Conquer Your Fear Of Public Speaking With These 4 Tips:
Public speaking is the single most difficult task in many people's professional lives. As Mark Twain once famously quipped: "There are only two types of speakers in the world: (1) The nervous and (2) the liars." But it doesn't necessarily have to be this way. Use these four practical tips to help make public speaking a confident part of your own professional repertoire.
1. Step into the shoes of your audience. Especially if you’re nervous about presenting, it’s really hard to step into the shoes of your audience – probably because you’re so focused on getting everything right on your end, and perhaps also on calming your own anxiety. But understanding your audience is so important to public speaking. Even before you step on stage, you should be thinking about your audience when crafting your content. What do they know about your topic? Where should you then start in terms of explanation? What do they care about? What matters to them? And how can what you have to say solve their problem… or help answer their questions… or provide something useful to them? That should be the driving focus as you write your speech: to craft what you have to deliver in a way that truly delivers value to your audience, and in a way that they can easily understand and appreciate.
2. Get honest feedback—and make sure you’re willing to receive it. Public speaking is a skill – and like any skill, you need practice and feedback to improve. So, especially as a young person just starting out, it’s really key to find ways to practice in front of an audience – even a small audience – and to get feedback, both about the content you’re sharing and also about you as a presenter. In terms of the content: you want to make sure your audience receives what you’re trying to deliver. Do they understand your message and framework? Do they get those two or three key points you really want them to come away with? And then, in terms of your style as a presenter: Are you engaging? Do you keep the audience’s attention? Can you bring elements of your personality to the table, even if you fumble a bit? Find people whose opinions you trust to give you this feedback and be open to receiving it.
3. Focus on why your content matters –and let that be your source of confidence. Everyone is nervous about public speaking – and especially about the impression we’ll have on others. And there’s no question that this external evaluation is a legitimate and important concern. But equally important in my experience is making sure that you yourself really love the talk you’re giving; that you care about the ideas; that you stand behind the concepts; that you feel like you’re doing something meaningful – and delivering something truly of value to the audience. Because if that’s the case, you’ll likely feel much more comfortable - and confident - delivering your message, and you’ll be more likely to impress your audience as well. So, bottom line: wow yourself before even thinking of wowing a crowd.
4. Do your best to leave your notes behind. It’s certainly more comfortable to speak with notes…and perhaps even to put those notes up on a podium. But it also creates a barrier with your audience, which makes it much harder to connect and engage with them. I learned this lesson myself early in my career when taking a public speaking class. We all spoke with notes in the class until the professor suddenly took away our notes one session and never let us speak with them again. To this day, I remember that sense of dread of having my notes taken away. But it also was a blessing in disguise. Ever since then I’ve spoken without notes and with a much greater sense of connection with my audience.
Andy Molinsky
Harward University
For more, please visit
www.andymolinsky.com
Public speaking is the single most difficult task in many people's professional lives. As Mark Twain once famously quipped: "There are only two types of speakers in the world: (1) The nervous and (2) the liars." But it doesn't necessarily have to be this way. Use these four practical tips to help make public speaking a confident part of your own professional repertoire.
1. Step into the shoes of your audience. Especially if you’re nervous about presenting, it’s really hard to step into the shoes of your audience – probably because you’re so focused on getting everything right on your end, and perhaps also on calming your own anxiety. But understanding your audience is so important to public speaking. Even before you step on stage, you should be thinking about your audience when crafting your content. What do they know about your topic? Where should you then start in terms of explanation? What do they care about? What matters to them? And how can what you have to say solve their problem… or help answer their questions… or provide something useful to them? That should be the driving focus as you write your speech: to craft what you have to deliver in a way that truly delivers value to your audience, and in a way that they can easily understand and appreciate.
2. Get honest feedback—and make sure you’re willing to receive it. Public speaking is a skill – and like any skill, you need practice and feedback to improve. So, especially as a young person just starting out, it’s really key to find ways to practice in front of an audience – even a small audience – and to get feedback, both about the content you’re sharing and also about you as a presenter. In terms of the content: you want to make sure your audience receives what you’re trying to deliver. Do they understand your message and framework? Do they get those two or three key points you really want them to come away with? And then, in terms of your style as a presenter: Are you engaging? Do you keep the audience’s attention? Can you bring elements of your personality to the table, even if you fumble a bit? Find people whose opinions you trust to give you this feedback and be open to receiving it.
3. Focus on why your content matters –and let that be your source of confidence. Everyone is nervous about public speaking – and especially about the impression we’ll have on others. And there’s no question that this external evaluation is a legitimate and important concern. But equally important in my experience is making sure that you yourself really love the talk you’re giving; that you care about the ideas; that you stand behind the concepts; that you feel like you’re doing something meaningful – and delivering something truly of value to the audience. Because if that’s the case, you’ll likely feel much more comfortable - and confident - delivering your message, and you’ll be more likely to impress your audience as well. So, bottom line: wow yourself before even thinking of wowing a crowd.
4. Do your best to leave your notes behind. It’s certainly more comfortable to speak with notes…and perhaps even to put those notes up on a podium. But it also creates a barrier with your audience, which makes it much harder to connect and engage with them. I learned this lesson myself early in my career when taking a public speaking class. We all spoke with notes in the class until the professor suddenly took away our notes one session and never let us speak with them again. To this day, I remember that sense of dread of having my notes taken away. But it also was a blessing in disguise. Ever since then I’ve spoken without notes and with a much greater sense of connection with my audience.
Andy Molinsky
Harward University
For more, please visit
www.andymolinsky.com