Make a plan for the conclusion It has been said many times, If you fail to plan, you plan to fail and it could not be more true when it comes to crafting a killer conclusion. When it comes to social media posts, the combination either symbolizes a trend or an outstanding opinion. Naturally, adding the Mic Drop emoji signifies the end of a certain topic between messages. The Morning Brunch with John Bommarito 107. 5 Tips for a mic-drop worthy conclusion 1. The act of dropping the mic usually signifies the end of a speech, debate, or conversation. WOMEN IN ART MUSIC FESTIVAL, East Lansing, MI(United States) THE BITTER END with LIVE FROM NEW YORK, New York, NY(United States)ĬLUB PASSIM WITH LIVE FROM NEW YORK, Cambridge, MA(United States)ĮVANSTONSPACE details TBA, Evanston, IL(United States) If you “Mic Drop” this week, let me know, I’d love to hear about it! I don’t do it for everything I say, because obviously sometimes I’m not sure, but for the really good stuff, the stuff I really, truly MEAN, yeah, just own it and drop the mic. I didn’t have to finish by apologizing, AND I wasn’t waiting for approval from the other person to find out if it had merit. People who havent been around microphones think it adds emphasis and looks cool people who know what theyre doing know that dropping a microphone sounds awful, possibly hurts the mic, and in general looks like a wannabe-artist move. Heres what we got into:The M&A spree that includes updates from Qualtrics, Cvent, and Mint Mobile. I surprised myself, but it was amazing how much better it felt to put THAT punctuation on the end of a sentence/idea/story that I felt great about sharing. Mic Drop and Drop the Mic are expressions referring to the practice of intentionally letting a microphone fall to the ground as a display of bold confidence. 31 minutes Description This week, Alex and Natasha took the mic to talk about the slowest news cycle weve had since the beginning of the grocery delivery wars and WeWork. When I was done speaking, right at the point where I normally would’ve taken it back a little, I held my arm out to the side, held it up high, opened my fingers and said: “MIC DROP!” Recently, TWICE, I have shared something, an idea, a belief, an insight with someone. When I used to tell stories or try to explain where I was coming from, I’d usually end my story with “I don’t know” or “I don’t know if that makes any sense.” And, without really knowing it, it always made me a little sad to be so excited to share an idea or feeling, and then have it always peter out a little at the end.īut then something happened.
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