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"Giving
an Effective Speech for Class"
1.
Remember, it's called "PUBLIC" speaking, not "SELF"
speaking, so focus all your energy and attention into the message, not
yourself. In other words, lose yourself in the message to a point that
you can see and hear yourself giving your talk. As long as you are self-conscious
about how you look, sound, and come across, your message will suffer.
2.
In corporate humor, but carefully. While you're outlining your presentation,
if you think of something funny, put it in (but only if it reinforces
your point). Use anecdotes, not jokes -- leave that to the professionals.
3.
Keep it interesting. Talk about things your audience is familiar with.
Get them involved by asking them questions and getting them to participate
(but always stay in control). Use examples and stories that they can relate
to. Always try to give people a reason to listen. Which leads to my next
point...
4.
Use a lot of support for your presentation. If you're giving an informative
talk, demonstrate your points physically, visually or emotionally. If
you're giving a persuasive talk, support it with facts, statistics (not
too many), and data that might be somewhat shocking to them. Tell stories
that will bring your message alive. Use comparison and contrast, analogies
and metaphors, and anything else you can think of to get your point across.
5.
Structure your talk. Make your presentation easy to follow by telling
them how many points you will be making (no more than 3 to 5). Verbally
hold their hand through your presentation. You know your talk is well
structured when you forget a point or place, and the audience can remind
you.
6.
Keep practicing. I've given over 300 presentations (maybe more), and I
still practice and rehearse before I get on stage or even step into the
classroom. You're never to good not to practice. Know your presentation
inside out (but without memorizing it word for word -- that's a no no).
7.
Have a strong introduction that will grab the audience by the throat,
and don't let them go until you're done. That was the most important lesson
I ever learned about public speaking. Don't ever start a presentation
by saying hello or introducing yourself (save it after you've grabbed
their attention). Let the first words out of your mouth be interesting
(a story, a poem, a question, a quote, a prop, etc.). You will have the
audience eating out of your hand when you learn to master this.
8.
Explode with enthusiasm. Enthusiasm is contagious, but so is boredom.
And you won't get the audience excited about your message unless you're
excited about it first. Fall in love with your message, and get pumped
about it. The way you get excited about a presentation is to learn something
that most people don't know, but should. It's your job to share your findings
with them, knowing that the information could possibly change their lives.
Now, isn't that exciting?
9.
Keep eye contact. Don't rely on your notes, rely on your knowledge and
preparation. The more you look at your audience, the more you engage them
and bring them into your presentation (also, it's harder for them to fall
asleep during your talk). Don't stare (that will make you nervous), just
glance at the entire room.
10.
Close as strong as you opened. Review your 3 to 5 points and then close
with something they will remember: a strong quote, a strong call for action
(challenge them to do something), a poem, a story, a dramatization, etc.
Most people will only remember the beginning of you presentation and the
end, so make both memorable.
Here
are some additional tips for you:
Memorize
your introduction and your conclusion (they're the most important parts
of your presentation).
Realize that most people will be shocked by a good presentation rather
than a bad one, so you have nothing to lose.
Imagine the kind of speaker you would want to see and hear, and be that
kind of speaker.
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