1178 Articles match "Audience","Publicity","Speaking"

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Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Tags: Audience-Centered Speaking Event Planning Non-verbal Communication Public Speaking Rehearsa For my blog today, I'm linking to an article I posted recently on the Harvard Business blog site that has received a lot of comment.  0160; Add yours here, and  enjoy!  0160; [link]
 
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
As public speakers, we all have our own " voice " -- a style, a persona that is uniquely our own. Conscious focus on developing that voice serves to enhance our credibility and help us establish rapport with our audiences. One of the roles we frequently fulfill, as public speakers, is using our unique voice to become a voice for others. The "others" may be constituents, employees or those with less power and marginalized rights. As a tip of the hat to St. Patrick's Day , my own Irish heritage and Women's History Month , I'd like to salute Mary Robinson
 
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Time and again, when I ask my readers what they fear most, several mention the fear that, despite their best effort, their speech will fall flat, get no reaction or a bad reaction--that there will be a mismatch between what they see and what the audience sees. It's poignant here, because so many thousands of people looked forward to this keynote as a highlight of the interactive conference--even Gray's piece is titled, "The SXSW Keynote With Ev Williams You Had Hoped to See." His long wishlist for the talk indicates that would-be attendees came there--as most audiences do--with many
 

The Best from the Speaking Pro Central Community

I did an article years ago on the Ten Commandments of Public Speaking, Speaking, and it’s time to update it.   shall know that a speech is for the audience, not the speaker.   shall not dump information on the audience; thou shall rather seek to persuade.   0160; Here goes:  
How to Change the World A practical blog for impractical people. « The Education of a Late-Adopter Blogger | Main | Addendum to How to Get a Standing Ovation » January 18, 2006 How to Get a Standing Ovation When I started public speaking in about 1986, I was deathly afraid of public speaking--for one thing, working for the division run by Steve Jobs was
The first draft of the book is done , and to help get there I read over 50 books on public speaking. Dale Carnegie got much of it right 50 years ago in Public Speaking for success (one of the best I read - I’m surprised too). It goes like this: know your audience, be concise and practice. Many popular ones, old and new, as well as books by preachers, teachers, salesmen, infomercial stars, and professors. What did I learn?
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.
One of the goals of the book is to talk about things going wrong in public speaking. Leave your story of a public speaking disaster! To help get things started, here’s some of my own public speaking disasters: Someone yelled out that our scores were wrong, which prompted the audience to start yelling and booing Few books ever mention how often things go wrong, even for experienced speakers, and I want to make sure these stories get told. It can be something that happened to you or something you saw or heard happen to someone else.
Twittering snide, insulting remarks about your fellow committee members while they speak and marking it with #ala09 hash tag to ensure that the widest possible audience sees your comment: REALLY VERY NOT GOOD No publicly flaming speakers.” 8220;Only tweet what you would stand up and say publicly.” The latest academic research on Twitter and conferences addresses the issue of “snarky tweets” during presentations. What should be the guidelines of what is acceptable and what is not?
Audiences today expect to have a conversation with speakers, and they crave real connection with successful speakers.  0160; The best way to ensure that these good things happen during your presentations is to involve your audiences throughout.  0160; As the audience shakes itself awake, and starts wondering if it does in fact have any questions, the speaker stands there for what seems like an eternity, then gives up and concludes that no 0160; But that takes some art.  0160; How do you think about it? 
Your audience is there for what you are going to say. That’s because though you may not be comfortable in front of an audience, you can prepare good content. Its an awful feeling to be standing in front of an audience with a little voice in your head going “I’m waffling. It’s normal to feel nervous about presenting Giving your first presentation or speech is daunting.  I’ve worked with many new presenters and here’s the advice that has made the most difference to them.
What should you know about your audience? think speakers have five opportunities, at minimum, to find out what they need to know about an audience . I always take the time to ask the organizers of any conference, session or meeting at which I'm speaking what I should know about the audience, especially in reference to my topic. If it is relevant to That sea of faces, those nudging/BlackBerry-ing/distracted people, the eager fans, the strangers, your office colleagues. Who are they?
0160; Most people use it incorrectly, and it becomes a barrier between speaker and audience.  the audience to read along with them?  0160; Or, they go nuts with the animation, swoops, and flying headlines that make audiences dizzy to little purpose.  0160; Or they use cheap-looking clip art that I’ve blogged many times on how NOT to use Power Point.  0160; For example, they create word slides, really speaker notes, with many bullets of text, expecting – what? –