ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Chris Anderson - TED Curator
After a long career in journalism and publishing, Chris Anderson became the curator of the TED Conference in 2002 and has developed it as a platform for identifying and disseminating ideas worth spreading.

Why you should listen

Chris Anderson is the Curator of TED, a nonprofit devoted to sharing valuable ideas, primarily through the medium of 'TED Talks' -- short talks that are offered free online to a global audience.

Chris was born in a remote village in Pakistan in 1957. He spent his early years in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan, where his parents worked as medical missionaries, and he attended an American school in the Himalayas for his early education. After boarding school in Bath, England, he went on to Oxford University, graduating in 1978 with a degree in philosophy, politics and economics.

Chris then trained as a journalist, working in newspapers and radio, including two years producing a world news service in the Seychelles Islands.

Back in the UK in 1984, Chris was captivated by the personal computer revolution and became an editor at one of the UK's early computer magazines. A year later he founded Future Publishing with a $25,000 bank loan. The new company initially focused on specialist computer publications but eventually expanded into other areas such as cycling, music, video games, technology and design, doubling in size every year for seven years. In 1994, Chris moved to the United States where he built Imagine Media, publisher of Business 2.0 magazine and creator of the popular video game users website IGN. Chris eventually merged Imagine and Future, taking the combined entity public in London in 1999, under the Future name. At its peak, it published 150 magazines and websites and employed 2,000 people.

This success allowed Chris to create a private nonprofit organization, the Sapling Foundation, with the hope of finding new ways to tackle tough global issues through media, technology, entrepreneurship and, most of all, ideas. In 2001, the foundation acquired the TED Conference, then an annual meeting of luminaries in the fields of Technology, Entertainment and Design held in Monterey, California, and Chris left Future to work full time on TED.

He expanded the conference's remit to cover all topics, including science, business and key global issues, while adding a Fellows program, which now has some 300 alumni, and the TED Prize, which grants its recipients "one wish to change the world." The TED stage has become a place for thinkers and doers from all fields to share their ideas and their work, capturing imaginations, sparking conversation and encouraging discovery along the way.

In 2006, TED experimented with posting some of its talks on the Internet. Their viral success encouraged Chris to begin positioning the organization as a global media initiative devoted to 'ideas worth spreading,' part of a new era of information dissemination using the power of online video. In June 2015, the organization posted its 2,000th talk online. The talks are free to view, and they have been translated into more than 100 languages with the help of volunteers from around the world. Viewership has grown to approximately one billion views per year.

Continuing a strategy of 'radical openness,' in 2009 Chris introduced the TEDx initiative, allowing free licenses to local organizers who wished to organize their own TED-like events. More than 8,000 such events have been held, generating an archive of 60,000 TEDx talks. And three years later, the TED-Ed program was launched, offering free educational videos and tools to students and teachers.

More profile about the speaker
Chris Anderson | Speaker | TED.com
TED Studio

Chris Anderson: TED's secret to great public speaking

Kris Anderson (Chris Anderson): TED predstavlja tajnu dobrog javnog govorništva

Filmed:
5,536,245 views

Ne postoji jedinstvena formula za sjajan govor, ali postoji jedan tajni sastojak koji dele svi najbolji govori. Urednik TED-a, Kris Anderson, otkriva ovu tajnu, uz četiri načina da vam ona uspe. Da li imate ono što je potrebno da podelite ideju vrednu širenja?
- TED Curator
After a long career in journalism and publishing, Chris Anderson became the curator of the TED Conference in 2002 and has developed it as a platform for identifying and disseminating ideas worth spreading. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
Some people think that there's
a TEDTED Talk formulaформула:
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Neki ljudi misle
da postoji formula za TED govor:
00:15
"Give a talk on a roundокругли, redцрвена rugtepih."
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„Održi govor na okruglom, crvenom tepihu.“
00:17
"ShareUdeo a childhoodдетињство storyприча."
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„Ispričaj priču iz detinjstva.“
00:18
"DivulgeOtkriti a personalлични secretтајна."
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„Ogoli ličnu tajnu.“
00:20
"EndKraj with an inspiringинспиришући call to actionпоступак."
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„Završi sa inspirativnim
pozivom na akciju.“
00:23
No.
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Ne.
00:24
That's not how to think of a TEDTED Talk.
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Ne treba tako razmišljati o TED govoru.
00:26
In factчињеница, if you overusepreveliko korišćenje those devicesуређаји,
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U stvari, ako previše koristite te savete,
00:28
you're just going to come acrossпреко
as clichtaj kliљeéd or emotionallyемоционално manipulativemanipulator.
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ostavićete utisak klišea
ili emotivnog manipulanta.
00:32
But there is one thing that all
great TEDTED TalksRazgovori have in commonзаједнички,
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Ali postoji jedna stvar,
zajednička svim odličnim TED govorima,
00:36
and I would like to shareОбјави
that thing with you,
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i želim da je podelim sa vama,
00:39
because over the pastпрошлост 12 yearsгодине,
I've had a ringsidering seatседиште,
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jer sam tokom poslednjih 12 godina
imao mesto u prvom redu
00:42
listeningслушање to manyмноги hundredsстотине
of amazingНевероватно TEDTED speakersзвучници, like these.
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odakle sam slušao stotine
sjajnih TED govornika, kao što su ovi.
00:46
I've helpedпомогао them preparePripremite se
theirњихова talksразговоре for primeглавни time,
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Pomogao sam im
da pripreme govore za glavni nastup
00:49
and learnedнаучио directlyдиректно from them
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i od njih sam direktno učio
00:50
theirњихова secretsтајне of what
makesчини for a great talk.
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njihove tajne toga
šta čini jedan odličan govor.
00:53
And even thoughипак these speakersзвучници
and theirњихова topicsтеме all seemИзгледа
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I iako ovi govornici i njihove teme
deluju potpuno različito,
00:56
completelyу потпуности differentразличит,
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00:57
they actuallyзаправо do have
one keyкључ commonзаједнички ingredientsastojak.
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ipak imaju jedan zajednički sastojak.
01:01
And it's this:
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A to je ovo:
01:03
Your numberброј one taskзадатак as a speakerзвучник
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vaš prvi zadatak kao govornika
01:05
is to transferтрансфер into your listeners'sluљalaca mindsумови
an extraordinaryизузетно giftпоклон --
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je da u um vaših slušalaca
prebacite jedan izuzetan dar -
01:10
a strangeчудан and beautifulЛепа objectобјекат
that we call an ideaидеја.
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čudnu i lepu stvar koju nazivamo idejom.
01:16
Let me showсхов you what I mean.
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Pokazaću vam šta mislim.
01:17
Here'sEvo HaleyHaley.
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Ovo je Hejli.
01:18
She is about to give a TEDTED Talk
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Ona se sprema da ordži TED govor
01:20
and franklyискрено, she's terrifiedprestravljen.
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i iskreno, prestravljena je.
01:22
(VideoVideo zapis) PresenterZa prezentatora: HaleyHaley VanKombi DyckDajk!
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(Video) Domaćin: Hejli van Dajk!
01:24
(ApplauseAplauz)
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(Aplauz)
01:30
Over the courseкурс of 18 minutesминута,
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Tokom 18 minuta,
01:32
1,200 people, manyмноги of whomкога
have never seenвиђено eachсваки other before,
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1 200 ljudi, od kojih se mnogi
nikada nisu upoznali,
01:36
are findingпроналажење that theirњихова brainsмозга
are startingпочевши to syncсинхронизовати with Haley'sHaley, na brainмозак
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shvatiće da njihovi mozgovi
počinju da se sinhronizuju sa Hejlinim,
01:40
and with eachсваки other.
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ali i međusobno.
01:41
They're literallyбуквално beginningпочетак to exhibitИзложба
the sameисти brain-wavemozak-talasa patternsобрасци.
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Bukvalno počinju da ispoljavaju
iste obrasce moždanih talasa.
01:45
And I don't just mean
they're feelingОсећај the sameисти emotionsемоције.
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Ne mislim samo da doživljavaju
ista osećanja.
01:48
There's something even more
startlingpomuti razum happeningдогађај.
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Nešto još čudesnije se dešava.
01:50
Let's take a look insideу
Haley'sHaley, na brainмозак for a momentтренутак.
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Hejde da za trenutak pogledamo
unutar Hejlinog mozga.
01:54
There are billionsмилијарди of interconnectedмеђусобно повезане
neuronsнеурона in an impossibleнемогуће tangleтангле.
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Tu postoje milijarde neurona,
međusobno povezanih u nerazmrsivi čvor.
01:58
But look here, right here --
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Pogledajte, baš ovde -
02:00
a fewнеколико millionмилиона of them
are linkedповезано to eachсваки other
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nekoliko miliona njih
povezani su međusobno
02:03
in a way whichкоја representsпредставља a singleједно ideaидеја.
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na način koji predstavlja jednu ideju.
02:06
And incrediblyневероватно, this exactтачно patternобразац
is beingбиће recreatedObnovljeni in realправи time
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Neverovatno, ovaj isti obrazac
se u isto vreme stvara
02:10
insideу the mindsумови of everyoneсви listeningслушање.
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u umovima svih koji slušaju.
02:13
That's right; in just a fewнеколико minutesминута,
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Tako je; u samo nekoliko minuta,
02:15
a patternобразац involvingукључивање millionsмилиони of neuronsнеурона
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obrazac koji uključuje milione neurona
02:18
is beingбиће teleportedteleportovao into 1,200 mindsумови,
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teleportuje se u 1 200 umova,
02:21
just by people listeningслушање to a voiceглас
and watchingгледа a faceлице.
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samo tako što ljudi slušaju jedan glas
i gledaju jedno lice.
02:24
But wait -- what is an ideaидеја anywayУ сваком случају?
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No, čekajte, šta je uopšte ideja?
02:27
Well, you can think of it
as a patternобразац of informationинформације
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Možete o njoj misliti
kao o šemi informacija
02:31
that helpsпомаже you understandРазумем
and navigateнавигате the worldсвет.
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koja vam pomaže da razumete svet
i upravljate njime.
Ideje se javljaju
u raznim oblicima i veličinama,
02:34
IdeasIdeje come in all shapesоблике and sizesвеличине,
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02:36
from the complexкомплекс and analyticalаналитички
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od složenih i analitičkih
02:38
to the simpleједноставно and aestheticестетски.
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do jednostavnih i estetskih.
02:40
Here are just a fewнеколико examplesпримери
sharedдељени from the TEDTED stageфаза.
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Evo nekih primera sa TED bine.
02:43
SirGospodine KenKen RobinsonRobinson -- creativityкреативност
is keyкључ to our kids'dece futureбудућност.
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Ser Ken Robinson - kreativnost
je ključ budućnosti naše dece.
02:47
(VideoVideo zapis) SirGospodine KenKen RobinsonRobinson:
My contentionрасправа is that creativityкреативност now
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(Video) Ser Ken Robinson:
Moj argument je da je danas kreativnost
02:50
is as importantважно in educationобразовање as literacyписменост,
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jednako važna u obrazovanju kao pismenost,
02:53
and we should treatлијечити it
with the sameисти statusстатус.
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i trebalo bi da joj damo isti status.
02:56
ChrisKris AndersonAnderson: EloraElora HardyHardi --
buildingзграде from bambooбамбус is beautifulЛепа.
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Kris Anderson: Elora Hardi -
građevine od bambusa su prelepe.
02:59
(VideoVideo zapis) EloraElora HardyHardi:
It is growingрастуће all around us,
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(Video) Elora Hardi:
On raste svuda oko nas,
čvrst je, elegantan,
otporan na zemljotres.
03:01
it's strongјак, it's elegantелегантно,
it's earthquake-resistantotporna na zemljotres.
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03:05
CACA: ChimamandaChimamanda AdichieAdichie --
people are more than a singleједно identityидентитет.
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KA: Čimamanda Adiči -
ljudi su više od samo jednog identiteta.
03:09
(VideoVideo zapis) ChimamandaChimamanda AdichieAdichie:
The singleједно storyприча createsствара stereotypesстереотипи,
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(Video) Čimamanda Adiči:
Pojedinačna priča stvara stereotipe,
03:12
and the problemпроблем with stereotypesстереотипи
is not that they are untrueNije istina,
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a problem sa stereotipima
nije u tome što su neistiniti,
03:17
but that they are incompleteнепотпун.
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nego što su nepotpuni.
03:19
CACA: Your mindум is teemingBilo je mnogo with ideasидеје,
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KA: Vaš um vrvi od ideja,
03:21
and not just randomlyнасумично.
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ali ne nasumično.
03:23
They're carefullyпажљиво linkedповезано togetherзаједно.
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One su pažljivo međusobno povezane.
03:25
CollectivelyKolektivno they formобразац
an amazinglyНевероватно complexкомплекс structureструктура
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Zajedno, formiraju
neverovatno složenu strukturu
03:28
that is your personalлични worldviewпоглед на свет.
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koja čini vaš lični pogled na svet.
03:30
It's your brain'sмозак operatingоперативно systemсистем.
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To je operativni sistem vašeg mozga,
03:32
It's how you navigateнавигате the worldсвет.
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način na koji upravljate svetom,
03:34
And it is builtизграђен up out of millionsмилиони
of individualпојединац ideasидеје.
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i sagrađen je od miliona
individualnih ideja.
03:38
So, for exampleпример, if one little
componentсаставни део of your worldviewпоглед на свет
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Na primer, ako je jedan delić
vašeg pogleda na svet
03:42
is the ideaидеја that kittensmačiće are adorableneodoljiva,
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ideja da su mačići neodoljivi,
03:44
then when you see this,
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onda ćete na ovo
03:47
you'llти ћеш reactреаговати like this.
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reagovati ovako.
Međutim, ako je neki drugi deo
vašeg pogleda na svet
03:48
But if anotherдруги componentсаставни део of your worldviewпоглед на свет
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03:51
is the ideaидеја that leopardsleopardi are dangerousопасно,
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ideja da su leopardi opasni,
03:53
then when you see this,
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onda ćete kad vidite ovo,
03:54
you'llти ћеш reactреаговати a little bitмало differentlyдругачије.
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reagovati malo drugačije.
03:57
So, it's prettyприлично obviousочигледан
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Dakle, prilično je očigledno
03:59
why the ideasидеје that make up
your worldviewпоглед на свет are crucialкључно.
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zašto su važne ideje
koje čine vaše viđenje sveta.
04:03
You need them to be as reliableпоуздан
as possibleмогуће -- a guideВодич,
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Potrebno vam je da budu
najsigurnije moguće - vodič,
04:06
to the scaryстрашно but wonderfulДивно
realправи worldсвет out there.
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za zastrašujuć, ali divan svet.
04:09
Now, differentразличит people'sљуди worldviewsћudnji
can be dramaticallyдраматично differentразличит.
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Sad, pogledi na svet različitih ljudi
mogu se dramatično razlikovati.
04:14
For exampleпример,
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Na primer,
04:15
how does your worldviewпоглед на свет reactреаговати
when you see this imageслика:
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kako vaše viđenje sveta reaguje
nada vidite ovu sliku:
04:19
(VideoVideo zapis) DaliaDalija MogahedMogahed:
What do you think when you look at me?
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(Video) Dalija Mogahed:
Šta pomislite kad me pogledate?
04:22
"A womanжена of faithвера,"
"an expertстручњак," maybe even "a sisterсестра"?
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„Religiozna žena“, „stručnjak“,
možda čak i „sestra“?
04:28
Or "oppressedugnjetavan," "brainwashedispran mozak,"
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Ili „ugnjetavana“, „ispranog mozga“,
04:32
"a terroristterorista"?
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„terorista“?
KA: Kakav god da je vaš odgovor,
04:33
CACA: WhateverKako god your answerодговор,
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04:35
there are millionsмилиони of people out there
who would reactреаговати very differentlyдругачије.
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postoje milioni ljudi
koji bi reagovali veoma različito.
Zato su ideje zaista važne.
04:38
So that's why ideasидеје really matterматерија.
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04:40
If communicatedкомуницира properlyпрописно,
they're capableспособан of changingпромена, foreverзаувек,
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Ako se dobro prenesu,
imaju sposobnost da zauvek promene
04:44
how someoneнеко thinksмисли about the worldсвет,
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nečije mišljenje o svetu
04:46
and shapingoblikovanju theirњихова actionsакције bothи једно и друго now
and well into the futureбудућност.
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i uobliče njihove postupke,
kako sada, tako i u budućnosti.
04:51
IdeasIdeje are the mostнајвише powerfulмоћан forceсила
shapingoblikovanju humanљудско cultureкултура.
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Ideje su najmoćnija sila
koja oblikuje kulturu ljudi.
04:55
So if you acceptприхватити
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Ako prihvatite
04:56
that your numberброј one taskзадатак
as a speakerзвучник is to buildизградити an ideaидеја
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da vam je, kao govorniku,
najvažniji zadatak da izgradite ideju
04:59
insideу the mindsумови of your audienceпублика,
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unutar umova vaše publike,
05:01
here are fourчетири guidelinesСмернице
for how you should go about that taskзадатак:
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evo četiri saveta
za pristupanje tom zadatku:
05:04
One, limitограничење your talk
to just one majorглавни ideaидеја.
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prvo, ograničite svoj govor
samo na jednu veliku ideju.
05:09
IdeasIdeje are complexкомплекс things;
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Ideje su složene stvari;
05:11
you need to slashkosa crta back your contentсадржај
so that you can focusфокусирати
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morate da smanjite sadržaj
kako biste se usredsredili
05:14
on the singleједно ideaидеја
you're mostнајвише passionateстраствено about,
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na jednu ideju koja vam je najvažnija,
05:17
and give yourselfсами a chanceшанса
to explainобјасни that one thing properlyпрописно.
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i kako biste imali šansu
da tu jednu stvar adekvatno objasnite.
05:20
You have to give contextконтекст,
shareОбјави examplesпримери, make it vividbujne.
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Morate je staviti u kontekst,
dati primere, učiniti je opipljivom.
05:24
So pickпицк one ideaидеја,
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Dakle, odaberite jednu ideju
05:25
and make it the through-linekroz liniju
runningтрчање throughкроз your entireцео talk,
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i neka ona bude nit
koja prožima ceo vaš govor,
05:29
so that everything you say
linksлинкови back to it in some way.
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tako da sve što kažete
na neki način vodi nazad do nje.
05:33
Two, give your listenersPlatan a reasonразлог to careнега.
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Drugo, dajte svojim slušaocima
razlog da im bude stalo.
05:37
Before you can startпочетак buildingзграде things
insideу the mindsумови of your audienceпублика,
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Pre nego što počnete da izgrađujete nešto
u umovima svoje publike,
05:41
you have to get theirњихова permissionдозволу
to welcomeДобродошли you in.
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morate dobiti njihovu dozvolu
da vas prime.
05:44
And the mainглавни toolоруђе to achieveпостићи that?
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A glavni alat da postignete to?
05:46
CuriosityRadoznalost.
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Radoznalost.
05:47
StirKomešanje your audience'spublike curiosityрадозналост.
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Pokrenite radoznalost kod svoje publike.
05:49
Use intriguingинтригантно, provocativepo dnevniku questionsпитања
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Koristite zanimljiva, provokativna pitanja
05:52
to identifyидентификовати why something
doesn't make senseсмисао and needsпотребе explainingобјашњавајући.
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da biste otkrili zašto nešto nema smisla
i potrebno je objasniti ga.
05:56
If you can revealоткривају a disconnectiondiskonekcije
in someone'sНеко је worldviewпоглед на свет,
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Ako u nečijem pogledu na svet
otkrijete nepovezanost,
06:00
they'llони ће feel the need
to bridgeмост that knowledgeзнање gapјаз.
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oni će imati potrebu
da premoste taj jaz u znanju.
06:04
And onceједном you've sparkedизазвао that desireжеља,
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Kad jednom pokrenete tu želju,
06:06
it will be so much easierлакше
to startпочетак buildingзграде your ideaидеја.
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biće mnogo lakše da počnete
da gradite svoju ideju.
06:10
ThreeTri, buildизградити your ideaидеја, pieceпиеце by pieceпиеце,
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Treće, gradite svoju ideju, deo po deo,
06:13
out of conceptsконцепте that your audienceпублика
alreadyвећ understandsразуме.
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iz koncepata koje publika već razume.
06:17
You use the powerмоћ of languageЈезик
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Koristite moć jezika
06:18
to weaveткати togetherзаједно
conceptsконцепте that alreadyвећ existпостоје
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da spojite koncepte koji već postoje
06:21
in your listeners'sluљalaca mindsумови --
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u umovima vaših slušalaca -
06:23
but not your languageЈезик, theirњихова languageЈезик.
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ali ne svog jezika, njihovog jezika.
06:25
You startпочетак where they are.
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Krenite sa mesta na kom se oni nalaze.
06:27
The speakersзвучници oftenчесто forgetзаборави that manyмноги
of the termsуслови and conceptsконцепте they liveживи with
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Govornici često zaboravljaju
da su mnogi termini sa kojima žive
06:30
are completelyу потпуности unfamiliarNepoznata
to theirњихова audiencesпублике.
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potpuno nepoznati njihovoj publici.
06:33
Now, metaphorsметафоре can playигра a crucialкључно roleулога
in showingпоказивање how the piecesкомада fitфит togetherзаједно,
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Metafore mogu odigrati značajnu ulogu
u uklapanju delova slagalice,
06:38
because they revealоткривају
the desiredželjeni shapeоблик of the patternобразац,
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jer otkrivaju željeni oblik,
06:42
basedзаснован on an ideaидеја that the listenerslušalac
alreadyвећ understandsразуме.
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zasnovan na ideji
koju slušalac već razume.
06:46
For exampleпример, when JenniferJennifer KahnKahn
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Na primer, kad je Dženifer Kan
06:48
wanted to explainобјасни the incredibleневероватан
newново biotechnologyбиотехнологија calledпозвани CRISPRCRISPR,
137
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želela da objasni neverovatnu
novu biotehnologiju, CRISPR,
06:51
she said, "It's as if, for the first time,
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rekla je: „To je kao da, po prvi put,
06:54
you had a wordреч processorпроцесор to editУредити DNADNK.
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imate računar za obradu DNK.
06:57
CRISPRCRISPR allowsомогућава you to cutрез and pasteпасте
geneticгенетски informationинформације really easilyлако."
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CRISPR van omogućava da veoma lako
sečete i lepite genetske informacije.“
07:02
Now, a vividbujne explanationобјашњење like that
deliversиспоручује a satisfyingda bih zadovoljio ahaAha momentтренутак
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Tako slikovito objašnjenje
dovodi do zadovoljavajućeg „aha“ trenutka
07:06
as it snapspucketanje into placeместо in our mindsумови.
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kad klikne na svoje mesto u našem mozgu.
07:08
It's importantважно, thereforeстога,
to testтест your talk on trustedповерљив friendsпријатељи,
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Stoga je važno da svoj govor testirate
na svojim prijateljima,
07:12
and find out whichкоја partsделови
they get confusedзбуњено by.
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da otkrijete koji delovi ih zbunjuju.
07:15
FourČetiri, here'sево the finalконачни tipСавет:
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Četvrto, ovo je poslednji savet:
07:17
Make your ideaидеја worthвреди sharingдељење.
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neka vaša ideja bude vredna širenja.
07:21
By that I mean, askпитати yourselfсами the questionпитање:
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To znači da postavite sebi pitanje:
07:23
"Who does this ideaидеја benefitкористи?"
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„Kome ova ideja koristi?“
07:26
And I need you to be honestпоштен
with the answerодговор.
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Budite iskreni u svom odgovoru.
07:29
If the ideaидеја only servesслужи you
or your organizationорганизација,
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Ako ideja služi samo vama
ili vašoj organizaciji,
07:32
then, I'm sorry to say,
it's probablyвероватно not worthвреди sharingдељење.
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onda, žao mi je,
verovatno nije vredna širenja.
07:35
The audienceпублика will see right throughкроз you.
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Publika će vas prozreti.
07:37
But if you believe that the ideaидеја
has the potentialпотенцијал
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Međutim, ako verujete
da ta ideja ima potencijala
07:40
to brightenulepљa up someoneнеко else'sдруго day
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da nekome ulepša dan,
07:42
or changeпромена someoneнеко else'sдруго
perspectiveперспектива for the better
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da nekome na bolje promeni shvatanje
07:45
or inspireинспирисати someoneнеко to do
something differentlyдругачије,
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ili inspiriše nekoga
da nešto uradi drugačije,
07:48
then you have the coreјезгро ingredientsastojak
to a trulyзаиста great talk,
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onda imate ključni sastojak
za zaista dobar govor,
07:51
one that can be a giftпоклон to them
and to all of us.
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koji može biti dar svima nama.
Translated by Ivana Korom
Reviewed by Ivana Krivokuća

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Chris Anderson - TED Curator
After a long career in journalism and publishing, Chris Anderson became the curator of the TED Conference in 2002 and has developed it as a platform for identifying and disseminating ideas worth spreading.

Why you should listen

Chris Anderson is the Curator of TED, a nonprofit devoted to sharing valuable ideas, primarily through the medium of 'TED Talks' -- short talks that are offered free online to a global audience.

Chris was born in a remote village in Pakistan in 1957. He spent his early years in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan, where his parents worked as medical missionaries, and he attended an American school in the Himalayas for his early education. After boarding school in Bath, England, he went on to Oxford University, graduating in 1978 with a degree in philosophy, politics and economics.

Chris then trained as a journalist, working in newspapers and radio, including two years producing a world news service in the Seychelles Islands.

Back in the UK in 1984, Chris was captivated by the personal computer revolution and became an editor at one of the UK's early computer magazines. A year later he founded Future Publishing with a $25,000 bank loan. The new company initially focused on specialist computer publications but eventually expanded into other areas such as cycling, music, video games, technology and design, doubling in size every year for seven years. In 1994, Chris moved to the United States where he built Imagine Media, publisher of Business 2.0 magazine and creator of the popular video game users website IGN. Chris eventually merged Imagine and Future, taking the combined entity public in London in 1999, under the Future name. At its peak, it published 150 magazines and websites and employed 2,000 people.

This success allowed Chris to create a private nonprofit organization, the Sapling Foundation, with the hope of finding new ways to tackle tough global issues through media, technology, entrepreneurship and, most of all, ideas. In 2001, the foundation acquired the TED Conference, then an annual meeting of luminaries in the fields of Technology, Entertainment and Design held in Monterey, California, and Chris left Future to work full time on TED.

He expanded the conference's remit to cover all topics, including science, business and key global issues, while adding a Fellows program, which now has some 300 alumni, and the TED Prize, which grants its recipients "one wish to change the world." The TED stage has become a place for thinkers and doers from all fields to share their ideas and their work, capturing imaginations, sparking conversation and encouraging discovery along the way.

In 2006, TED experimented with posting some of its talks on the Internet. Their viral success encouraged Chris to begin positioning the organization as a global media initiative devoted to 'ideas worth spreading,' part of a new era of information dissemination using the power of online video. In June 2015, the organization posted its 2,000th talk online. The talks are free to view, and they have been translated into more than 100 languages with the help of volunteers from around the world. Viewership has grown to approximately one billion views per year.

Continuing a strategy of 'radical openness,' in 2009 Chris introduced the TEDx initiative, allowing free licenses to local organizers who wished to organize their own TED-like events. More than 8,000 such events have been held, generating an archive of 60,000 TEDx talks. And three years later, the TED-Ed program was launched, offering free educational videos and tools to students and teachers.

More profile about the speaker
Chris Anderson | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

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