The following excerpt is from Dan S. Kennedy and Dustin Mathews’ book No B.S. Guide to Powerful Presentations. Buy it now fromAmazon | Barnes & Noble | iTunesor click here to buy it directly from us and SAVE 60% on this book when you use code CAREER2021 through 4/17/21.
Note: This excerpt was guest-written by Dave Vanhoose, co-founder of Speaking Empire.
There’s not much real certainty in business or in life.
In the beginning, I fell into the trap that catches most speakers and presenters: being a professor. I learned that it’s much more useful to be a Presentainer® — our word at Speaking Empire for somebody who can move an audience emotionally, connect with them personally, and entertain them on some level. This is the only way to hold attention and grow interest. It makes you more memorable and your presentation more influential. It involves the audience as they like to be involved. The TV they watch, the movies they see twice, the games they play and the novels they read all do this, and so should you.
If you have a powerful presentation, and you have the right mindset about it, yourself and your audience, and you have the right delivery, you win every time. So let’s talk about delivery.
1. Leading and ending
The classic, textbook speaking formula applies: Tell your audience what you’re going to tell them, tell them, then tell them what you told them. This lets you first create a sense of anticipation, getting the audience sitting on the edge of their seats and hanging on every word. Most of the great stage magicians of the golden era, Houdini included, always told the audience about the illusion they would next see, in very dramatic terms — they didn’t just go out on stage and perform the trick. At the other end, you summarize what you’ve told and shown them, because people tend to very quickly forget key points of any complex presentation.
2. The yes state
Small commitments lead to more substantial commitments. Resistance is better erased a little bit at a time. As a presenter, your goal is to have people say yes to you, mentally and physically, a number of times during your presentation. You can involve people by getting them to raise their hands, yell a word or phrase of agreement — “Yes” will do, even getting “All those who…” to stand up. With most audiences, there’s limited response to the first attempt at this, and you have to joke with them and cajole them to get more of them to play.
At Speaking Empire, we usually build some “Yes” questions, requests for agreement and moments into every presentation.
A lot of things can affect the audience’s state: who they are, how they came into the audience — willingly or “sent” by an employer — time of day and fatigue, what they know in advance about you and your presentation and location. This hands you two responsibilities: first, to do what you can to help get them into a positive mental attitude about you and your presentation’s benefits and benefits of benefits before they are actually with you. Second, to be able to “take the temperature” of a group and make some adjustments on the fly if it’s cold, to warm it up.
The one thing never to do is to leave an audience’s mental and emotional state to random chance and try to deal with it in a single leap over a tall wall toward the end of your presentation.
3. The seven-minute rule
Have you ever seen a speaker start strong but lose his audience sometime during his presentation? The audience starts slumping, fidgeting, and even looking at their phones — at worst, getting up and leaving — one after another. In making Speaking Empire the go-to company for developing powerful presentations, we’ve done a lot of research, as well as drawn from our own experience. One of the areas where there’s a lot of research to be had is in the neurosciences. One fact for which there is consensus is that the human brain can only maintain focus for seven minutes. It basically fades, stops and restarts in seven-minute cycles. That’s why you need to get your audience to re-engage with you every seven minutes.
You can do this with a quick request or direction, like:
- Raise your hand if _________.
- You’ll want to write this down.
- Stand up if — or — stand up and do ____________.
- Turn to your neighbor and _______.
- Repeat after me . . .
4. Dynamism
Few effective speakers stand still behind a podium or lectern, or read a word-for-word speech from notes or a teleprompter — it doesn’t have enough life to it. Audiences are affected as much or more by how you say what you say as they are by what you’re saying. That “how” includes voice, confidence, enthusiasm, whether or not you seem to be happy to be in front of them delivering your message and physical movement. In many ways, you’re a performer delivering a performance.
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