Friday, May 8, 2020
How to Avoid the Top 5 Public Speaking Mistakes - Kathy Caprino
How to Avoid the Top 5 Public Speaking Mistakes On Wednesday, I posted an article on my Forbes blog Image by Daehyun Park via Flickr called: Why So Many Experts Are Terrible Speakers: Top 5 Public Speaking Mistakes. I was as suprised as anyone when this piece went viral. Over 110,000 folks viewed the article piece as of this morning (it was one of the top three most popular pieces on Forbes the day it was published!), and thousands shared it on their social networks. Clearly this topic touched a nerve. My guess is that thousands of folks have attended live and online conferences and workshops this past year, and have been as astounded as I about the lack of ability of the speaker to connect, enliven, motivate and educate us, or to leave us with anything lasting or meaningful. Its a great disappointment when you plunk down your hard-earned money to learn something new from an expert and to be inspired, only to leave feeling deflated and let down. As a frequent speaker at live and online conferences, Iâm in the company of hundreds of folks each year who are top authors, experts and consultants. In many cases, these are great thought leaders who perform public speaking as just one aspect of their professional endeavors. In attending these programs, Iâm continually shocked at how many content experts are, in fact, wholly ineffective speakers . My colleague, Krista Carnes, Founder of Booking Authors a consulting firm that helps experts and authors connect with new opportunities and audiences, and a member of the Maestro Market start up team â" shared this: âOne big mistake I find is the incorrect assumption that speaking at a âbig nameâ event or two is the only way to get attention. There are no âsmallâ events when youâre starting out. Most people, no matter how much passion they have, are simply not ready to get in front of large audiences. In striving for those large opportunities only, many overlook exciting, creative ways to engage with their communities and tribes â" ways that nurture the development of presentation skills and personal presence that are crucial in todayâs digitally-driven age.â Observing amazing speakers who move and motivate us (watch some TED Talks for inspiring examples), and comparing them to ineffective speakers, Iâve observed five core behaviors that keep speakers from achieving their key goals â" to motivate, enliven, inform and educate. Below are the top five mistakes content experts often make as speakers when trying to engage audiences, stimulate crowds, and connect deeply with others. Iâve made some of these mistakes myself, and have lived the experience of losing an audience. None of us are born astounding speakers, and thereâs always more to learn, but the first step is to acknowledge your own gaps. TOP 5 PUBLIC SPEAKING MISTAKES â" FAILING TO 1. Meet the Audience Where They Are First and foremost, speakers must remember that their deep knowledge about a topic isnât (usually)shared by the audience. Listeners arenât in the same place you are â" they havenât spent years studying this area, researching it, living it. Itâs new to them. So you must meet your audience where they are, finding a way to hook them in. Then take them on a stimulating journey of initial discovery through full-out engagement so that your key points can be understood and embraced. Assuming that they know what you know, or care in the way you care, is a mistake. You have to generate a significant level of interest from the beginning, and pique that interest continually throughout your presentation. 2. Make a Heartfelt Human Connection In the past few weeks, Iâve been a part of a number of national events that highlight speakers who are at the top of their fields. Iâve seen evidence that being a nationally-recognized guru doesnât mean you have any degree of social or emotional intelligence. Iâm finding that numbers of these experts simply fail to engage us on an emotional, heartfelt level â" they donât connect in a personal way, or give the sense that they truly care a whit about the audience and its ability to productively use the vast information they know and share. In the end, their lack of a human connection makes their presentations feel overwhelming and unsettlingâ" they push us away with all data, facts and statistics, and no heart and soul. Theyâre simply not likable. 3. Show Respect for the Listener Again, Iâve seen scores of speakers alienate an audience by expressing disdain or criticism for some common behavior or thinking. For example, if youâre speaking to social media novices about what they need to do to get up to speed in the social media arena, you must understand that many folks are afraid and insecure about taking the plunge, and you need to be gentle with them, not judgmental, critical or flip. In the end, if you hate or disrespect your listeners for their lack of savvy in your area of expertise, theyâll hate you back. And if you leave your audience feeling that they are losers, failures or unworthy of your respect, then youâll achieve the opposite of your desired effect â" youâll bruise their sense of self-worth and create a huge rift between you and your audience.Youâll lose them forever. 4. Inspire Follow-Up Thinking/ Action Itâs not enough to present information without inspiring people to follow up with new action or thinking. Your words and messages simply wonât last in the minds of the audience members if you donât motivate your listeners to DO something different with what youâve just shared and taught. Think about how you can connect and engage with your audience after your talk, and help them on a path of thinking or behaving differently, making use of your information in ways that better their lives. If you donât, youâve missed a key outcome of serving as a speaker/presenter â" to inspire positive action. 5. Leave a Lasting Message of Significance Finally, with the millions of webcasts, seminars, workshops and talks available today to us â"either in person or online your talk will not stand out or be effective if you donât leave the audience with a clear message of significance â" something lasting, meaningful, and impactful. If youâre simply sharing dry information, but donât touch on the vital âessenceâ of your material (the living, breathing heart of what you care about and why we should care), youâll fail as a speaker. In the end, itâs not easy to be a compelling speaker or presenter, and deep knowledge of a topic doesnât necessarily contribute to your ability to reach people. But addressing these mistakes will help you communicate in ways that make you the speaker that people ask for most and remember best. Id love to hear your thoughts What is your deepest public speaking challenge and how are you overcoming it? Thanks for sharing.
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