10 tips for PUBLIC SPEAKING
22/10/2012
Feeling some nervousness before giving a speech is natural and even
beneficial, but too much nervousness can be detrimental. Here are some
proven tips on how to control your butterflies and give better presentations:
1. Know your
material. Pick a topic you are interested in. Know more
about it than you include in your speech. Use humor, personal stories and
conversational language – that way you won’t easily forget what to say.
2. Practice.
Practice. Practice! Rehearse out loud with all equipment you plan
on using. Revise as necessary. Work to control filler words; Practice, pause
and breathe. Practice with a timer and allow time for the unexpected.
3. Know the
audience. Greet some of the audience members as they arrive. It’s easier to speak
to a group of friends than to strangers.
4. Know the
room. Arrive early, walk around the speaking area and practice using the
microphone and any visual aids.
5. Relax. Begin by
addressing the audience. It buys you time and calms your nerves. Pause, smile
and count to three before saying anything. ("One one-thousand, two
one-thousand, three one-thousand. Pause. Begin.) Transform nervous energy into
enthusiasm.
6. Visualize
yourself giving your speech. Imagine yourself speaking, your voice loud,
clear and confident. Visualize the audience clapping – it will boost your
confidence.
7. Realize
that people want you to succeed. Audiences want you to be interesting,
stimulating, informative and entertaining. They’re rooting for you.
8. Don’t
apologize for any nervousness or problem – the audience probably never noticed it.
9. Concentrate
on the message – not the medium. Focus your attention away from your own
anxieties and concentrate on your message and your audience.
10. Gain experience. Mainly, your speech should
represent you — as an authority and as a person. Experience builds
confidence, which is the key to effective speaking. […]
Toastmasters International. (n.d.). 10
Tips for Public Speaking. Retrieved October 22, 2012, from http://www.toastmasters.org/tips.asp