In giving the actual speech, several helpful hints can aid you in delivery.
Remember a few of the basics--come prepared, don't be a bore...show
what you have to say; don't just tell it, and finally, try to be consisitent
in keeping good speaking poise, i.e., posture, eye contact, voice level,
etc.
- Remember
your Boy Scout days and the age-old motto "be-prepared?" Know what
you're going to say before you arrive and jot your organized ideas
(not word by word) in outline form on an index card.
- Bring
a written (and interesting) introduction for someone to read before
you speak. It gives you credibility and sets the stage to the way
you want to begin. There's nothing worse than a lousy introduction.
- Speak
loud enough to be heard and speak clearly. Microphones can't make
up for whispers.
- Avoid
fillers such as like, um, and ya know, instead pause briefly.
- Stand
on the balls of your feet for a dynamic apearance. Don't lean.
- Keep
it short. "An example is better than a sermon."
- Look
at your audience and SMILE; you're both happy to be there.
- Talk
to the audience members...one at a time. Look at individual's eyes.
- Use
colorful nouns and kicking verbs. Show, don't tell.
- If
you're accepting an award, let the audience see it; use it to enhance
your speech not in place of it.
- Finish
with confidence and competence. Don't let your closing comments
fizzle out. You set the mood with your final words and sounds.
- Don't
rush off stage. Pause to accept the applause (audience reaction).
It says you're listening to them just like you hoped they listened
to you.
|