Key Takeaways
- Deploy a range of audience connection techniques for maximum impact.
Explore Further
optional exercises for further reflection and practice
READ
- “Google’s CEO Doesn’t Use Bullet Points and Neither Should You,” by Carmine Gallo (Inc.)
- “17 Ways to Create an Interactive Presentation that Stands Out” (Visme)
- “How to Connect With an Audience Fast” (Nick Morgan, Public Words)
- “Tailor Your Presentation to Fit the Culture” by Erin Meyer (HBR)
- “Going from Suck to Non-Suck as a Public Speaker” by Peter Sims (HBR)
- “How to introduce yourself so you’ll be unforgettable (in a good way!)” (TED Ideas)
DO
- Choose three TED Talks at random. For each one, jot down the audience connection technique(s) you identify the speaker using. Identify at least one additional connection technique that each speaker could have used.
Build Your Checklist
this list grows throughout the academic quarter
- Create my Anxiety Management Plan (AMP) and use when speaking publicly
- Define my audience and speaking goals:
- Who am I speaking to?
- What are their needs?
- What I want them to think, feel or do differently after hearing me?
- Choose and apply an identifiable structure, such as:
- What, so what, now what?
- Problem, solution, benefit
- What is, what could be, new bliss
- Create a powerful opening and closing
- Prepare visual aids that pass the “billboard test,” reinforcing structure and story:
- One big idea per slide
- Quick impact
- Clean and crisp
- Practice and digitally record my talk repeatedly, refining:
- Visual delivery: Stance, movement, gestures, eye contact
- Vocal delivery: Volume, dynamics, pace, tone
- Verbal delivery: opening, closing, structure, story