Challenge, Inform or Get Off The Stage - Presentation Skills and
Powerful Public Speakers
"There are two types of speakers; those that are nervous and
those that are liars." Mark Twain
Most of us put public speaking at the top of our list of things
to avoid. Then along comes that promotion or new opportunity,
and with it, new responsibilities. Among them: communicating,
powerfully and effectively in public. Before you rush to get out
of that responsibility, consider what it can do for you.
This one ability--communicating ideas powerfully and
effectively--can impact professional success more quickly and
more absolutely than nearly any other. Become an effective
communicator, and you will solidify a reputation as an effective
leader. Yet many otherwise accomplished executives never learn
to communicate well and take pains to avoid having to speak in
public at all.
That's a lot of wasted opportunity. You can't expect your ideas
to be considered or followed, much less admired, if they're not
communicated well.
Speaking to a group, even a small group that knows you, can be
an intimidating. No one has yet died in the effort. We can all
get past our fear of public speaking with practice. The
important thing is to understand the power you have, that we all
have, to communicate effectively. Here are some tips for
powerful public speaking:
--Don't hide behind charts, graphs and power point slides.
Despite the cliche, facts don't speak for themselves. Materials
can only support your communication, not substitute for it.
--Accept the "public" part of public speaking. Speeches and
presentations delivered before an audience really are about you
and your ability to connect. If you're bored, your audience will
be as well. Find the passion in your work and build your
presentation or speech around it.
--Put real effort into the question and answer period following
your speech or presentation. For many in the audience, it's
their chance to connect with you and you to them.
--Make sure your public speech or presentation isn't simply a
recitation of the facts. Your audience could get that from you
in an email. What any audience wants is your perspective. Always
provide a context for the data or information you provide.
--Never go long. Any performer knows it's best to leave them
wanting more. Make sure you have something your audience can
take home with them to think about.
--Don't forget to speak ABOUT something. Your main points should
be clearly stated and they'll be back. Before long, you'll be
wondering how you ever considered public speaking something to
avoid!
Above all, practice, practice, practice. Don't run from public
speaking opportunities--embrace them--and the power they have to
promote your professional success.
Aileen Pincus is President of The Pincus Group, an executive
communications training firm providing coaching in media
training, presentation and speech skills and crisis
communications for a wide variety of clients. She can be reached
at http://www.thepincusgroup.com.