On-Site Public Speaking Training – Presentation Training: can be designed to the needs of your company or organization and can be delivered on-site at a time and location of your choice. If you have any questions please call or email us with any additional questions you may have. Contact us.
Public Speaking Seminars
The Art of Public
Speaking Seminars
Our Public Speaking training seminars are designed for both the
inexperienced presenter or as a refresher for more experienced members
of your company or organization. Our public speaking training seminars (seminar) are offered in
most major cities across the United States and Canada. All public
speaking skills
training classes are small which assures each training seminar participant that they will be allotted an extensive amount of time with each of the two senior level public speaking seminar administrators.
Our public speaking training seminars (presentation training) will eliminate all participants fears or inexperience in public speaking and dramatically improve public speaking skills whether you are persuading, educating, or informing. Our highly interactive public speaking seminars (seminar) focus on professional business communication including preparation, structure, delivery, and strategy, use of visual aids, and handling tough questions & answers. Contact us today by phone at 713-627-7700 or via email: service@publicspeakingtraining.net, Ask for our Public Speaking Seminar Customer Service Specialist.
Public Speaking Skills Training: 10 Public Speaking Course Tips to Improve Your Public Speaking Skills
Here are 10 tips to improve your public speaking skills, whether you
are presenting at work, giving a toast at a wedding or receiving an
award.
1. Have a Message
What is the one thing that you want the audience to remember from your
presentation? Put it into one sentence and you have your message - the
whole point. Say it clearly and repeat it so the audience remembers it.
And make sure that every example, story and statistic relates to it.
2. Focus on Your Audience
Why should the audience care about what you are saying? Think about your
message from the audience's point of view and then target your public
speaking presentation to their needs. Remember, it's not all about you -
it's about them.
3. Organize Your Material
One of the easiest ways to improve your presentation/public speaking
skills is to organize your material clearly. Your public speaking
presentation should have an introduction, body and conclusion. The body,
or main part of your public speaking presentation, should consist of
related material arranged according to some organizational principle,
such as a number of points, chronology, pros and cons, etc. Be sure to
have a clear transition from one section of the body to the next.
4. Slides May Not Be Necessary
Too many presentations are full of crowded, hard-to-read slides with too
much disorganized information thrown onto them. Before you create
slides, think about whether they're really necessary. How will slides
make your public speaking presentation better? You are the presentation
and the slides are just the visual aid.
5. Watch Your Time
One of my clients was scheduled to speak at a retirement dinner for a
colleague. The first speaker went over his allotted time limit by twenty
minutes, which bored the audience and left my client with very little
time to present. Never go over your time limit. No one will complain if
you finish a few minutes early but things go downhill very fast once you
go one minute beyond your time limit.
6. Make Eye Contact
When you're speaking, make eye contact with everyone in the audience -
or if it's a very large group, with all sections of the audience. It
helps you connect to the audience, engage them and gauge their reaction.
Hold eye contact for three to give seconds and then move onto another
person.
7. Use Non-Verbals
Non-verbal communication includes elements such as facial expression,
voice, eye contact, gestures, posture and movement. The key is for your
non-verbal’s to match the message you are conveying or it will confuse
the audience and distract from your message. So if you want to convey a
message with confidence, stand up straight with your shoulders back and
your weight evenly distribute on both feet, smile, make eye contact with
the audience and speak in a loud, clear voice.
8. Smile
Facial expressions fall under non-verbal’s but a smile deserves its own
tip. Smiling can relax you, which in turn, can relax the audience and
help you be more engaging. In most public speaking situations, a smile
is appropriate, but nerves or a misplaced sense of seriousness prevent
speakers from smiling; instead, they look gloomy or bored. (Exceptions
to the smile-is-appropriate rule would include, for example, announcing
layoffs.)
9. Be Confident
If you are nervous about public speaking, join the club - Toastmasters,
that is. Toastmasters International is an organization which helps
thousands of people in clubs around the world improves their public
speaking skills through regular meetings of prepared and extemporaneous
speeches. The practice and the feedback that you'll receive will help
you overcome your fear.
10. Practice
There is no substitute for practice. If you're not used to public
speaking, it's going to be almost impossible to be as good as you could
be without practice. How should you practice? Say the words out loud, in
as close to the real environment as possible, with particular focus on
your opening, closing and key points. It's also helpful to record
yourself or get feedback from trusted colleagues.
Public speaking is a skill that you can practice and improve. Following
these 10 tips will help you learn to be a more effective speaker.
Source: Gilda Bonanno
link
Subject: Public Speaking Course
