Good Public Speaking
Good Public Speaking
When you think of impressive public speakers like Seth Godin, Simon Sinek, or
Gary Vaynerchuk, one thing sticks out: Their passion for their topic.
That excitement is infectious and inspiring. It’s also the best way to attract and
maintain audience attention.
Whether you want to expand your public speaking resume, or just get better at
presenting in front of clients, these tips can help you meet your goals.
But remember, even if you master all 17, the most important thing you can do is
to get fired up about your topic. Find an angle that excites you, and the rest will
come.
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17 Tips to Improve Your Public Speaking Skills
Once you’ve defined what you want your audience to take away, build your
talking points around supporting that goal. This lends itself to a more focused and
actionable speech that provides real value to your audience.
For example, let’s say a big conference has invited you to speak about how small
businesses can grow their sales organizations. Start by nailing down your
objective. If it’s getting the audience to hire you as a sales consultant, build your
speaking topic around five things preventing small sales organizations from
scaling.
Once you’ve defined your end goal, build a presentation that offers real value to
your audience, regardless of whether they pursue your product or service.
If you immediately and doggedly pitch your consulting service throughout your
presentation, you’ll probably lose your audience’s trust, and the remainder of your
presentation will lose its credibility.
Offer tips and strategies that will be fresh, useful, and insightful for your audience.
And make any business pitches subtle and at the end of your presentation.
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3) Make Slides an Aid, Not a Crutch
The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association recommends using
keywords, instead of sentences or paragraphs on your slides. This helps your
audience focus on your message. The ASHA also suggest bulleting body copy,
using punctuation sparingly, and never using more than eight words per line or
eight lines per slide.
Another rule of thumb is to make your font size double the average age of your
audience. This means the font for most of your presentations will be between 60
and 80 points.
Make sure you’re practicing your presentation in front of several groups of people.
Present to coworkers or to someone who represents your target audience. Ask for
honest, critical feedback on the good, the bad, and the ugly of your presentation.
It’s also smart to record yourself during one of your practice runs, so that you can
review areas that need work.
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5) Eat Well & Burn Cortisol
Eating a protein-packed snack before a public speaking engagement boosts your
energy, focus, and mood. But what if there were a way to decrease stress too?
Well, there is. Cortisol, also known as the "stress hormone," can interfere with
your memory and limit your ability to process complex information. This can make
it difficult to read your audience and react in the moment.
To decrease your cortisol levels, exercise one to three hours before you speak.
You’ll feel less stressed and your audience will benefit from your focus.
This is a great way to calm pre-presentation jitters, not to mention network and
recruit a few last-minute audience members into your meeting or session. Bonus
points if you find a way to incorporate those conversations into your speech.
To illustrate, suppose you talked with Laura from XYZ Sales at the coffee bar this
morning. If Laura shared that sales recruitment is a big roadblock to scaling their
sales team, include this anecdote in your presentation, along with tips on how you
would approach the situation.
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It gives your audience the chance to get used to you as well. If they’re checking
email or answering some last-minute texts, it provides a few buffer moments so
they can wrap up. This pause also sets the tone for the rest of your speech, which
should be evenly paced, effective, and purposeful.
Your audience doesn’t care. Announcing to them that you haven’t prepared or are
tired from a long flight won’t change the way your presentation is received or
remembered.
Don’t begin your presentation with an excuse. That makes the time about you,
when it should be about your audience and how you can provide value to them.
9) Be Conversational
The first 30 seconds of a speaker’s presentation tell you almost everything you
need to know about what’s next. That means you probably haven’t made it past
introducing yourself before you’ve either lost or gained the attention of your
audience.
So how do you make the most of that first few seconds? First, be conversational.
Use inflection in your voice and engage in natural, friendly body language.
Instead of staying glued to your podium, walk casually back and forth in front of
your audience. Gesture with your hands and make eye contact with individual
people in front of you.
Second, don’t memorize your content. You should understand the concepts
you’re communicating and know the overall structure of your presentation, but
don’t recite your speech word for word. You’ll seem rehearsed and less engaging.
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10) Rejoice in the First Mistake
I once had an instructor who would openly rejoice when she made her first
mistake in front of a large class. She said it took the pressure off for the
remainder of her class, so she could simply relax and teach.
While I wouldn’t recommend calling out the first mistake you make in front of your
audience -- they likely didn’t even notice -- it is something you can quickly take
note of internally.
Don’t beat yourself up about it, feel embarrassed, or let it derail your composure.
Simply acknowledge your first mistake and view it as permission to relax and
move on with your presentation.
Your audience is more likely to remember and share the stories you tell than the
stats and figures you pack your slides with. Make your presentation personal, and
remind them that you’re human.
Check out a few top TED Talks to learn how to flex your storytelling muscles. TED
Talks are driven by powerful storytelling -- which is one of the reasons they’re so
memorable. Stories also give your audience more context around your topic,
heightening their ability to relate and find value in what you have to say. Basically,
when in doubt, tell a story.
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12) Channel Nervous Energy into Positive Energy
If you’re not excited about your presentation, why would your audience be? One
way to channel excitement into your public speaking is to transform nervous
energy into positive energy.
Simon Sinek has another great insight here. After watching reporters interview
Olympic athletes, he noticed many of the athletes had similar responses when
asked if they were nervous before competing. They answered, “No, I was
excited.”
Sinek points out that they translated the body’s signals of anxiety or stress --
sweaty palms, neck tension, fast heartbeat -- as excitement. When Sinek’s
onstage and notices these same signs, he says out loud to himself, “I’m not
nervous, I’m excited!”
Another way to control the pace of your presentation is to routinely pause for
between three and five seconds. This length of pause remains conversational,
while allowing you to take a breath and refocus before moving forward. As a
bonus, it’s just long enough to get people to look up from their smartphones to
see why you’ve stopped.
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In smaller settings, repeating audience questions gives you an extra few
moments to gather your thoughts. More importantly, it ensures that you’ve
understood what the question is and are actively listening to the needs of your
audience members.
A simple technique for doing so? Mention each key point three times. Introduce
your main points in the agenda you share at the beginning, speak to each point
clearly during your presentation, and close by reviewing and restating your main
points.
When appropriate, throw in a GIF or video. But make sure it aids in your
storytelling, instead of distracting from it. A truly engaging public speaker will be
able to present impactfully without gimmicks.
If you’re tempted to add a third GIF to your presentation, take a harder look at the
quality of content you’re preparing. Could you illustrate that point better with a
thoughtful anecdote or past experience?
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17) Always End Early & Say Thanks
Whether your audience gave you five minutes of their attention or an hour, end
early and say, “Thank you.” Time is a precious commodity, and they chose to
spend a significant portion of it with you.
Be respectful of that time and always end early -- especially if you’re expecting a
longer Q&A period. If people have questions, you want to make the most of every
second before you lose them to the next session or meeting.
Public speaking is an art, and one that can take years to perfect. By following
these tips for effective public speaking, you’ll start to notice benefits immediately.
Want to continue your public speaking education? I mentioned Simon Sinek
several times during this presentation. Check out his Skillshare class
“Presentation Essentials: How to Share Ideas That Inspire Action” for more.
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