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Telling
a Joke -- The Dialogue From The Platform
by John
Kinde
Anytime
you're giving a speech, always remember it's a conversation.
Sometimes we fall into the trap of thinking we're presenting
a monologue. It's easy to think of a speaker as the vehicle
delivering a load of wisdom. In reality, every speech is a
conversation. A two-way conversation with the audience.
It's
important to remember that this dialogue is not with the audience
as a group, but rather a one-on-one conversation with each
person. You're speaking individually to each person in the
audience. For example, you're making eye contact with one
person at a time. When you find your self mechanically spraying
the audience with eye contact, you are actually NOT making
eye contact with anyone.
Eye
contact is the first step in the public speaking conversation.
I always define good eye contact as conversational eye contact.
I genuinely consider myself speaking to one person at a time.
When you're truly connected with one person, everyone in the
audience feels connected to you. If your eyes are wandering
nervously around the room, nobody feels connected. If the
audience is large, perhaps 1000 people, when I make eye contact
in the back part of the room I focus on actually connecting
with one specific person. In reality, several people feel
you're looking right at them. The important thing is for your
to feel the connection with one specific person so you avoid
the feeling of "speaking to an audience."
Receiving
energy from the individuals in the audience is important.
It is partly the appreciation of the audience being sent to
you. It is partly your own energy being reflected back to
you. The value is how it energizes you. There is also great
value in the feedback it provides you as to "how you are doing."
If you're tuned in, you'll be aware of signals from the audience:
Are they excited? Are they bored? How much did they like the
humor you just shared with them? If you're really tuned in
to their energy, it will boost your presentation to a new
level. I've found that my performances on the improv comedy
stage have been a great benefit to my connection with the
audience.
The
room chatter is something to pay attention to. Apart from
the individual connection and energy feedback you receive
from persons in the audience, there is the environment of
the room. You will know, from the feedback of the room as
a whole, how your talk is going. When you're telling your
best story, is the room silent? Is there distracted conversation
from the back of the room? Is the serving staff making noise?
Is there a noise from outside the room that might be taking
focus away from your talk? Don't be oblivious to the "sounds
of the jungle" while you're speaking.
Taking
notes immediately after the talk is a great way to learn
lessons from each talk. Giving a talk does not give you experience
for the record book. LEARNING something from the talk is what
gives you experience. Evaluate your connection with the audience
members, the energy you traded with the audience members,
the sounds of the jungle while you spoke. What was great?
What could be done differently? Consider all the elements
that are important to you and create a critique form you can
complete immediately after the talk. You can't fill it in
a week later. You need to do it right after the program.
Take
your awareness to the next level and focus on some of these
ideas to tune you in to the audience and to connect you with
individuals. It will connect your speech, your stories, your
humor, and YOU to the individual listener who came to enjoy
your program.
(632 words)
©
Copyright 2007John Kinde
John Kinde presents workshops and coaching on humor and improv
skills for business. John is part of the Fripp Las Vegas team
and the author of a series of audio and video learning tapes.
You will find humor skills articles at http://www.HumorPower.com
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