I was never a huge fan of public speaking. I was always very nervous
and had this overwhelming feeling the audience was judging my every
word. I now know how to overcome my fears and deliver a memorable
presentation.
I have summarized for you the top 5 strategies I use to make sure every presentation is a showstopper.
Realize 90% of Nervousness Doesn't Even Show
The
audience usually can't see the telltale symptoms of nervousness. The
butterflies, the shaky hands or the sweaty palms. The key is for you to
not focus on them either. You need to focus on the audience. When you
do this two things will happen: 1) they will like you more, and 2)
much of the nervousness that you feel will go away.
Don't Avoid Eye-Contact.
When
we are nervous, it is a natural reaction to want to hide. When you are
standing in front of a group of people where do you hide? You can't.
So you will tend to look down or look away from your audience. If we
can't see them they can't see us, right? Wrong.
The other trick
people try is to look over the tops of their heads. The idea here is
that by looking a peoples foreheads, they will think you are looking at
them. Wrong again.
You need to look directly into people's eyes
with kindness. Create a rapport with the audience through your visual
contact. If anyone smiles when you look at him or her, smile back.
This will make you, and the audience, feel more at ease and will make
your presentation more genuine.
Identify three people in the
audience whom you want to speak to: One on your left, one in front of
you and one on your right. Deliver your speech to these three people.
Look at each one for about 4-5 seconds and "switch target" to the next
person. Don't maintain eye contact for too long. This will create an
uncomfortable situation. You don't want to creep people out.
By
using this technique, it will give the impression to the entire audience
that you are making eye contact, because you are sweeping the room with
your glances.
Don't Apologize.
Never start a presentation with an apology. By
starting a presentation with an apology for your nervousness or for
having a cold, you are drawing attention to something the audience may
not have noticed. You are also announcing to the audience, "the
presentation you are about to receive is less than you deserve, but
please don't blame me."
Avoid Rushing Monotone Voice.
A
fast paced monotone speech is a sure-fire way to make your audience feel
unimportant. It will also cause them to lose focus and become bored.
How many lectures did you sit through in school listening to a monotone
professor drone on about whatever subject he was teaching? How much of
those lectures did you actually remember?
You don't want to subject your audience to this same torture and you want them to remember what you talked about.
You
can easily avoid monotone messages. Before saying a word think about
the value of your message. Think about the aspects that create
passionate feelings. Think about speaking clearly with compassion.
Smile. Tell yourself a joke. Take a huge confidence breath.
Use
eye-contact, positively say "you," and flow with the message. If you do,
you'll hear, "I felt like you were speaking specifically to me." That's
one of the best compliments you can get. And it proves that you're
speaking TO not AT the audience.
Limit your talk to a few key points.
Narrow
down your topic to either one key point for a short talk, or three key
points for a longer talk (a talk longer than 30-minutes). Ask yourself,
"If my audience only remembered one thing from my talk, what would be
the most important thing for them to remember?" The more points your
presentation has, the less focus the audience will have on each
individual point. Once you have your key points, then create your
PowerPoint slides.
If you remember these five key points, you will be sure to knock-em dead
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar
Pengunjung yang baik selalu meninggalkan komentar :)