The Ten Habits of Highly Effective Speakers
by Sandra Schrift
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Published on this site: January 2004 - See
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Successful speakers do not do all the right things all the time. They often take
risks and risk bombing. But all top speakers take daily action, to move towards
their goals with many adjustments. Here are ten ways to be a highly effective
speaker.
- Have a passion for your subject(s). If you don't care about
your topic, who will? Make a list of five topics you love. Choose two and be willing
to develop a program you are willing to stay with for at least two years.
-
Be persistent in your quest to be a speaker of excellence. You must be perceived
as an expert with expertise. Demonstrate this through your life experiences, research
and the way you customize your material for each audience. You are only as good
as your last speech!
- Have the patience to succeed. Is persistence
your middle name? Don't expect to be a success over night.
Get support,
mentors, a coach to help you master your presentation(s). One speaker said, This
is a hard business to make an easy living.
- Speak from your heart.
Be authentic. Be vulnerable.
Share your mishaps and idiosyncrasies. You won't be perceived
as real until you do this. When you are truthful, your audiences
will trust what you are saying. Let your message provide
hope for your audience.
- Connect quickly with your audience. You only have 30
seconds to make your connection. So pay attention to your opening remarks. Don't
use jokes they may offend people in your audience. Do use short quotations, a
funny story that is relevant to your message, a question or two to get their attention
quickly.
- Prepare 24/7 you don't write speeches, you find them
everywhere in hotels, from family experiences, in the supermarkets and restaurants.
Retrieve them and retell them. Don't lose out on great material because you didn't
have your note pad near you. Why not invest in a mini-tape recorder and record
ideas as they occur throughout your day.
- Speak to the ways people
learn; auditory, visual and kinesthetic. Know your audience so that you can offer
the right mix. Research suggests 40% are visual, 40% are kinesthetic, and only
20% are auditory. If you don't use props or visuals, you will not reach 80% of
your audience.
Be inclusive and find ways/tools that will speak to 100% of
the people in your audience.
- Support your main points with stories
most people delineate their thoughts visually. People learn best from your personal
stories. They will also do a better job in retaining your message if you tell
them a story. Remember when you were a kid. . .you said to your parents, tell
me a story. When an adult hears your story, they are only a step away from their
own story. Become a good story teller and watch your referrals and repeat business
increase.
- Make it fun learning is directly proportional to the
amount of fun your audience is having laughter is like internal jogging. Inject
some humor along the way. The audience wants to lighten up even with serious matters.
Reminder---mature adults do not take themselves too seriously.
-
Have a reverence for the work you do. It is a privilege to be on the platform.
And with this comes an awesome responsibility to your audience. Speaking is an
art and a skill. Tap in to your creativity, your wholesomeness, your playfulness.
Live/speak from the inside out.

Sandra Schrift 13 year speaker bureau owner and now career
coach to emerging and veteran public
speakers who want to "grow" a
profitable speaking business. I also
work with business professionals and organizations who want to delivermasterful
presentations.Join my free bi-weekly Monday Morning
Mindfulness ezine www.schrift.com/monday.htm
www.schrift.com


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