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Posts Tagged ‘presentation training’

My Biggest Mistake and the Two Tools That Fixed It

I’ve always prided myself in being a content-rich speaker so imagine my surprise when I had the following conversation after a speech. A couple ladies cornered me and said, “You had a lot of content in your speech.” I said, “Thank you.” Then they said, “We mean you had too much content.” At first I thought, “Too much content? I’ve spent all this time striving to be a content-rich speaker and now they’re telling me I have too much content?” Guess what? They were right.

The problem with having too much content is just what one of the ladies told me. She said, “As soon as I’d begin writing something down, you’d say something else worth remembering and I wouldn’t catch it. Because you shared so many points, I’m afraid I won’t recall any of them.”

Here’s the problem many speakers will face if they are not careful

When we start to know more and more about our topic, inevitably that “more” ends up finding its way into our speech. What’s important to realize about speaking is that oftentimes less is more. Just because you know more doesn’t mean you have to show more within that speech.

Here are two great solutions to keep your audience from feeling lost or overwhelmed

  1. Tighten up your structure by calling back to each major point before you move onto the next point. For example, if my point is on Facing Reality, once I make the point I can transition by saying, “So you face reality with whatever measurement scale you use because, remember, you master what you measure. Once you face reality, the next step is to…” Then, every time I finish my other points, I make sure to call back to every single one of the points I already covered. For my four Rs, I’ll call back to Facing reality, Relinquishing what’s in the way, Relying on the people and processes, and Reforming to a better way. Regularly calling back like this makes your message very clear and keeps your audience members from getting lost.
  2. Use my 10 to 1 Rule of Thumb. Part of my mistake was that I tried to fit too many points into too little time. Now I use my 10 to 1 Rule of Thumb. For every 10 minutes I speak, I feel I can make an average of one point that I can illustrate effectively and make palatable for my audience. Therefore, if I’m asked to speak for 45 minutes, I’ll do my 4 Rs to Remarkable Results speech. If I’m asked to speak for 30 minutes, I’ll do my 3 Rs to Remarkable Results. The key is to heed the old speaker proverb that, “When you squeeze your information in, you squeeze your audience out.” By using a similar formula to my 10 to 1, you’ll move towards much greater clarity and your message will be easily digested.

So What Can We Learn  from This?

Being content-rich should not include filling your audience up with content until they overflow. Instead, it should be about giving them a few solid, memorable, and actionable ideas that they can use to improve their situation. Indeed less is more. I’ll leave it at that.

25 Phrases to Guide You to Greatness in Speaking

Every now and then it is important to remind ourselves of some of the foundations that can lift us to great heights in speaking. Here are 25 phrases to do just that.

  1. Speak to one but look to all
  2. When you lift yourself up you let your audience down
  3. What gets recorded gets rewarded
  4. Don’t add humor to a speech; uncover humor within it
  5. What’s loose is lost
  6. When you squeeze your information in, you squeeze your audience out (this one is not mine. It’s an old speaker proverb).
  7. You master what you measure
  8. Conflict is the hook and Dialogue is the heart
  9. Put the process, not the person, on a pedestal
  10. The phrase determines what stays
  11. To be a great speaker you must be a great tease
  12. Be a similar person with a special process
  13. Never sell a product, always sell a result
  14. Let your story lead to their story
  15. Never end with the Q&A
  16. People remember best what they hear first and what they hear last
  17. Don’t tell; ask
  18. You can’t affect if they don’t reflect
  19. Become niche and famous (If you try to speak to everyone you will end up speaking to no one)
  20. A confused mind says no but a clear mind says go
  21. Give the visual before the verbal
  22. Give the look that goes with the line
  23. Reactions tell the story (Darren LaCroix)
  24. Too many speakers try to get across too much information in too little time
  25. Don’t speak for standing ovations, speak for standing invitations

To get a better understanding of what these phrases mean and how life-changing they can be for your speaking, see the World Class Speaking book.


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