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Chris
Witt, an executive speech coach based in San Diego, works with
executives who want to speak like leaders and with scientists,
engineers, and programmers who want to improve their
presentation and communication skills.
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Speaking Trends for 2007
Here are the trends I've noticed as I've observed
effective speakers and contemporary presentations.
- The IN-AND-OUT Speech
In-N-Out Burger, a fast food chain in the
Western United States
, attracts customers with its limited menu of hamburgers
and french fries made to order. The idea is that
people can get what they want fast and get on with their
busy days. Effective speeches and presentations are like
that. When you speak, don’t offer a wide range of
options or added extras. Keep your remarks focused,
purposeful, and brief. Give people what they need in as
little time and with as few words as necessary.
- Entertainment Rules
You don’t have to dazzle your audience with
your brilliance or amuse them with your wit. But you do
have to entertain them, because if you bore them, you’ll
lose them. To entertain means to hold the attention of, to
extend hospitality toward, or to mull over. That’s what
a good speech does. It engages the audience’s attention,
it is warm and welcoming, and it leaves the audience with
something to think about.
- Ideas Trump Information
The more facts and data you try to convey,
the less your audience will absorb. They’ve already hit
their saturation point. What they want is a way to
understand all the information that’s already at their
fingertips. They want ideas that pull it all together and
make it meaningful. And most of all, they want ideas that
will improve their lives. Use information to illustrate
and substantiate your ideas. Use ideas to win your
audience’s hearts and minds.
- Speak Like a Leader
As you rise in an organization or gain more
authority, you have to change the way you speak. As a
leader your goal is no longer to convey information, as if
you were conducting a seminar or a technical briefing. As
a leader, your goal is to form your audience’s sense of
identity, to shape the way they see things, and to
motivate them to act. See "How Leaders Speak."
- Upfront and Personal
Audiences have long ago lost their fascination with
PowerPoint. They don’t want to look at one more list of
bullet points or an endless succession of charts and
graphs and cheesy graphics. When you speak, even if you
need to use PowerPoint, put yourself in a place that
demands the audience’s attention. Keep them looking at
you, listening to you, interacting with you. Use your
slides as a support, something you refer to now and then
to illustrate what you mean.
The Witt Communications Newsletter contains advice for
improving your ability to present yourself and your ideas in
a way that wins people's cooperation. It comes out once a
month. Subscribe here.
For information about how Chris Witt can help you become a more
powerful speaker, contact
us.
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