103 Articles match "Eye Contact","Public Speaking"

The Latest from the Speaking Pro Central Community

Saturday, March 13, 2010
Remember most of the skills needed to be a great presenter or speaker work whether you are speaking to 1 person or 1000! Engage with confident eye contact Tags: Presentation Skills Public Speaking Sales Techniques. 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 presenting will help you sell much better face to face.
 
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. I had a discussion about this with colleague Frank Blanchard , who watched me lead a workshop for scientists on communicating science to public audiences. Let me tell you why. Which one of those opening lines would you have chosen, if you were giving a speech or presentation?
 
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Public Speaking Tips from my Dog Balou By Joey Asher, President Speechworks 0160;  And if he could only talk and write on a flip chart, I’m sure he’d be a great public speaker. Like Balou, great public speakers understand that you can overcome mistakes with connection.  My dog Balou is a 60-pound, black-lab mix that we adopted at a PetSmart rescue day last year in Sandy Springs, Ga.   That’s because he understands how to connect with people better than most humans.
 

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.
Timing in public speaking is one of the most important aspects of humor and NO ZZZZZs speaking. Jack Benny said, 'When you are speaking, timing is not so much knowing when to speak, but knowing when to pause.' Jack didn't speak a word for an extended period of time. Not only is timing involved in an individual piece of humor, it is also involved in the placement of that piece of humor in the overall presentation. Timing is also involved in spontaneous reactions to 'expected' unexpected developments during the presentation.
Boing Boing Home Gadgets TV Boing Boing Offworld Suggest a Link Archives Subscribe Mark Cory David Xeni John Moderation Policy Excellent public speaking advice Posted by Cory Doctorow , March 8, 2009 4:01 AM | permalink The inestimable Duncan Davidson, photographer laureate of the OReilly tech conferences, has distilled his experiences watching thousands of speakers on thousands of stages into a pithy, useful article about how to be a better
Many people think that this type of visualization can help you not only speak better but also help reduce your fear of public speaking. It may make you feel good at the time, but the scientific evidence doesn’t support the belief that it will help you achieve your best performance or reduce your fear of public speaking. But there are three drawbacks with this type of visualization for reducing But there are other types of visualization that can help you in both these areas. Visualization for best performance
Grand Canyon University Top Online Universities Articles Best Online University Accredited Online University Top Online University more... 101 YouTube Videos to Teach You the Art of Public Speaking By L. Fabry With the internet giving users the tools to instantly and permanently post videos, public speakers have to be more careful than ever. Online University Reviews Search top online university reviews, ratings and rankings of accredited top online universities to find the best online university for you. Online University Degree Finder University Reviews American Intercontinental University reviews American University reviews Argosy University reviews Ashland University reviews Ashworth University reviews Aspen University reviews Bellevue University reviews Boston University reviews Capella University reviews Colorado Technical University reviews Cornell
And if he could only talk and write on a flip chart, I’m sure he’d be a great public speaker. Like Balou, great public speakers understand that you can overcome mistakes with connection.  They know that if they connect with the audience with energy, eye contact and stories, all will be forgiven. My dog Balou is a 60-pound, black-lab mix that we adopted at a PetSmart rescue day last year in Sandy Springs.   That’s because he understands how to connect with people better than most humans.
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. 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 Yet for many speakers, it's tough to focus on the audience. Why?
0160; Pause before you start to speak – Wait 3 seconds, making eye contact with the audience, before you start speaking.  0160; So know your material well enough that you can truly focus on the audience when you’re speaking.  Tags: Audience-Centered Speaking Authenticity Non-verbal Communication Public Speaking Rehearsal Speech Writing Storytelling Visual Aid 1.  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