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Seven Public Speaking Survival
Tips
I used to be terrified of public speaking - now it's natural
and fun.
Dry mouth, fast heart, sweaty palms, blank mind - yeah I've
been there! It's easy to fear public speaking. But I was never
just content with overcoming fear. I wanted to be a great
speaker. What I needed was a way of calming down and applying
simple techniques and strategies to talk like a pro.
When I'd learned to relax (more of that later) I learned and
applied the following four steps.
Reassure your audience - they need to know you know your stuff
and you are human!
Hook them by being interesting and relevant. Tell them why what
you are saying is relevant to them.
Inspire them by giving them information and ways of seeing that
are new and applicable.
Leave them on a high by telling a story them encapsulates your
central message.
How do you become confident enough to apply the four steps?
Here's some tips some of which are practical some of which are
to do with the way you think about your public presentations
and also how you can start to change the way you feel about
them.
Tip One
Breath your way to calm. When you breath out you relax that's
why people sigh when they're stressed.
Breathing in without breathing out causes hyperventilation and
worsens anxiety. Just before your speech take five minutes
breathing in to the count of seven and out to the count of
eleven (quick count-not seconds!). On the out breath hold it a
second before breathing in again. This will produce quick and
lasting calm. Remember extending the out breath calms you
down.
Tip Two
You have a responsibility as the presenter but relax you don't
carry all the responsibility. Presenting is a team effort.
Audiences are responsible for politeness, extending their
attention and attempting to learn. It's not all you-it's a
meeting of two halves. Never mind how they judge you. How do
you judge them?
Tip Three
Use metaphor and stories. We all experience life
metaphorically. The most technical logical person spends at
least two hours a night dreaming! Talk detail if necessary but
present patterns with metaphors. Folk from 4 to 104 love
stories. Use em.
Tip Four
Captivate attention by using words that evoke all the senses.
Describe how things look, sound, feel, smell and taste. Paint
pictures and sensations in their minds with your words.
Tip Five
Vary your voice tonality and speed of delivery. Keep them alert
and engaged. Convey energy when need be and slow down when you
need to 'draw them in close.' You are the conductor to their
orchestra. And pepper your talk with humour. Your willingness
to be funny shows personal confidence and confidence is
contagious.
Tip Six
Tell them what they are going to get. What they are currently
getting and then what they have got from you. Sell your
sizzle!
Tip Seven
Watch and learn from other great speakers until compelling,
relaxed speaking is a part of you.
Rehearse positively. You need to rehearse how your going to
feel as well as what you are going to present. Don't think
about your forthcoming presentation whilst feeling nervous as
this creates an instinctive association between fear and
presenting. This natural negative self-hypnosis is very common
with nervous speakers.
Hypnotically rehearse your speech whilst feeling relaxed. This
produces the right 'blueprint' in your mind. In fact when you
do this enough times it actually becomes hard to be
nervous!
All great speakers know how to use great self-hypnotic
rehearsal. Hypnosis changes attitudes and can bring emotion
under control. I used hypnosis, to change my instincts around
public speaking. Now I just can't get nervous whether it's 50
or 500 people. The world needs great communicators. Go for
it!
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Source: http://www.hypnosisdownloads.com
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