public speaking skills
Every public speaker should be able to:
- Research
a topic – Good
speakers stick to what they know. Great speakers research what they need
to convey their message.
- Focus – Help your audience grasp
your message by focusing on your message. Stories, humour, or other
“sidebars” should connect to the core idea. Anything that doesn’t needs to
be edited out.
- Organize ideas logically – A
well-organized presentation can be absorbed with minimal mental strain.
Bridging is key.
- Employ
quotations, facts, and statistics – Don’t include these for the
sake of including them, but do use them appropriately to complement your
ideas.
- Master metaphors –
Metaphors enhance the understandability of the message in a way that
direct language often can not.
- Tell a story – Everyone loves a story.
Points wrapped up in a story are more memorable, too!
- Start strong and close stronger – The body of your presentation should be strong
too, but your audience will remember your first and last words (if,
indeed, they remember anything at all).
- Incorporate humour –
Knowing when to use humour is essential. So is developing the comedic
timing to deliver it with greatest effect.
- Vary vocal pace, tone, and volume – A
monotone voice is like fingernails on the chalkboard.
- Punctuate
words with gestures – Gestures should complement
your words in harmony. Tell them how big the fish was, and show them with
your arms.
- Utilize
3-dimensional space – Chaining yourself to the lectern limits the
energy and passion you can exhibit. Lose the notes, and lose the chain.
- Complement
words with visual aids – Visual aids should aid the message;
they should not be the message. Read slide:ology or the Presentation Zen book and adopt the techniques.
- Analyze
the audience – Deliver the message they want (or need) to hear.
- Connect with the audience – Eye
contact is only the first step. Aim to have the audience conclude “This
speaker is just like me!” The sooner, the better.
- Interact
with the audience – Ask questions (and care about the answers).
Solicit volunteers. Make your presentation a dialogue.
- Conduct a Q&A session – Not every speaking
opportunity affords a Q&A session, but understand how to lead one
productively. Use the Q&A to solidify the impression that you are an
expert, not (just) a speaker.
- Lead a
discussion – Again, not every speaking opportunity affords
time for a discussion, but know how to engage the audience productively.
- Obey
time constraints – Maybe you have 2 minutes. Maybe you have 45.
Either way, customize your presentation to fit the time allowed, and
respect your audience by not going over time.
- Craft an introduction – Set
the context and make sure the audience is ready to go, whether the
introduction is for you or for someone else.
- Exhibit
confidence and poise – These qualities are sometimes difficult for a
speaker to attain, but easy for an audience to sense.
- Handle unexpected issues smoothly –
Maybe the lights will go out. Maybe the projector is dead. Have a plan to
handle every situation.
- Be
coherent when speaking off the cuff – Impromptu speaking (before,
after, or during a presentation) leaves a lasting impression too. Doing it
well tells the audience that you are personable, and that you are an
expert who knows their stuff beyond the slides and prepared speech.
- Seek
and utilize feedback – Understand that no presentation or presenter
(yes, even you!) is perfect. Aim for continuous improvement, and
understand that the best way to improve is to solicit candid feedback from
as many people as you can.
- Listen critically and analyze other speakers –
Study the strengths and weakness of other speakers.
- Act and speak ethically – Since public speaking fears are so common, realize the tremendous power of influence that you hold. Use this power responsibly.
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