's approval ratings! Source: X Interesting perspective on how home-schoolers might have an advantage in certain areas! Source: X Good use of contrast to share...

14 days ago • 6 min read
Share this post