You are standing in front of a room
full of potential clients. Everyone is seated on the edge of their chair. Your
introducer eloquently conveys your credentials. The room is quiet, and full of
anticipation. It is time for you to begin. You stand, knowing you must catch
and hold attention, convey confidence and share your ideas. You are
well-prepared and feel at ease. You know you have a stellar presentation,
worked out kinks in your delivery and have incorporated success strategies on
how to write and deliver a great speech.
Tips for Writing a Great
Speech
1. The first step is to ask yourself what you hope
to accomplish with your presentation. Without an outcome in mind, your speech
may be bland and even boring. Once you know what you hope to accomplish, you
can begin.
2. Decide the major "must make points" of your
presentation. Do not over pack your presentation with information. If your
speech is less than thirty minutes, do not have more than five major points you
want to convey. When you are giving a speech in an effort to get clients you
want to also do the following:
1. Inform
your audience on your subject
2. Establish yourself as an expert and
a resource
3. Encourage your audience to take action
3. Unless you are a comedian, do not open with a joke. Leave humor
to the humorists. Instead, open and close with a story - everybody loves
stories.
4. When it comes to speaking and storytelling stick
with what you know. Do not tell a story about something that is unfamiliar to
you. When telling a personal story paint pictures for the audience with your
words. Describe colorful images the audience can see in their minds.
5. Until you are an experienced confident speaker, write your speech
out completely. After writing it out completely, edit it, then go through it
again and take out any words or phrases that seem unnecessary.
6. Bring your whole speech to the podium or front of the room. Make
sure you number the pages in a large size font, so you will not mix them up.
Write a shorter outline for quick reference.
7. Regardless of
the topic, use quotes. Audiences like quotes. Use interesting sources that the
audience can relate to and refrain from quoting dead presidents.
8. Anecdotes, current event items and facts that you can reference
can add credibility and interest to your presentation.
9. Check
on pronunciation and grammar questions. Be confident that everything you say is
accurate.
10. Keep sentences short so you can breath in the
right places.
11. Consider tape recording your speech in your
own voice and playing it over and over to accelerate learning. The better you
know your speech and the more you have practiced, the more you-- and your
audience-- will enjoy it.
Tips for a Great Delivery
1. ELIMINATE UNNECESSARY SPEECH FILLERS from your communication.
Fillers are words and phrases such as "umm," "well," "it is sort-a like," "it's
kind-a like." These take away from the message you want to convey.
Some of
the words and phrases to eliminate include: "you know," "I think," "I'm sorry,"
"just," "but," "should," "like," "um," and, "a," etc.
2. USE THE
POWERFUL PAUSE. Do not be afraid to have a moment of silence between
sentences. A pause, after a thought and prefacing a response to a question
holds the attention of the listener.
3. BREATHE from the diaphragm.
Breathe deeply and often.
4. PACE YOURSELF. Do not talk too
fast or too slow.
5. PHYSICALLY POSITION YOURSELF POWERFULLY.
Be aware of your posture when you speak. Slouching, tilting your head and
crossing your arms or legs diminishes the message. Stand up straight, shoulders
down, feet firmly planted and knees unlocked.
6. PROJECT YOUR
PRESENCE.
Your voice is the herald that carries your message. Speak
from your diaphragm not your throat. Keep the sound in the low- to- medium
range. This projects authority. Speak loudly enough to be easily heard. Focus
on speaking with enthusiasm, and energy and create color with your voice.
7. GESTURES.
Do not be a statue, consider occasionally
exaggerating a gesture. Speaking from a platform is different than holding a
one on one conversation. Use your whole body when you speak.
8.
CONNECT WITH YOUR AUDIENCE.
Use a lot of eye contact. Speak directly to
individual members of the audience. Do not take your eyes off your audience or
focus on a point over their heads.
9. COMMUNICATE CONFIDENCE.
Make a conscious effort to project yourself confidently. This is as
important as the message.
10. WARM UP.
Take a few minutes
before you begin to warm up your body. Move around and do some vocal exercises
to warm up your mouth and your voice.
Pre-presentation Do' &
Don'ts
Have a glass of water near you, located in a place that can
not easily be knocked over. Do not drink ice cold water since cold water can
tighten your vocal cords. Only drink room temperature water.
Use audio
visuals only after practicing with the technology ten times.
Have a
couple of lines to say when the technology seems to be slowing down your
presentation. Have a Plan B in the event all technology fails you.
Do
not start your speech by using warm-up phrases like "thank you for that great
introduction," "gee, it is great to be here." Jump right in with your
rehearsed, opening story.
Handouts That Can Get You Clients
Always have something to give to audience participants when you
speak. Audience members will forget you when you walk out the door if they do
not have a part of you to take home with them.
o In addition to
information on the topic discussed, consider giving participants an article you
have written on the topic. This makes you look like an expert. Always have your
brochures and business cards displayed.
o Include a flyer on
your upcoming seminars or where you will be speaking next.
o
Put your business name, address and phone number on the bottom of each sheet of
paper you give your audience.
o Many speakers use an evaluation
form to ask audience members for feedback on how their presentations can be
improved. While you have to be pretty thick- skinned to do this, it can be very
helpful.
o Design a sheet asking audience members for their
contact information. Consider including qualifying questions to help you
determine if you should follow up with an individual. For example "Do you or
does your company use (fill in the blank with your product or service)?", or
"Would you be interested in a complimentary consultation to discuss (fill in
the blank with your product or service)?"
o To make sure
everyone turns in their form, hold a drawing, give away one of your products or
services.
o Consider making a special offer good only for a
certain period of time for everyone in your audience. Give each person a
customized coupon with the offer written on it. Or send them an electronic
coupon after the event.
o Some savvy professionals give
everyone in the audience a specialty item with their business information on
it, such as a pen, a pad of paper or an eraser. You will make friends with your
audience members when you give them freebies.
Start with a few of
these tips that seem right for you, then add a few more. Speaking is a skill
that can take time to develop. The more you do it, the more clients it will
bring you and, eventually, you will find that there is no place you would
rather be than in front of an audience sharing your message.
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
Caterina Rando, MA, MCC, is a business success speaker, coach
and author of the national bestseller "Learn to Power Think." She helps people
get the results they want with ease. To find out about her programs, book and
other resources, visit http://www.caterinar.com.




