A
Humorist Adapts Fripp's Presentation Principles
by John
Kinde and Patricia Fripp
As one
of my humorist speaker friends John Kinde, well-known for
his Humor Power newsletter says, "Great speaking skills
give you the illusion of competence. The flip side: Poor speaking
skills give you the illusion of incompetence! If your presentation
skills are weak, you will probably appear less than competent
even if you happen to be a master of the subject matter."
He is
a master at observational humor and wrote some brilliant observations
about the Fripp Presentation and Speaking School...from a
humorist's point of view! In case you are interested in attending
any of the classes offered this year...or just want to learn
from the highlights, here is what John wrote:
"Last
November I had the amazing experience of watching a master
in action. After a combined 55 years of National Speakers
Association and Toastmasters experience, I have to say that
the Fripp Presentation and Speakers School is the best speakers
training workshop I've ever attended. Solid content, no fluff,
and brilliant laser-focused coaching. Many of Fripp's coaching
suggestions blew us away, and several actually got gasps of
amazement from the participants.
Although
the primary focus of the two-day school was not Humor Skills,
most of the concepts could be applied to make you a more humorous
speaker. Here are a few gems from Fripp's speaker school and
some comments on how they relate to the design and presentation
of humor.
1. Never
open a speech with a joke! Great suggestion. Everything in
a speech should have a point and purpose. A joke, just for
the laughs, is out of place in a formal speech. Yes, it's
great to open with humor, but do it with a humorous story
that has a payoff which ties into the theme of your talk.
2. Rapport
covers flaws. When giving a talk, whether you're getting laughs
or motivating the audience, don't worry about being perfect.
It's nice to be prepared, but perfection is not a requirement.
In fact, an occasional stumble makes you a real person. Audiences
identify with someone who is real. The audience likes someone
who is real. And when people like you, it's easier to be funny.
3. Stand
still at the opening of your talk. The eye goes to movement
and not sound. In your opening you want the focus to be on
your carefully-crafted words. Likewise, when you're delivering
your humorous punchline, it is best if you are not moving.
Your set-up is likely filled with animation and gestures.
And the space AFTER the punchline is delivered is often punched
up with movement, your physical reaction to the punchline,
called a 'take.' But the punchline itself is best delivered
with no movement. Movement attracts attention and diverts
focus from the key words which will activate the laugh.
4. Eliminate
unnecessary words. A basic rule of humor: The fewer words
between the start of a funny story or joke and the punchline,
the better. Keep your wording tight and you'll get more laughs.
A long, wordy story better have a huge laughter payoff or
you're in trouble. If the punchline is weak and the setup
is long, the expression is that the punchline is carrying
too much baggage. Trim and tighten for best results.
5. When
crafting the opening to a speech, ask yourself, "what are
they thinking?" That's also the key to good observational
humor. If you can determine what people are noticing, and
what they are thinking about what they are noticing, you have
the seed for a good humor line. When you can tap a universal
truth, in the form of a common thought, humor almost comes
automatically. Often all you need to do is just state the
obvious. They laugh, as they think, "Yeah, I was thinking
the same thing!"
6. When
you have the right words, the speech is so much easier to
deliver. And so it is with humor. A well word-smithed humor
story will have the right rhythm and punch that the delivery
will flow easily and naturally. You will find it easier to
relax and enjoy the experience of sharing the story without
having to stress over the word selection.
7. Know
your speech so well that you can forget it. Also with a humor
story, know key parts of your setup and punchline so well
that it comes to you without thinking. It allows you to be
'in the moment' and connect with your audience.
8. Specificity
equals believability. And specificity is funnier. A car is
funnier than a vehicle. A Yugo is funnier than a car. A yellow
Yugo is even funnier.
9. When
designing your speech, tie your closing back to your opening
scene. Often, I open and close a talk with humor. I call the
process 'bookending'. I like to have bookends on each end
of the speech. The bookends are similar, that is they match.
I gave a speech where I open with a funny line involving an
800 toll-free telephone number. At the end of the speech,
I close with a different 800 phone number story.
10.
Your audience remembers the mental images that you create.
People think in pictures. Paint a funny picture and your humor
stories will come to life.
11.
Speakers should avoid misusing technology. A speaker can misuse
PowerPoint, thinking that the computer program is the key
element of the presentation (instead of the actual message
and delivery). Likewise, I've observed that speakers who want
to include humor in their presentations often misuse props.
They rely on the prop to create and carry the humor, just
as a speaker could rely on PowerPoint to be the main focus
of the speech. For example, when a red clown nose used to
get a laugh solely for the sake of wearing a clown nose, a
speaker is falling short of the humor potential the clown
nose could have if it were blended into a powerful humor story.
12.
The pause gives people a chance to think about what you've
said and to internalize it. In delivering humor, the pause
is what lets people process the relationships and connections
that trigger the laughs. Without the pause after the punchline,
you don't give the laughter a chance. You subconsciously tell
people that there is nothing funny and that they're not supposed
to laugh. The pause is one of your most powerful assets when
delivering humor.
13.
Use verbal shorthand to give your characters a back-story.
Describe someone or something with a label that brings with
it a rich combination of characteristics. I have a story about
an 80-year-old man who gave me some unsolicited advice. I
could say that I was approached by a 'George-Patton-style
WWII Colonel', because as we talked I discovered that he was
a retired Colonel who served in WWII, and that description
accurately pictures his authoritarian style.
14.
Make them like your characters. As you build your characters,
do more than just describe them. Give the audience a reason
to like them. In a funny story, just as the audience needs
to like you, they also need to like and care about the characters
you include in the story.
15.
Your life is a comedy routine. Develop your own original humor.
Your life is a goldmine of humorous experiences. Dump the
jokes and tell your own rich, humorous stories.
16.
When looking for interesting stories from your past, ask yourself
what questions do people ask about your job or past experiences?
I realized that I have 17 years experience as a nuclear weapons
launch officer and have never included any experiences from
that part of my life in my speeches. I have homework. Certainly
there are some story gems from those many years of working
at such an unusual job that my audiences would find interesting
or fascinating.
17.
A movie must have 'five moments.' What are the 'five moments'
from your speech that people will be talking about afterwards.
If you use funny stories, some of those 'five moments' will
most likely be the laugh points in your stories. People remember
best what they laugh about.
18.
If you want to learn something, teach it to others. She specifically
recommended taking what we learned from the speaking school
and teaching it to others. I told her I'd write an Ezine article
about what I learned and apply it to using humor. She said,
'Great idea.' So here it is.
(1,412 words)
John
Kinde is a Las Vegas based motivational humorist and prolific
writer: JohnKinde@humorpower.com You will find more humor
skills articles at http://www.HumorPower.com
Click
here to find out more about Patricia Fripp's CDs, DVDs, and
books on Public Speaking and Presentation Skills.
Patricia
Fripp is a San Francisco & Las Vegas based award-winning keynote
speaker, in-demand executive speech coach, and sales presentation
skills trainer.
Enjoy
Patricia Fripp's online video and keynote presentation descripitons
on this website.
Contact
Patricia at pfripp@fripp.com
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