Delivering an effective presentation to 20 or to 200 people is difficult.
Because listeners have better access to information since the internet became
commonplace, audiences expect more content from speakers today. In addition,
because of the entertainment slant of most media today, audiences want a
presentation delivered with animation, humor, and pizzazz.
If you would rather spend your time preparing your content than reading a
book on public speaking, this is an article especially for you! From my
experiences in delivering over l500 speeches during the past 20 years, here is a
quick guide to giving an effective and interesting presentation your very first
time.
Begin with something to get the attention of the audience. This might be a
startling statement, statistic, or your own story. Listeners pay close attention
when a person begins with, “Two weeks ago as I was driving to work a car pulled
out in front of me….” You could begin with a current event: “You might have read
in the paper this morning about the flood that….” A question is another way to
make people listen. “How many of you feel our society spends too much on medical
care?” might be a way to begin a presentation about curbing costs. Whatever
technique you use, when you grab the attention of the audience you are on your
way to a successful speech.
Second, be energetic in delivery. Speak with variety in your voice. Slow down
for a dramatic point and speed up to show excitement. Pause occasionally for
effect. Don’t just stand behind the lectern, but move a step away to make a
point. When you are encouraging your audience, take a step toward them. Gesture
to show how big or wide or tall or small an object is that you are describing.
Demonstrate how something works or looks or moves as you tell about it. Show
facial expression as you speak. Smile when talking about something pleasant and
let your face show other emotions as you tell about an event or activity.
Whatever your movements, they should have purpose.
Structure your speech. Don’t have more than two or three main points, and
preview in the beginning what those points will be. With each point, have two or
three pieces of support, such as examples, definitions, testimony, or
statistics. Visual aids are important when you want your audience to understand
a process or concept or understand a financial goal. Line graphs are best for
trends. Bar graphs are best for comparisons and pie graphs are best for showing
distribution of percentages.
Tie your points together with transitions. These could be signposts such as
“First,” “Second,” or "Finally." Use an internal summary by simply including the
point you just made and telling what you plan to talk about next. “Now that we
have talked about structure, let’s move on to the use of stories,” would be an
example. When you have an introduction, two or three main points with support
for each, appropriate transitions, and a conclusion, you will have your speech
organized in a way that the audience can follow you easily.
Tell your own story somewhere in the presentation--especially in a technical
presentation. Include a personal experience that connects to your speech
content, and the audience will connect with you. You want to help the audience
link emotionally with what you are talking about, and the personal experience
does that. With almost any topic you might choose, you have at least one “war
story” to relate to the topic. When you tell the story, simply start at the
beginning and move chronologically through the narrative, including answers to
the “W” questions: “Who,” What, “When,” "Why," and “Where.”
To add interest and understanding to your speech, include a visual aid. A
visual aid could be an object, a flip chart, a PowerPoint presentation, overhead
projector slides, or a dry erase board. Whatever visual you are using, make sure
everyone can see it. The best way to insure this is to put the visual where you
will be speaking, and then find the seat farthest from it and determine if you
can read the visual from that seat. Introduce the visual properly rather than
simply throwing it at your audience; explain what the visual will do before you
unveil it. Don’t allow the visual to become a silent demonstration. Keep talking
as you show the visual. You are still the main event and your visual is an aid.
Look at your audience, not your visual. When the visual is not in use, hide it
from the audience. Humans are a curious lot, tending to keep looking at the
object and losing track of the speaker—you!
If you are delivering a persuasive speech, in addition to your own stories
include testimony of experts whom the audience respects and whose views
reinforce your points. Add a key statistic when possible to show the seriousness
of what you are discussing. For example, if I were discussing the need for
improved listening to better serve your customers, I might add that although we
spend half of our communication time in listening, our listening efficiency is
only about 25%. By using stories, testimony, and statistics in your persuasive
talk, you add depth to your evidence.
Look at the audience as you speak. If it is a small audience, you can look at
each person in a short period of time. If it is a large audience, look at the
audience in small “clumps” and move from one clump to another. One way to insure
good eye contact is to look at your audience before you start to speak. Go to
the lectern and pause, smile, look at the audience, and then speak. This will
help you maintain good eye contact throughout your presentation as well as
commanding immediate attention.
One of the ways to have consistently good eye contact is not to read your
speech. Use note cards that have key words on them. The word or phrase should
trigger the thought in your mind and then you can speak it. If you are including
a quotation or complex statistics, reading from your note card actually lends
credibility. If you write out your speech you will tend to read it and lose eye
contact with the audience, as well as not being as enthusiastic in delivery as
when you speak from note cards.
Include a “wow” factor in your speech. Something in your speech should make
your audience think, “Wow!” It could be a story, a dramatic point, an unusual
statistic, or an effective visual that helps the audience understand
immediately. With a “wow” factor, you then have something to look forward to in
the speech that you know will have an impact on your audience. You’ll become a
more enthusiastic speaker because the “wow” factor will get you as well as your
audience pumped for the speech.
Consider using a touch of humor in your speech. Don’t panic at this
suggestion; you are not becoming a comedian but rather lightening up a serious
speech so that people will be more accepting and interested in your ideas. Humor
will help you to be perceived as an amiable person, and it is hard for people to
disagree or be bored if they are smiling at you. Until you have lots of
experience, keep your humor short. Perhaps inject a one-liner or a quotation.
Yogi Berra said a lot of funny things. “You can observe a lot just by watching”
for example. Tell a short embarrassing moment in your life that you might have
thought not funny at the time. Now that you can laugh at the experience, you
understand the old adage, “Humor is simply tragedy separated by time and space.”
Don’t poke fun at your audience; you should be the object of any shortcoming,
showing that you can laugh at yourself. Avoid long stories or jokes. Even
seasoned speakers know that funny stories soon become unfunny if they go on too
long. Probably the least risky use of humor is a cartoon. The cartoon is
separate from you and if people don’t laugh, you don’t feel responsible. (Be
sure to secure permission to use it.)
Finally, leave the audience with something to think about. People remember
best what you say last. You might summarize your main points, or you might
complete the statement, “What I want you to do as a result of this presentation
is....” But beyond that, make your last words a thought to ponder. For example,
I might end a speech on becoming a better speaker with “As Cicero said centuries
ago, 'The skill to do comes with the doing.'”
A more modern guide to effective public speaking was penned by some unknown
sage: "Know your stuff. Know whom you are stuffing. Know when they are stuffed."
One never becomes a “perfect” speaker; developing public speaking skills is a
life-long experience. But the points discussed here will get you started in
becoming the speaker you want to be and the speaker your audience wants to hear.
Stephen D. Boyd, Ph.D., CSP, is a professor of speech
communication at Northern Kentucky University in Highland Heights, Kentucky. He
is also a trainer in communication who presents more than 60 seminars and
workshops a year to corporations and associations. See additional articles and
resources at http://www.sboyd.com.
He can be reached at 800-727-6520 or at
info@sboyd.com.