Public Speaking Workshops

The Art of Public Speaking
Our Public Speaking training workshops are designed for both the inexperienced presenter or as a refresher for more experienced members of your company or organization. Our training workshops are offered in most major cities across the United States and Canada. All public speaking skills training workshops are small which will give you all the face to face time you need with our training team.

Our public speaking training workshops (presentation training) will eliminate your fear or inexperience in public speaking and dramatically improve your speaking skills whether you are persuading, educating, or informing. Our highly interactive workshops focus on professional business communication including preparation, structure, delivery, and strategy, use of visual aids, and handling questions & answers. Contact us today by phone at 713-627-7700 or via email: service@publicspeakingtraining.net

Public Speaking Skills Training: D.O.A. - Why Presenters Hate Bad Introductions

A Poor Introduction Can Kill A Speech Before You Start
We spend all of this time coming up with our next speech, getting each and every word just right, practicing the speech, the gestures, the pauses, only to get killed before we even open our mouths to speak.

How does this crime occur? Simple – whoever is running the show delivers a bad introduction and then turns the stage over to the public speaker. Just imagine the total silence that grips the room then – all of a sudden there is no excitement about who you are or what you are going to be saying. Talk about having to dig yourself out of a hole before you even start!

Michael Varma is a professional public speaker who had found himself in this situation a number of times and has come up with some ways to avoid it.

First off, as a public speaker you’ve got to spend some time thinking about just what an introduction is designed to do. In the world of professional comedy, a warm-up act comes out before the main act. The role of the warm-up act is simply to get the audience used to laughing. This makes things much easier for the main act – the audience is already conditioned to laugh no matter what the main act says. An introduction does the same thing for a public speaker.

As a public speaker, you need to come up with a good introduction for yourself and your speech. A good introduction needs to contain three things:

Content: What are you going to be talking about? This is designed to grab your audience’s attention so that they will be eager to hear more.
Context: Just knowing WHAT you will be talking about is not enough, your audience needs to know WHY you will be talking about it and why they should care. Providing them with this information will start to build a bridge between you on stage and the audience even before you start to speak.
Credibility: Providing the audience with a reason why you are the best person to be talking to them about this topic is the final part of an introduction. All too often we put too much information here (we are, after all, proud of ourselves). In all honesty, one or two sentences does the trick.

Look, you can’t always control the way life goes and sometimes you will be introduced poorly. However, if you write out your introduction, print it out nice and large and provide it to your introducer BEFORE he or she goes on stage, then you will have done your best to avoid being a victim of the crime of a poor introduction.

Jim Anderson:  link

Subject: Public Speaking Skills Training