Stripping for the Audience: Secrets of Great Presenters
by Randy Siegel
Published on this site: April 15th, 2005 - See
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Some say the secret to being a good presenter is to visualize the
audience naked. I say if you really want to be a great speaker,
its the speaker who must strip for the audience.
Great speakers and presenters are not afraid to bare their souls
to the audiences. They strip away their masks and illusions allowing
audiences and prospects to see them for whom they are. Audiences
walk away not only with increased knowledge but some insight into
the presenter as a person.
Whether our goal is to sell, educate, or inform every speech or
presentation has a goal, and key to reaching that goal is generating
trust. In order to trust us, people must know us, like us, and believe
we are credible.
Its no wonder so many of us are terrified to speak in front
of a group. Presenting speaks to our greatest insecurity
people may not accept us as we are.
Each person has a unique presentation style, and while some elements
work well, others do not. Regardless of the presenters skill
level, I have found most presenters can increase their likeability,
credibility, and authority by at least 25 percent by unlocking the
four-second window.
Within four seconds, most of us form an immediate impression and
then spend the next 30 minutes justifying our impression. Think
back to a blind date, first interview, or social situation. Did
you make a snap judgment as to whether or not you were going to
like him or her? Most of us do.
We do it to others, and others do it to us. Most audiences decide
whether or not they like us before we utter our first word.
For some, this four-second window is a breeze. These
rare men and women have naturally-high likeability factors,
a face, smile, or presence in which people find instantly attractive.
For most of us, however, this is not the case.
We have to earn our positive rating in an incredibly short period
of time.
Six factors contribute to first impressions:
=> gestures,
=> stance,
=> movement,
=> dress,
=> grooming,
=> stance,
=> eye contact.
Of these, dress and grooming, stance, and eye contact are most
important.
Experts abound on the subject of proper dress and grooming for
presentations, yet the best advice I found came from one of my seminar
participants. She suggested looking into the mirror and noticing
if anything stood out, and if it does, taking it off and changing
it.
One man I coached loved loud ties. While his neckwear reflected
his outgoing personality, it also distracted from his presentation.
The audience focused on his ties rather than his face, missing much
of what he had to say.
Like appearance, stance contributes to instant credibility, and
for many women, stance is a challenge.
Most women are taught at a young age to assume a dancers
pose, feet close together with one toe pointed out at a 90-degree
angle. While this stance may be feminine and pretty, it holds no
authority.
Instead, I counsel both men and women, to stand tall, feet shoulder
width and pointed outward, hands at their sides.
While it is important to gesture naturally, hands should drop to
the sides when not in use.
Stance is important in establishing credibility so dont hide
it. At no time should speakers stand behind a podium, desk, table,
or other obstacle. Great speakers allow the audiences to see all
of them physically as well as emotionally.
The eyes have been called the windows of the soul.
As such, they are one of our greatest weapons in winning audiences.
When it comes to eye contact, great speakers use a rifle instead
of a shotgun.
I coach executives to begin their presentations by standing in
silence, finding a friendly face, establishing eye contact, taking
a deep breath, and then beginning their talk. This simple tip helps
speakers become grounded and start their presentations with authority.
Many presenters talk while moving their heads from person
to person like a sprinkler system, or worse they lose all
connection with their audience by staring at one person, the
slide screen, or into space. I train presenters to pick one
person and maintain steady eye contact with that person until
they have delivered a complete thought. Intensive eye contact
can be uncomfortable, yet it is also highly effective in generating
trust.
Discomfort is a constant companion for great presenters for they
know no matter how good they think they are they can always be better.
Using appearance, stance, and eye contact, they generate instant
credibility while constantly challenging themselves to share more
of themselves with their audiences.

Randy Siegel helps men and women become high
voltage communicators by forging stronger relationships
with key constituents. To learn more about high voltage
communications and sign up for Stand in Your Power!,
newsletter visit
http://www.PowerHouseCommunications.com

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