121 Articles match "Audience","Eye Contact","Speaking"

The Latest from the Speaking Pro Central Community

Thursday, March 18, 2010
As she does so, she sees and makes eye contact with a large crowd, and gestures to make them feel included. Her engagement with the audience: Watch for the pop quiz, which involves the audience in demonstrating research findings on sleep deprivation. Related posts: Extemporaneous speaking: When you need to wing it Are you a fan of The Eloquent Woman on Facebook ? Ashley Merryman: On Parenting from PopTech on Vimeo . With a generous hat tip to David Murray of Vital Speeches of the Day for pointing me here , check out this Ashley Merryman
 
Saturday, March 13, 2010
You want your audience to do something as a result of your presentation.  Who is your customer(audience) What features of your product or message can you turn into relevant benefits for the audience The answers to these questions will allow you to develop an effective and tailored sales proposition for your audience which you can then bring to life with great presentation In my book, presentation skills and selling skills go hand and hand.   The principles of effective selling will help you to produce powerful persuasive presentation and the principles of great
 
Thursday, March 4, 2010
I'm so glad you all asked me to speak to you today, because I think I may have some insights you might find useful about my experiences as a woman in our industry. Being a woman in our industry is like being a vacuum cleaner: It sucks. Which one do you find more compelling, as an audience member? Respectful and qualified won't help Let me tell you why. Which one of those opening lines would you have chosen, if you were giving a speech or presentation?
 

The Best from the Speaking Pro Central Community

Even a newbie at public speaking knows they should make eye contact. But the term eye contact is rather vague. It can infer just making fleeting “contact” with a person then moving on. Don’t make eye contact – make “eye connection”.  Eye connection means spending time with each person so that person feels like you’re just talking to them. Eye connection has two major benefits:
After Debbie Friez's guest post on body language last month , these commenters wonder whether the eyes have it--or not. Here's what they wondered: In terms of body language, I would also love to know more about eye contact and what it communicates ...Eye Eye contact is not super-comfortable for me, but I'm afraid it makes me look evasive or dishonest (when I'm not at all). I often wonder how much eye contact is passable, professionally.
As a presenter, I feed off the energy of the audience. used to think that the audience determined the energy in the room, but after applying some of Jerry Weissman’s principles, I learned the presenter has more control over the room than I previously thought. At first, I thought it was just a “cooler” audience than usual (which it was) but I could tell that the way I was presenting was having an effect on their energy level as well. I There was good energy at my Web2.0Expo presentation.
0160; Lose the Power Point – when you put up Power Point slides you ask the audience to look at 2 – or 3 – things at once: you, your slides, perhaps a printout of your slides. 0160;  Talk from the audience’s point of view – a common mistake presenters make is to explain an idea the way they learned it.  0160; But your history is not inherently interesting to an audience.  1.  That’s distracting.
So the critical step to avoid making hecklers out of people in your audience is to listen. It will probably feel far too long for you, and you may even see some people in the audience getting restless, but this is the most effective preventative method to stop them continuing to heckle. If you interrupt them the first time they try and speak, they’ll be like a jack-in-the-box for the rest of your session. Most hecklers are made, not born. If people don’t feel listened to they will turn into hecklers.
TED, the technology/education/design conference, hires a photographer to capture its dynamic speakers, and James Duncan Davidson offers this "dear speakers" essay on everything from taking off your name tag to how to move effectively around the speaking space. Since some of our readers recently asked questions about eye contact and connecting with the audience, take a look at his advice on where to look. He says eye contact will: ...make make them feel like you are addressing them.
Here's Stephanie Benoit talking about eye contact, her second priority for stepping up her speaking. Eye contact's basic and essential for good speaking: You can't succeed without it. Yet for many speakers, it's tough to focus on the audience. Why? Eye contact: May distract you. Means you have to confront your audience, directly. May show you an awkward or awful reaction. May give away what you're thinking or forgetting. In my experience,all of those are valid concerns--but no reason to stop making eye contact!
Can eye contact trip you up? Absolutely--and you're less likely to notice it than is your audience. This week, my video--at the end of this post--is responding to Stephanie's #2 coaching priority and covers these aspects of how eye contact issues can work against you: If your eyes signal that your talk's off-track: Those quick, inadvertent looks to one side or the other (or up and to angle) happen at the same points that you might otherwise use a verbal "um" -- the points where you've forgotten where you are heading or what words come Here's a picture of a very brief visual um from Stephanie's video of yesterday.)
When you’re at an event where several people speak, you’ll notice that some people sprinkle their talk with filler words, especially “uh.” 8221; By contrast, those who speak without filler words sound polished and eloquent. I’ve noticed that educators seem to think that they don’t do public speaking, but they do! Do you strive to look, sound, and perform your best when you present? Say good-by to filler words
But comparing them to the Karaoke singers, you really got a strong sense of the importance of connection with the audience. Even the best Karaoke singers had no connection with the audience. For them, it was all about the audience. They were connecting with the audience from the start, Last Friday night, I enjoyed the music scene in Nashville and went to both a Karaoke Bar and a blues bar.   While the Karaoke bar was an interesting novelty, I left after about 30 minutes.