If you have the energy for a third viewing

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sadiksojib35
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Joined: Thu Jan 02, 2025 7:09 am

If you have the energy for a third viewing

Post by sadiksojib35 »

During the second viewing, analyze your delivery. How do you speak? Are you loud and clear enough? Does your speech style match the topic of your presentation? Have you managed to avoid filler words? How are you holding yourself? Are you walking or standing, looking at the audience or at your slides, smiling or tense with fear?

You can devote it to analyzing your interaction with the audience. Have you managed to capture the attention of the audience? Are you asking them questions? Does the audience respond to your jokes? Of course, natural interaction with the audience is the highest level of oratorical skill. But we are sure that you will definitely get to this aspect of your performances!

4. Analyze the lists. It’s great if you have several entries azerbaijan phone number lead in the “good” column! Don’t forget to use these skills in your next speeches, rely on them as a foundation. The “fix” list can be quite long, don’t be scared. Choose 2-3 items from it. It’s better to start working on improving your speeches with aspects related to structure and delivery. The lack of usefulness and meaning in a report cannot be replaced by successful jokes and dialogue with the audience.

5. Think about your action plan and success criteria. Once you have determined what you will work on, think about how you will do it and, most importantly, what result you will consider good enough. Add columns to your table for “What will I do?” and “How will I know that the goal has been achieved?” For example, you noticed that you spend most of your speech looking at your slides and not at the audience. This means that during rehearsals and future speeches you need to pay special attention to how you stand and where you look. Your action plan might look like this: “learn the order of the slides and the text of the speech well; ask Fedor to interrupt me as soon as I turn away during rehearsal; during the speech, don’t forget to choose two people in the audience to whom I will talk.” You can consider it a success if, during the next video recording, you discover that you have been facing the audience for more than half of the time. If you decide to work on the simplicity and clarity of explanations, then boldly get rid of unnecessary details on slides and in speech, look for simple examples that explain your thoughts, ask colleagues to listen to you. Do not immediately set yourself the ambitious goal of earning a reputation as a person who can clearly explain complex things. Start with a simple criterion: "One of the listeners said at the end of the speech: "Thank you, I finally understood everything!"

6. Find a partner who also wants to improve their public speaking. Friendly support, feedback, help with technical issues, thinking together and finding solutions will help you move much further than if you go down this path alone.

7. And finally, practice, practice, and more practice. Take advantage of every opportunity to speak, because skill only comes from repeated practice. Regularly record your speeches on video and analyze them. Note what you have achieved and use these developments in future speeches. Work on your shortcomings, setting specific achievable goals for future speeches. You will see that progress will not be long in coming!5
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