Posts Tagged ‘Public Speaking Audience’

Public Speaking – An Audience Centered Approach

Sunday, March 21st, 2010
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First of all, if you aren’t already approaching your public speaking engagements as audienced centered, you are a boring public speaker.(For more help, Click Here! )

Sorry to be harsh, but connecting with your audience as a public speaker needs to be your number one priority. People need to know that you are interested in them before they will be interested in you.

The best way to do do this is to keep eye contact with them as much as possible. As you say your speech, look around the room, always scanning. Look at people’s faces, but not at any one person’s for too long, because that can make people feel uncomfortable. This means that you will have to memorize your speech, which is more work, but will also make you more comfortable when you are up in front. Even if you have your speech perfectly memorized, still bring a copy up with you, just in case.

Be Funny! I don’t mean that you have to be a standup comedian up there, but if you have a small joke about the subject matter that you are speaking about at the start of your speech, people will listen to the rest of your speech more intently. Self-depreciating humour is excellent to break the ice. Everyone will see that you do not take yourself too seriously. As well, if you make a mistake in your speech, laugh, or at least smile. This will also put people at ease.

Repeat Yourself! Studies have shown that people only remember about 10% of what they here in a speech fifteen minutes later. The more you repeat your main points, the more likely it is for your audience to remember it. Don’t say the exact words over again, but continue to push your main idea throughout the speech.

Those are my tips for making an audience feel that they are the reason that you are speaking. This is just one facet of public speaking, although it is an important one.

It’s really too bad that our education system doesn’t spend more time on teaching public speaking. It is an integral skill for everyone, whether you are a high-powered CEO talking to board members or a fry-cook asking your boss for a raise. The skill set is the same. You need to be clear, confident and concise. I really recommend learning all you can about the art of public speaking and practising as much as possible.

Remember, no one is a natural at public speaking. If someone looks like they are, it is because they practise and have been taught well. To learn more about public speaking for yourself, I recommend that you Click Here! and get the jump on everyone else.

You’ll also be the life of the party.

Jared loves public speaking.

Public Speaking – Care About Your Audience

Saturday, March 13th, 2010
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The next time you’re tasked with giving a presentation, forget getting it right! Think about it. You do your best to prepare for a presentation you must deliver internally or externally. You’ve created a myriad of Power Point slides and have practiced each and every word over and over. You get up in front of the group to present and your become weak in the knees, you begin to sweat and your voice seems to have dropped to a whisper. What happened? Public speaking ranks as the number 1 fear of the human being. We already know this. But, what else do we know? Every presentation is made up of 3 components. We call them the 3V’s.

1. Visual 2. Vocal 3. Verbal

These components together convey the total believability of the message you are delivering. Let’s define them. The Visual component is everything you see or don’t see. It included movements that begin with the way you get out of your chair and how you return to it. It included how you are dressed, how you stand, walk, gesture and appear in front of the audience. It included any visual aids you use as well. The Vocal component includes not what you say but HOW you say it. It compromises the tone of your voice, the volume at which you speak, the rate at which you speak and the pauses you include or don’t include in your material. The Verbal component is comprised of the actual words or verbiage that you say. The words that you spent so much time writing and preparing and that are probably on the page you have in front of you to read.

Unless you are on the phone and have no visual appearance to the audience, your presentation will have these 3 components. They are the tools you have to deliver 100% impact and believability to your audience.

Now, we also know something else very important. Each of these 3 components has a completely different weight in the overall 100% believability of your message. They are astonishing!

The weight of each component follows:

VISUAL 60% VOCAL 30% VERBAL 10%

Surprised? These numbers are absolutely critical to your delivery of an exceptional presentation. It means that your visual appearance and how you say what you say matter 9X more than simply the word you speak. No wonder politicians with great poise, charisma and a convincing tone get elected so often!

The problem remains that we invest our energy in getting all the words and sentences right without paying attention to our skills in the preparation and delivery. This simply can and does not work based upon how we know human beings take in and digest information. We must follow the rules of the 3 V’s to deliver a presentation that has impact. Yes, it is work for us as a speaker, but there is a payoff.

An old, wise and very seasoned speaking coach once conveyed one of the most important messages I have ever heard on delivering presentations. This has been some of the most valuable advice I have ever received on the topic. I will share that advice with you now:

“The audience can never and will never be more excited about the presentation than the presenter.”

If you expect the folks sitting in front of you to stay with you and take an interest in your material, then you best heed the rules of thumb we are discussing here. I didn’t invent them. No one did! We just must deal with them as a presenter to deliver excellence. Most presenters want to go up in front of the audience and simply do what they feel most comfortable doing and deliver their own way. The audience pays with disinterest and boredom. You must deliver an audience centered presentation. The presentation is after all for them isn’t it? If it doesn’t work for the audience, then you are wasting their time. And time is something no one seems to have a lot of these days. You can’t change the rules. But, you can change the way you deliver your material. Practice these skills by taking a presentations skills course to drastically improve your effectiveness. It will be one of the best things you have done for yourself both personally and professionally!

About the Author

With more than 20 years experience in corporate turnaround environments, John Males brings expertise to clients in the areas of management, sales and negotiations. His customers include some of the world’s most successful firms and recognized brands. John can be reached at info@fathomtraining.com or http://www.fathomtraining.com

Public Speaking Tips – How to Get a Great Response from Your Audience

Friday, February 26th, 2010
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I’m sure you know that the fear of public speaking is one of the strongest fears that people have. The truth is that it’s not the speaking that is the source of the fear, people speak everyday. The fear comes from the perception that the audience is judging the speaker. The true fear is the fear of a bad audience response.

You can ensure that you will get a good audience response every time by following a simple five step formula.

Step 1: Visualize a Successful Audience Response

A large percentage of your behavior is under the control of your subconscious mind. You subconscious mind is strongly influenced by your expectations. For this reason you should spend some time imagining a hearty applause at the end of your talk. You could also visualize happy, interested faces throughout the talk. This is the best way to set that expectation in your favor.

Step 2: Be Yourself

You can always tell a speaker who has been trained by one of the (unnamed) speaking groups. They have a rigid formula. They start their talk with a joke and so on. It is stiff and mechanical and rarely works well.

You don’t need a rigid formula like that. Just be yourself. If you are a funny person then a joke will pop out at an appropriate time and it will be funny. If that is not your nature then you don’t need to tell a joke. If you just be yourself then you don’t have to remember any mechanical formula because you have already been yourself for years.

Make sure that your talk contains no more than five key points and if the talk is a long one then you can further break those points down into no more than five sub-points per key point. You put those points down on a card (or five cards in the case of the long talk) and then you talk off the top of your head on each point. If you have prepared your topic well then you will know the material and it will flow naturally.

Step 3: Engage The Audience By Speaking To Them.

Treat the talk like a one on one conversation with a bunch of different individuals. Make eye contact with the most positive looking people in the audience and make sure that you do this with people in various parts of the room. As more people become interested make eye contact with them as well. They then feel like you are speaking to them.

Step 4: Use Everyday Words and Everyday Examples.

Use everyday words and everyday experiences to explain your points and the audience will follow you more easily.

If I am going to give a talk on a topic I haven’t spoken on before then I practice the talk while I’m driving around in the car. I do exactly as outlined in this article and talk off the top of my head on each point but I am listening to myself to make sure that the language I use is simple and easy to follow. I will do this as often as I can before I actually have to give the talk so that when I am on the platform the talk flows easily and the right words automatically come out.

Step 5: Be Friendly.

If you were having a social chat with your friends then you would have a friendly demeanor and you would naturally smile from time to time. Treat your audience as if they are your friends and you will find that you will naturally act in a friendly way toward them. When you smile people are more likely to smile at you. Friendliness attracts friendliness.

Try this simple five point system at your next talk and you will find that the audience will love you.

James Delrojo would like to help you by giving you his ebook “Unleash the Success Power of Your Mind” (valued at $27) completely FREE. Go to http://www.YourSuccessMind.com

 

James Delrojo would like to help you by giving you his ebook “Unleash the Success Power of Your Mind” (valued at $27) completely FREE. Go to http://www.YourSuccessMind.com

Public Speaking Audience – Effectively Delivering Your Message

Friday, January 29th, 2010
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Whether you’re preaching a sermon, trying to sell something or wanting to nail down that presentation, delivery is everything. The best way to successfully deliver any message is to keep it fresh, keep it short, keep it simple and keep it fun.

When I started developing my first slide show years ago, I paused to reflect on what was right or wrong with most presentations. Placing one slide up on the screen and talking for an hour was something I didn’t want to do. I had seen that same mistake made over and over in high school and college. The only things more boring then bad slide presentations are chalk talks and object lessons.

People new to speaking often depend on gimmicks. They often feel more comfortable using chalk board, an overhead projector, audience giveaways or something they can hold in their hand or place on a lectern for people to focus on. While these kinds of things can be useful in some cases, they can also be a distraction. A professional Speaker should never create a gap between themselves and their audience. You can steer clear of that pitfall by limiting the use of gimmicks and avoiding topic saturation.

The worst classroom nightmare that can happen to a junior or senior high school student is to end up with a teacher fresh out of college. They are easy to spot because of a misplaced passion to teach everything they have ever learned in one semester and burn up more chalk then a cheap ice cream company. Saying too much about any topic is as bad as not saying enough. An overuse of presentation graphics and technology detracts from your subject.

While tools like PowerPoint are a blessing to Speakers who were once chained to cumbersome and often unreliable slide projectors, they are not a substitute for content. Content will always be king. Editing content is an art form that must be learned through experience. Like many Speakers, most of my early gigs were for community groups, service organizations and clubs. They were, needless to say, unpaid. However, those engagements were excellent proving grounds for my material and provided good opportunities for me to sharpen my speaking skills.

The best way to understand what’s right or wrong with a presentation is audience reaction. No matter how much you know about any topic or how passionately you present it, the audience will decide whether or not your presentation deserves their attention. Getting that attention means editing and presenting your content to suit them.

You can grab on to your audience by focusing in on the most interesting aspects of any topic. Let’s say your topic is CORN. Most people are not going to care about how many tons of it are produced by farmers each year or what it takes to get it to market. They have already seen that on the Discovery Channel ten times over. Tell them what they don’t know about the crop. Focus in on unusual uses, unique growing methods and uncommon processing procedures. Inform your audience by entertaining them.

Maintaining audience interest means speaking WITH them, not AT them. An audience will judge you by the first twenty words that come out of your mouth. This doesn’t mean that you have to begin with a joke or story, it just means you have to start with sincerity. Say what you feel, not what you know and NEVER reintroduce yourself. During the first five minutes of your presentation, you will either gain or lose your audience. Begin with the WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE and WHY of your topic. Those old journalistic building blocks serve professional Speakers well.

If content is king, comfort rules! You cannot successfully deliver your message to a room full of uncomfortable people. Your audience should be comfortable in every way imaginable. More then a few event planners have felt my wrath when I found horrific conditions present at various Speaking venues. I learned, early on, to verify any and all essential equipment and set-ups the day before my arrival. Arriving at least two hours before my audience on the day of a presentation was also important. That allowed time for any quick fixes.

Every member of your audience must be able to clearly see you, hear you and view any screen or monitor comfortably. If seating is portable, rows should be kept short. People like the ability to come and go as needed. Chilled water must always be available. A good listener is a comfortable listener.

You cannot get your message across if no one understands what you are talking about. Speakers often justify boring presentations by claiming that listeners will not appreciate the topic if they are not given the ‘big picture.’ These are Speakers who imagine an audience filled with Intellectuals or Professionals who appreciate the highbrow approach and hang on their every word. Anyone who has ever attended an average Financial Planning or Real Estate Investment seminar knows how tragic and ineffectual this kind of presentation can be.

If some Speakers put too much into a presentation, others depend on fluff and sideshows leaving their audience with nothing but a momentary high to take home. There is a big difference between a coaching session and public speaking. Coaches put on a show and depend as much on audience participation as they do on hype to get a point across. Coaches create an event and motivate participants, while professional Speakers deliver a message and enlighten their audiences.

Most Speakers I have met live on credentials. They write their own introductions and hope to impress an audience with all kinds of educational and professional accomplishments. Few live up to their resumes. That’s because the focus is on them, not their message. With the possible exception of personality cults or celebrities, most people come out to hear the MESSAGE and not the Messenger. Given that, your delivery of that MESSAGE had better be good!

Let’s revisit the essentials. Keep your presentation FRESH, keep it SHORT, keep it SIMPLE and make it FUN. This is a delicate balancing act. While you never want people to feel cheated because you didn’t say enough, it’s no better to say so much that they end up with a headache from trying to take it all in. Likewise, you do not want them to perceive you as a novice because you over-simplified things, depended on gimmicks, told too many jokes or replaced popular material with new stuff just to keep it crisp.

Every professional Speaker must balance content, technique, technology and audience satisfaction. It’s a comfort zone that you reach through trial and error. You’ll know you are there when audiences accept, enjoy and appreciate your message.

Author: Bill Knell Author’s Email: billknell@cox.net Author’s Website: http://www.billknell.com Terms To Use Article: Permission is granted to use this article for free online or in print. Please add a link to or print my website address: http://www.billknell.com

Public Speaking – How to Keep Your Audience’s Attention

Thursday, January 21st, 2010
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There are four essential elements that you need to master if you are ever going to be a successful public speaker and fully engage your audience.

Eye Contact:
Over 80% of your impact is going straight into your audiences eyes…so look at them…not the floor or the walls or the ceiling or at your visual aids…look at the people. Spread your eye contact evenly throughout the room. Avoid looking at anyone for two long. You can get into all sorts of emotional bother if you stare someone in the eyes for too long! And random the eye contact. Don’t sweep the room like a lighthouse. Your audience will soon get into your rhythm and play games anticipating your next visit! A golden rule is, if your mouth is working you should be looking at your audience. If you have to look away for any reason (to get a drink of water for example or to write on a flip chart) stop talking and only allow your mouth to start working again when you are facing your audience.

Notes:
Don’t over script your talks and don’t hold your notes. If you are holding your notes you will continuously glance down at them, even when you don’t need to, and thus lose eye contact with your audience.If you hold your notes there is a danger that you will read them and that the language you use will be stilted and that all of the emotion will go out of your voice. You will certainly stifle your gestures. Just use keywords or pictures on a piece of card to prompt you. Write big, use colour and put your notes on a table at the side of your presenting area. You can then go over and have a look at them whenever you need to. You are the expert on the subject you are talking about. That’s why it’s you who is giving the talk. If you can’t manage without copious notes, what chance does your audience have?

Humour:
Presentations do not have to be totally serious. In fact, it’s a big mistake if they are. Inject some humour. Provide a contrast to your serious messages. Show that you will be an OK person to work with…that you have more than one side to your personality. Audiences need a release from the formality of a business presentation. Think of the times that you have been in an audience and how you felt when there was an opportunity to laugh. You felt refreshed, ready for the next bit. You don’t need to be the wittiest person on Earth. Just take every opportunity possible to ‘lighten-up’ your talk. The sort of humour that gets a laugh in a business presentation would rarely be funny anywhere else. Observe other good presenters to see what I mean. Do not tell jokes. They usually seem out of place and can destroy your credibility.

Stories, Examples and Anecdotes:
The most powerful device available to a presenter and one that cannot be overused. Stories etc. bring a presentation to life, make it interesting, make it memorable. They make abstract concepts real. Our experience is that you should surround the message that is in your story with as much imagery as you can. Really go to town on the story. Tell us about the people, the weather, the buildings, anything to bring the story to life. What happens, if you include this apparently irrelevant material, is that your audience will understand your message more easily and, perhaps, more importantly, they will remember it for longer. What happens is that people build up a vivid mental picture in glorious Technicolor as you are speaking and it is that picture they will remember and thus the point you made. So try starting your stories with a phrase like, ‘It was a cold rainy day in February, the wind was howling, the dogs were barking…’ rather than just telling the story without the atmosphere.

These four elements will breath life into your presentations. The audience will see you as someone who is confident, engaging and interested in them.

Bob Malloney, a soft skills trainer for over 20 years, can help you to make a real difference to your working life, all from the comfort and convenience of your PC. Streaming video courses that replicate instructor-led training in Personal Organisation, Presentation Skills, Relationship Selling and Negotiating Skills. Register now for a free, no obligation 7-day trial at http://www.videocoaching.tv

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