Public Speaking: Maintaining Your Focus
In the last post, we talked about reading to your audience. In this post, you are learning about maintaining your focus while speaking.
Public speaking can be intimidating for even the most seasoned of professionals.
That is because when speaking to a live audience, you never know what is going to happen. Never mind the freak occurrences of problems with the audience and the room. You are human and could be subject to momentary memory halts that often come as the result of nervousness or just looking up and seeing all those eyes looking at you.
Maintaining Your Focus with Structure
The discipline of giving a public presentation is to establish an internal structure to your talk that helps you stay on task and, maintain the focus of your subject for the entire time you’re speaking. That structure can also be of huge value in helping you gauge your time and adjust so you get the most crucial parts of your speech presented within the allocated time frame; even if that means leaving out less important parts of your presentation.
There is a simple directive that gives you a fine guideline for that structure.
It goes like this…
- Tell them what you’re going to do.
- Do what you said you were going to do
- Tell them you did it.
This may be overly simplistic but it is the heart of what makes a good presentation work.
And the simplicity also helps you stay focused under the pressure of a public speaking situation. Any tool that can do that is a good one.
You tell the audience what to expect during your opening comments.
Those comments also contact giving your personal information, a greeting to the audience and perhaps some humor to set the tone of the talk. After you have gotten the speech underway, it is common to establish what is the topic of your talk. But to do that, the most effective device is to make a statement of the problem. By phrasing the subject matter as a compelling and very real problem to your audience, that creates interest as the audience says mentally, “Yes I have that problem. Tell me how you will help me fix it.”
This is where you tell them what you’re going to do.
The body of your speech is usually a three to a five-point discussion of the solution to the problem. Don’t give them the entire heart of your speech but let them know the ground you’re about to cover. Not only does this give the audience a road map of what to expect, but it also lets them know that you know what you’re doing and you know when you will get done. This gets rid of a secret fear of an out of control speaker that a lot of people who sit in on presentations dread.
Once you establish this road map for the rest of your speech,
this gives the audience a good feel for where you will be going. By giving them this information early on, that reduces the impulse to interrupt you because they know you have a path to go on and they don’t want to take you off that path.
Follow through
Now it is just a matter of stepping through each of the outlined areas for this audience to see what you said you would do which is to offer a solution to the problem statement. Naturally, your detailed discussion will have more content than your brief preview. But if you continue to broadcast to the audience where you’re on the outline and that you’re on track to reach the goal, that keeps them interested and assured that this is an organized program they are a part of.
It is always good to let the audience know then when you’re entering your closing statements.
Many speakers use a simple clue like “Let me point out, and I am closing with this…” to give the audience the signal that the presentation is almost done. This is a common courtesy and a professional way to conduct a presentation. And if you treat the audience with respect like this by telling them what you’re going to do, do it and then tell them you did it, you will be a speaker that will get good reviews and invited back for more presentations frequently.
In this post you have learned the importance of establishing a structure in your public speaking, maintaining your focus to get through your event.
Want to increase your public speaking skills even more? Check out Public Speaking Without Fear on Amazon.com
Make sure you look for the next post soon. We will be talking about how to market without marketing when you speak.
Until then,
Keep the Shiny Side Up
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