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.
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workshops and one day workshop 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 lack of experience in public speaking and quickly and dramatically improve your interpersonal speaking skills whether you are persuading, educating, or informing others. Our highly interactive workshops focus on professional business communication including preparation, structure, delivery, and strategy, and how to use visual aids. Both the one day public speaking workshop and the two day public speaking workshop guarantees success in handling questions & answers as well. Contact us today by phone at 713-627-7700 or via email: service@publicspeakingtraining.net
Public Speaking Workshop: Why Every Public Speaker Should Be "Tweeting" (This Means You)
Will these Internet crazes never end? Just in case you've been living under a rock someplace and haven't heard about the "Twitter" revolution, guess what: it's arrived and this time around as a public speaker you should be an active participant.
Just What Is This Twitter Thing?
If you're already "tweeting" every day, you can skip this part! In a nutshell, Twitter is sorta like the Citizen Band radios of the mid to late 1970s. Once you set up a Twitter account, you can either use the Twitter web page or download and install one of countless Twitter utilities to send out short messages telling the world what you are doing at any given point-in-time.
The key word here is "short" - a Twitter message (a "tweet" to those of us in the know), is limited to no more than 140 characters. Clearly we're not talking about sending out emails here.
Just to round out our comparison of Twitter to CBs, with a CB you needed to be on a certain radio channel if you wanted to hear what someone was saying. In the world of Twitter you need to be "following" someone if you want to be able to receive and read their tweets.
Why Should A Speaker Care About This Twitter Thing?
So outside of being the latest Internet craze, why should someone who is interested in becoming a better public speaker spend any time looking into this whole Twitter thing? It turns out that there are three reasons: practice, info, and followers.
One of the most important and challenging things that a speaker does is to write their public speaking speech. Although what you want to say may be clear in your head, actually getting the words on paper that will make it clear in your audience's heads is a completely different matter.
Twitter's limitation on how much information that you can pack into a single message, 140 characters, is both a curse and a blessing. It's a curse for those of us (myself included) who are very verbose and who will use two words when one would do just fine.
It's a blessing in that if you want to clearly communicate an idea in just 140 characters then you're going to have to do a great deal of self-editing. You're going to end up throwing away all of that fancy prose that you use and boiling your tweets down to just the core essence of what you want to say.
This is exactly what you should be doing when you are writing a public speaking speech - getting rid of the fluff and just leaving the good stuff. By getting involved in the world of Twitter and actually spending time hand crafting your tweets, you'll refine your skills in this area. Sure, you could pay an expensive editor to help you refine your next public speaking speech, but it sure is cheaper to spend time on Twitter and learn to do it yourself.
Say Hello To Info
A nice side benefit to becoming active in the world of Twitter is that you'll grow a community of people who choose to follow you. This collection of people who may see every tweet that you send out are an incredibly valuable resource.
Pulling together a public speaking speech is not an easy thing to do. Finding the information that you need and running what you are going to say by interested people are critical things that you need to do. Your Twitter followers are the perfect source for information source recommendations as well as being able to provide quick feedback on just about anything you want to run by them.
It's All About Followers
Finally, a speaker without an audience does nobody any good. Every time you open your mouth to give a public speaking speech, you'd really like there to not be an empty chair in the house.
The more followers that you have in Twitter, the better your ability to get the word out about your next speaking engagement. No, not every one of your followers will be able to attend your public speaking speech (it's a global service after all), but they sure will be able to pass the word on and you'd be amazed at how powerful a force this can be.
What All Of This Means For You
It's starting to look as though the Internet tool called Twitter is here to stay. As more and more people sign up and start to "tweet", this is starting to become a genuine communication tool.
Speakers need to dive right in and start to use Twitter. The benefits are three-fold: using Twitter teaches speakers how to concisely express their thoughts, it provides a new way to gather information and test ideas, and finally it is a great way to advertise your next public speaking speech.
All new things can be a bit intimidating at first. CB radios had their own lingo and user community when they first appeared. Don't be nervous about using Twitter, get started and find out just how eloquent you can be in just 140 characters!
Dr. Jim Anderson: link
Subject: Public Speaking Workshop
