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Illustrate, Illustrate,
Illustrate
When a speaker loses an audience, too often it is a mystery to
him. But for the audience, it is not a mystery. The simple fact
is that many speeches we listen to spend a lot of time in some
theory or idea. And we as humans have trouble focusing on an
abstract idea for very long before losing interest. This is one
of many reasons one of the central rules of public speaking is
to use lots of stories and illustrations to make sure you hold
the audience's attention.
Some speakers look down on the need of audiences to connect to
the speaker via concrete illustrations. But this is a basic
form of human communication. In fact, some of the most
brilliant speakers in the world have acknowledged that if a
speaker cannot express his ideas in concrete illustrations,
then that speaker does not have a grasp on those idea yet.
The use of stories and humor should get started as soon as the
talk begins. One of the problems that public speaking
encounters has to do with the speed of processing. Science has
shown us that the human mind can think at least 10 times faster
than it can hear. That means that for 90% of the time you are
talking to a group, their minds have time on their hands. If
you give them a concrete story to work with, the details of
that story give that excess brain power something to do.
By opening with a light hearted illustration, you capture the
minds of your audience quickly. The best kind of opening story
is a humorous one particularly if it is an anecdote from your
past. This method not only is a wonderful way to get your talk
off with a enjoyable story, it connects them to you and opens
up the speaker to the audience which causes bonding.
When selecting the perfect opening humorous
story, use two criteria to select just the right
illustration. First select a story that links to the
problem to be solved by the presentation. If the problem
is an abstract tone such as spiritual hunger or political
theory, that can be tricky. But try to get close with the
illustration, at least close enough that you can have a
transition ready to take the audience from the story to
the concept you wish to discuss first.
Secondly, connect your opening story and every illustration in
your talk to your theme. In this way every step of the way, the
illustrations reach out to the audience, rescue them from
drifting and gently bring them back to the talk and what you
want them to be thinking about at this part of your
presentation.
You can tell if your audience is drifting. Any public speaker
has looked out and seen the audience begin to lose interest in
what is being said. The eyes begin to look away from the
speaker. Often they will take interest in something in their
lap or on their person. You might see them writing but its
probably not notes from your talk. Or their heads bob or you
just see them go to sleep entirely. So when you see that
happen, your presentation has spent too much time on
theoretical ideas and you need to go back and think through a
different mix of ideas and illustrations.
A good illustration at least will keep the audience involved in
the discussion. But a great illustration will actually become
part of the presentation so you can tell the story and then
proceed to use elements of the story as part of your next
points in your conceptual talk. When that works well, you will
stop losing the audience because the concrete story serves to
anchor the rest of the presentation perfectly.
So learn the art of telling a good story. Any long time story
teller will teach us that the heart of a good story is detail.
But in a public speaking setting, a story should be brief but
easy to understand. If it has humor, that’s the best story of
them all but above all, it should have personality. And it
should help to compel the audience to connect to the talk and
understand the ideas you want them to grasp. And if that
happens and you have a stronger talk as a result, you will be
glad you followed the advice of experts in public speaking to
illustrate, illustrate, illustrate.
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