The Henderson Group trains and coaches business professionals in the art of communication and presentation through our experiential methodology. Since 1990, The Henderson Group has helped Fortune 500 companies worldwide improve employee productivity and business results through the development of communication skills. You can find us online at SpeakFearlessly.net and HendersonGroup.com or Attend A Workshop
We present to shift the audience's perspective. We want to sell...we want to educate...we want to motivate.
None of this can happen until you awaken your audience and get their attention.
How to awaken your audience:
* Surprise them.
* Attention is captured by the unusual.
* Do Something Different!
When the audience knows what you are about to say, or how you are about to say it, they're ahead of you. Gradually their minds move on to something else.
Ways to awaken your audience:
- Catch the audience off guard by sweeping them into active participation.
- Employ a dramatic gesture at an unexpected moment.
- Reveal an interesting prop, or use an object in the room in an usual way.
- Tell a story about an experience you had that reveals something personal about you.
- Move with a sudden dynamic burst.
- Release a sound from your voice heretofore unheard.
- Make a percussive sound by clapping, stomping a foot or hitting your hand on a table.
- Use an unusual facial gesture.
- Tease the audience.
- Stop and be silent.
GESTURE
We communicate with all kinds of gestures. Whether hailing a taxi or blowing a kiss, the meaning of the gesture is understood accurately and quickly.
Actions Speak Louder than Words
Early on we learn that a person's body often speaks more truthfully than their words. If the speaker's behavior does not align with their words, which do you trust?
Imagine someone talking to you about an important topic. Imagine how much they would communicate if at just the right moment they:
- Blushed
- Blinked
- Yawned
- Looked away
- Started shaking
Instinctively we know to trust body language above spoken words. People carefully arrange their words to put their best foot forward; less frequently do they successfully monitor their physical behavior.
STILLNESS
Often, the most important movement is it's complete absence: calm, powerful stillness. Unfocused extraneous movement decreases your power and credibility, and can distract the audience from your message.
When you are not making a gesture or movement that supports your missive:
Choose stillness.
When you can confidently stand perfectly still in silence, the audience tends to interpret is as power and control.
GESTURE, MOVEMENT AND STILLNESS
Tips to Successful Use of Gestures, Movement and Stillness
Be Selective
Craft gestures to match your key points. Don't use the same gesture over and over. Avoid walking and talking (or your movements may obscure your words). Larger movements are best done before or after a point, while gestures can be used before, during or after speaking.
Be Specific
Practice more precise and differentiated movement. Don't just generally wave your arms. Chose dynamic, specific movements and gestures that elucidate or emphasize what you are conveying.
Be Surprising
Use varied rhythms and move at unexpected moments to gain maximum audience alertness. For example, don't always gesture at the end of a sentence or point.
Be Still
Practice the power of stillness. Don't fidget. Don't wander. Don't rock nervously back and forth. Stillness is extremely powerful, especially when contrasted with purposeful movement.
Be Subversive
Whatever gesture patterns you establish, mindfully break with them and create an ongoing variety of gestural expression.
- Related Articles
- Related Q&A
- Basic Business Skills Required
- 12 Business Skills You Need To Master
- Are you Psychic? Use your Most Important Life and Business Skill
- Improve Your Business Results by Investing in Business Skills Training
- Applying Business Skills to Your Non Profit to Lift Performance
- How to Develop a Money Making Business Skill Online
- Business Skills are Essential in Offshore Software Outsourcing
- How to Tell a Joke is a Business Skill




Choosing the Best
By: Media Solutions Marketing | 16/12/2009Printing Companies play a valuable role to enable your business to succeed. Choose a printer company that will help and assist you with all your needs. As a business man starting up to build an identity in the market, this is vital to the success and growth of your business.
Secret Meal Plan For Strong Abs
By: Owen Linnen | 15/12/2009Looking for what you must to eat to get rid of weight and get six pack abs? Well a lot individuals would have you eat all sorts of things, here is what you should be eating.
Learn Elements Now With Amazing Video Tutorials Help You Conquer Photoshop Elements in 2 Hours
By: David Peters | 15/12/2009Photoshop Elements Tutorial that will help you conquer any Adobe Photoshop Elements version in no time at all. Take a look at the free Photoshop Elements Tutorial.
You’re Right--Now, Tell Them!
By: Dr. Gary S. Goodman | 14/12/2009One of the best speech teachers I ever had said there are few forces in nature as strong as a communicator that is gripped by righteous indignation, recalls this top professional speaker, best-selling author, and creator of the new Nightingale-Conant audio program, "Crystal Clear Communication: How to Explain Anything Clearly in Speech or Writing."
8 Mindset Secrets for Business Growth
By: Be! Coaching | 10/12/2009Lately I’ve been focusing a lot of energy with my clients on keeping their mindset in a powerful and positive place. Why? Because having a positive mindset will magically make you tons of money and everything in your life will be better. Well, not exactly. The reality is your mindset is what propels you through the challenges. It’s what keeps you moving when you feel like checking out. And it helps you make important decisions fast and easy
Anywhere - Anytime, this is possible and feasible today, with solutions and modules "ic mobile"
By: Redazione Ic Mobile | 10/12/2009"IC Mobile" with its modules and its versions: Free, which is available free from the Apple Store, Light with management by spreadsheet and Pro with a server management company could become the real business personal assistant.
Tips for an effective presentation in English
By: Miron Abramson | 10/12/2009A tip for planning or creating effective presentations in English.
The Public Speaking Phobia
By: Trish Springsteen | 10/12/2009Fear of public speaking is one of the Top Ten Fears that people have. The technical term is Glossophobia. More often than not people will state they fear public speaking more than death. So what is it that makes people fear public speaking so much? In many cases it is the fear of the unknown - it is something they don't do very often so they don't know what to expect. It is often a fear of making a fool of oneself - they lack confidence and feel that people won't want to listen to them.
Presentation and Baseball: the Power of Being Present
By: Terry Gault | 12/05/2008 | PresentationI recently came across an op-ed article in the New York Times by David Brooks that struck me as significant for the art of presenting.
Wake Up Your Audience
By: Terry Gault | 28/04/2008 | PresentationWhy do you make presentations? Is it your idea? An assignment? A necessity? Part of your job? Of course there must be a reason for each presentation: to sell...to educate...to motivate. But to what kind of audience? To your boss? To an audience of a thousand people? Or maybe to one very important client? (But aren't all clients important?) How many of us would choose to stand up in front of people without a reason? Well, some might, but the majority of us would not.
Using Symbols in Your Presentation
By: Terry Gault | 28/04/2008 | Presentation"Everything in life cannot be grasped by the logic-centered left brain." D.T.Suzuki
Transparencey and Reputation
By: Terry Gault | 28/04/2008 | PresentationWhen an eager young person, perhaps a recent college graduate, applies for a job, will they mention their MySpace page? Or their Facebook entry? Probably not, but those sites can be checked, regardless of whether or not they've added them to their resume, application or(for some reason) are discussing them during their job interview. Employers engaged in the hiring process today often consider their candidate's online pictures and pages, which are quickly and easily accessible on the internet.
The Path to Presentation Peace: Mindfulness and Stillness
By: Terry Gault | 28/04/2008 | PresentationWhile a fairly new concept in schools, the practice of mindfulness has been used widely and successfully in hospitals and businesses, sports teams and even in prisons. In the article, the principal of Piedmont says, "If we can help children slow down and think, they have the answers within themselves."
The Empathetic Paraphrase
By: Terry Gault | 28/04/2008 | PresentationHow do you prove to a speaker that you are really listening to what they are saying?
The Discovery Process: Mental Maps
By: Terry Gault | 28/04/2008 | PresentationHow customers view you or your products is garnered by a framework of assumptions, stories and images in their minds. If you really want to influence someone, your first task is to understand how they think. An individual's perspective on the world can be identified and "mapped."
The Art of Presentation Tip #1
By: Terry Gault | 28/04/2008 | PresentationWe present to shift the audience's perspective. We want to sell...we want to educate...we want to motivate. None of this can happen until you awaken your audience and get their attention.