 |
Energizing Your Presentation
Author: J. Douglas Jefferys  | Posted: 23-05-2007 | Comments: 0 | Views: 10 | Rating: (50) (?)
Have you ever been to a boring presentation? Most of us have, and most of them are boring because there is no life or passion in what the speaker is saying. People remember more of what they see and hear as opposed to what they read. But to be really memorable, we need to add some life to what we present.
So how can we add life to our presentations and wake up the audience? Well, have you ever been nervous when having to speak to a group?
In many ways, getting nervous before speaking is a good thing, if you know how to properly channel that nervous energy and use it productively to energize your presentation. Think of yourself as a steaming, boiling pot. You have two choices. You can either try to keep the energy inside, or you can unleash it and use it to help vitalize your presentation, essentially, letting the steam out of the pot.
All too often, presenters choose to burn off that nervous energy by fidgeting, holding or grabbing on to things, and walking or rocking back and forth.
Learn how to dispense this energy in a productive way. This will make you feel more comfortable and will help you look better. You'll also start to enjoy giving your presentation, you'll relax, and the audience will feel it.
Working from the bottom up, let's start with your feet and a balanced stance.
Balancing Your Stance
The first thing is to adopt a stance that both appears balanced and also allows you to keep from needing or wanting to rock or pace back and forth. Presenters often rock back and forth, lean towards one side, or pace around the room in an unconscious attempt to burn off all that extra energy that the flight-or-fight syndrome had filled the body with. Because the glutes and the quads are the largest muscle groups in the body, the brain knows that by moving these muscles, the body can burn off the most amount of excess energy per unit time. Unfortunately, none of these movements helps your cause. All they do is distract from your message and telegraph to the audience that you're really nervous. That's not the message that you want to convey.
You don't have to be like Yul Brynner in "The King and I" with your feet way apart, or drag in like John Wayne. Consider instead a comfortable, balanced stance.
That means hands comfortably down to the sides (neutral position) with feet slightly apart and weight evenly distributed on the balls of the feet. Use your knees like shock absorbers supporting your upper body comfortably. This will help you to avoid favoring one side over the other, and "rocking" back and forth.
Pacin' the Cage
Can you take a step forward or back occasionally? Yes, but don't start dancing or rocking (We call this the hula-hoop). Try to stay in one place without appearing like a tree rooted firmly in the ground. Pacing back and forth constantly, for no apparent reason, typically drives the audience crazy. Yeah, a few overzealous motivational speakers or mid-night TV kitchen appliance hawkers may get away with it, but it generally doesn't fly in the business world.
On the other hand, if you'd like to pause and take a few steps forward to elaborate on that special point or take a step back to reflect and consider something, that's O.K. But constant non-purposeful movement is weak.
Using Hands Appropriately
Then, decide what you are going to do with your hands and learn to gesture from the shoulders, not the elbows. Use your hands to describe and emphasize. Drop your hands down to your side (neutral position) when you're starting your speech or when you're done gesturing.
When you gesture from the neutral position, your gestures become more emphatic. If everything comes from the middle magnet position it looks like you are stuck in a phone booth. Dropping your hands down to your sides is for many difficult to do without constant practice. With most people, the hands immediately come back together like magnets or start grabbing things like clothing, various body parts like your face, or they jump back into your pockets.
If you are talking about an increase in sales, show us by raising your arm up. If you mention something about reducing costs, again, show us and make sure that the gesture is different than the one you used for an increase in sales. It's amazing how many presenters will use the exact same gesture for an increase as they will for a decrease. That's confusing.
Keep in mind that gesturing helps you think. Have you ever noticed some-one talking on the telephone? What do they do with the other hand that's not holding the phone? They gesture and they gesture continually. Why? Because it helps them think and it helps them find the right words. Gesturing helps you relax and find the correct dialogue. And, you have something to do with those darned arms!
Finally, you certainly don't want to appear robotic, but most of us need to think about how we will gesture for whatever concept we're presenting, and how we will bring our emphasis to life with appropriate hand movement. It takes time and practice, and it needs to be well thought out.
Peggy Noonan is fond of saying, speaking of the audience, "They won't care how much you know until they know how much you care." Appropriate gesturing, getting your whole body involved in the delivery process, is the easiest and most emphatic way of showing your passion for your topic.
Rate this Article:
Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/advice-articles/energizing-your-presentation-152107.html
About the Author:J. Douglas Jefferys is a principal at PublicSpeakingSkills.com, a national consulting firm training businesses of all sizes to communicate for maximum efficiency. The firm spreads its unique knowledge through on-site classes, seminars and DVD's.
|
Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means to drive traffic to your website and promote yourself and your business. Join us today - It's Free! |
|
Related Articles
NLP: Voodoo Performance Improvement By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 23/05/2007 | Advice Ever been nervous, anxious, or downright fearful when having to speak to a group?
Try this: Imagine everyone in the group is looking at you with smiling adoration. Feel that they can't wait to hear the next thing you're going to say. See them nodding approvingly and occasionally glancing at each...
Presentation Skills - Keeping the Blackberries at Bay By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 11/11/2005 | Business Successful presentations require proper eye-contact - read more to discover how chances are you've always done it wrong!
Presentation Skills - The Right Graph By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 19/02/2006 | Business Microsoft does not know a heckuva lot about presentation design, but one thing they do correctly in PowerPoint is to make available different types of graph so that you can match the graph type to the point you're trying to make with your data.
Presentation Design - Dealing with the Prohibitor General By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 07/06/2006 | Business When we see a slew of equally bad slides from different people in the same organization, we're fairly certain that the company has a slew of workers in a Presentation Regulations Department working feverishly to hamstring any attempt by an employee to make their slides understandable, much less compelling.
Presentation Design - Too Much Information By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 07/06/2006 | Business In order to get your audience to buy in to your message, you must prepare and deliver it in a way consistent with adult learning theory.
Presentation Design - The Right Graph By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 07/06/2006 | Business There are twelve different graph types available with PowerPoint 2000, but few of those styles work well in the low-resolution world of computer-based presentations.
Presentation Design - The Good, The Bad, & The Mediocre By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 07/06/2006 | Business Your job as a presentation designer is to make ideas into visual images. For your presentations to work, the visual images must convey exactly what you want to say and require the least possible effort on the part of your audience to "get it". The difference between a visual that works and one that fails is good design.
Presentation Skills - The Rightly Timed Pause By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 08/06/2006 | Business People only start listening when you stop talking. To put it another way, one of the very best things you can ever do while speaking is to NOT.
Got a Question? Ask.
Ask the community a question about this article:
Frequently Asked Questions
Branding: I am a person with disabilities ...
By: Robert | 12-10-2008
branding: I am a person with disabilities (Learning challenges) of whom has spoken to groups on disabilities. How would I find mine niche or brand as a public speaker?
Missionaries out reach - contacting the need ...
By: tamaracinc | 06-09-2008
Missionaries out reach - contacting the need duties
With references to Ephesians 6 : 21-23
Finding old house lived in the 1946-1949
By: motherof2+3 | 24-08-2008
I am trying to find the address of the old house we lived in when my brother was born in 1946 (In York). Don't know how to go about doing this. I was 7 my brother was 2 and we have limited memory. But I am in Maine for about 5 days and would like to find it if possible.
1305 error
By: MM | 19-08-2008
When I am installing the program, I recieve a 1305 error. I don't know what this means or how to fix the problem. This same error has occured on both of my computers.
Need english speaking psychologist in cancun or Pdc or someone who can help online or by phone
By: fifficus | 06-04-2008
i am looking for an english speakingpsychologist in cancun or playa del carmen, mexico. does anyone know of one andhow can i get in touch with them? It is for additiction, personal and marriage councelling. thanks
Are you more afraid of public speaking or dying?
By: JasonRogers | 15-08-2007
Are you more afraid of public speaking or dying? Do you agree with Seinfeld? He says: "According to most studies, people's number one fear is public speaking. Number two is death. Death is number two. This means to the average person, if you go to a funeral, you're better off in the casket than doing the eulogy." - Jerry Seinfeld
Q&A Powered by:
More from J. Douglas Jefferys
Public Speaking - The Number 1 Fear Part II By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 01/08/2008 | Self Help Fight or Flight
When the hypothalamus, which regulates most bodily functions, receives the threat signal, it sends a group of hormones to the pituitary gland at the base of your brain. This in turn releases hormones that activate your adrenal glands, which sit on top of your kidneys - a spot...
Public Speaking - Lock, Talk By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 01/08/2008 | Leadership The process that sets you on your way to speaking like the best speakers in the world, speakers who possess The Skills, goes like this: You find a target in your audience and you lock eyeballs. You deliver a complete thought to that one person, and then you do the...
Public Speaking - Owning "The Skills" Part II By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 31/07/2008 | Leadership In order to present at the top, in order to acquire The Skills, you must remember three rules that govern everything you do whilst presenting. They're really quite simple, but sometimes it's easy to forget the simple things, and these rules must remain in the forefront of your consciousness at...
Public Speaking - Owning "The Skills" By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 30/07/2008 | Leadership People who get paid well to speak all share one of two traits: either they're famous, or they own "The Skills". To be able to move people who don't know you as a celebrity of some sort, you must know how to keep your audience focused on you and your...
Public Speaking - Masters of the Pause Part II By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 30/07/2008 | Leadership An Inconvenient Speaker
We have made the claim many times that Bill Clinton is the Master of the Pause. In fact, we have said that it is exactly this mastery that causes more people in polls to name the former president as the greatest living public speaker hands down.
If you doubt...
Public Speaking - Masters of the Pause Part I By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 30/07/2008 | Careers It's common to believe, when you listen to great speakers at work, that certain people are simply born with the talent to speak well, and therefore no amount of training or practicing is going to transform you into a great speaker, no matter how hard you try. And while it's...
Public Speaking - One Person, One Thought, One Pause By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 29/07/2008 | Leadership Perhaps the most difficult thing for speaker to learn is knowing when and where to stop speaking.
When you pause, you establish the pace from the beginning of your talk. You let the audience know that the information is going to be coming at them at a pace that they can...
Presentation Skills - Three Points and Your Out! By: J. Douglas Jefferys | 29/07/2008 | Leadership Organizing Your Presentation
Before organizing your presentation keep reminding yourself that Less is More. Also consider that most presentations have far too many concepts, and the concepts far too many details..
You should be able to put the gist of your presentation into one sentence or "headline". What would the headline of...
|
 |