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Put Some Snap Into
It!
The difference between a public speaking presentation that
bores you to tears and one that leaves you with a smile on your
face and thinking about that presentation is often not the
content but the style of the speaker. You can take the same
exact written talk and give it to two speakers and one will
turn that script into an exciting live event for his audience
and the other will leave that crowd cold.
Obviously your goal as to be that speaker that can really make
any presentation come alive. The first "myth" to get out of
your head then is that how well you do at creating excitement
has anything whatsoever to do with your subject matter. While
it always helps for you to be excited about the topic itself,
you can develop the skills to take any text and turn it into a
genuinely exciting public speaking event for any crowd and to
do it every time. Its just a matter of knowing how.
Much of how excited your audience will be has to do with your
own level of energy, your sense of humor and how much you are
enjoying yourself up there. This is one of the great secrets of
the really great entertainers or public speakers. If you are
having fun, your audience will have fun too. Fun is contagious.
Think of the great late night host Johnnie Carson. He always
seemed to be having a great time. And as a result the world
wanted to join him and have a great time too. You can cultivate
that personality and that attitude when you are on
stage.
To have fun during your public speaking engagement, you have to
learn to have some fun with the subject matter. This is not
always easy if the subject matter is mundane and ho hum. But if
you see that topic as boring, so will your crowd and your time
talking to them will be a tedious trial on your soul and on
theirs too. So have some fun even with how mundane the topic
is. If you join the audience in their feelings about the topic,
you and they become partners to find the excitement in this
topic.
But along with finding excitement in the topic, learn to have
fun with the audience. You can do that even before you begin to
speak on the outline at hand. Take some time to step away from
the podium and interact with the audience. Ask them questions
and learn who the vocal members of the crowd are. Find out who
the big jokers are and the ones who will have some wise cracks
to add as you speak.
These connections and spontaneous friendships will pay off as
the presentation begins. But you are doing something dangerous
there too. By energizing the crowd, you are also giving them
permission to jump in during your talk and "help you out". As
you begin to speak, put energy and excitement, humor and
personality into that text. The excitement of the crowd that
sprung into existence because you started your relationship
with them with affection and humor will feed your
presentation.
Yes, if you put this kind of snap and pop into your time in
front of a crowd, you will see feedback come back from that
audience, particularly from those wise crackers you took time
to make friends with at the start. But as scary at having that
kind of interruption is, it means your crowd is energized and
you an actually used that for your advantage. You can actually
develop the ability to "surf" these interruptions and use them
to propel your prevention forward. By teasing the crowd, asking
them questions, the funny remarks that come back will actually
be pertinent to what you have to say next. You can take your
cues from their comments and take them right back to your
outline and take the presentation forward to its
conclusion.
This kind of public speaking can be dangerous and more than a
little scary to learn to do. But because you had fun and our
audience had fun, that presentation is full of "snap" and is
100% more successful. And that makes it worth taking the risks
to learn this kind of public speaking.
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