Improve Your Public Image With Better Public
Speaking
To assist you in better public speaking, no matter what
level you're currently at, we've divided our suggestions into 2
categories: public speaking preparation, and ways to better
present it.
Tips On Script Writing
Some tips on how to write a movie.
Preparation For better public speaking, the
speach must be understood, and you start that process not once
you're up there at the podium in front of your audience, but in
the public speaking preparation. Certain elements attended to
long before the pivotal moment arrives can help ensure that
your speech is received and understood by your audience.
For one, you want to be clear in your own mind about the
message or purpose of your speech. Why are you giving it?
What's the underlying point? The clearer you are with this
information, the clearer the speech will be, and the clearer,
therefore, the audience will be with your message. During
public speaking preparation, keep it simple. Stick to one key
point, if possible (or no more than several, if not), and
tailor your speech accordingly. Make sure the audience walks
away from your finished speech with, if anything, your message
in mind. To achieve that, design your speech to convey that
information in as plainspoken, clear, and concise.
Having said that, you also want your speech to be as vivid
and descriptive as possible. That means using anecdotes, humor,
examples, quotes, visual aids, and any other methods you can
derive to paint a complete picture of your message. Combining
this tip with the one above is simply a matter of sticking to
one, two, or three main ideas and then coming up with as many
diverse means to clearly and concisely convey them.
Presentation Now that you've crafted a
compelling, informative, and comprehensible speech to deliver,
it's time to make sure your audience can receive your message.
The first and most fundamental element of this is to make sure
that you enunciate your words carefully. Remember that you are
not speaking to one person directly in front of you, but
several-to-many people spread out across a wide area, whether a
conference room, an auditorium, or an outdoor arena. Be sure
that your words are being understood and you're more than
halfway to having your message understood as well. In addition
to enunciation, it's equally imperative to project. For better
public speaking, do not rely on a microphone to carry your
words for you, or you'll end up sounding like a meek, insecure,
and unprepared presenter with amplification. There are several
ways to practice and develop the ability to project, namely
abdominal breathing, speaking to the back of the room, and
speaking confidently.
Breathing and projection can be trained, but confidence must
be cultivated from within. Nothing makes a speech more
impactful than a confident delivery, and nothing makes a speech
bomb more than a lack of confidence in the delivery. If you've
spent all this time preparing, developed a clear, concise,
simple, and vivid presentation of your speech, then there's no
reason not to be confident. Having confidence in your material
can help greatly in overcoming insecurity in your ability to
present - and is not to be undervalued or underestimated.
Lastly, relax. Yes, we know - easier said than done. But
taking your time, speaking slowly, taking frequent pauses
in-between passages, breathing deeply and evenly, and leaving
your hands free will all contribute to putting your audience at
ease, building rapport between you, and allowing for better
public speaking so that your message is received and
understood.
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