Have you ever sent an email so polished it could double as a mirror—only for no one to act on it? Or delivered a change initiative so inspiring it left your team staring blankly at their screens?
This week, Amanda Gilbert joins Jimmy and James to discuss the 4MAT model, a framework that might save your next communication from the recycling bin of irrelevance.
This isn’t about prettier PowerPoints or fancier fonts. It’s about why your message should matter to anyone but you, what you’re actually trying to say, how people might—might—do something differently, and what if they actually applied it.
James, who is midway through writing his second book (a collection of corporate disasters, because nothing bonds a team like shared schadenfreude), serves as the live guinea pig. It turns out that even a book about epic failures needs a structure that doesn’t just describe the wreckage but tells readers how to avoid driving off the same cliff.
The episode is all about cutting through the noise. Whether you’re rolling out a new policy, training a team, or just trying to stop your colleagues’ eyes from glazing over, the 4MAT model forces you to ask: Have I made this about them, or just about me? (If your answer involves “cascading information” or “aligning stakeholders,” you’ve already lost.)
Four key points: