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Audiences
Are Your Friend
For the
rank amateur to the ignorant
professional, audiences create the same effect no matter how small they
are to a speaker. Fear and anxiety.
From a
single person to a crowd as big as
the fans in the Super Bowl, speaking in front of a serious listening
audience is the true test and baptism of fire.
Despite
this, audiences are predictable.
Audiences listen to you because they want to learn something from the
speaker.
Following
this logic, the speaker would do
well to follow the strategy of making it informative as well as
interesting to listeners to see your speech through till the end.
Here
are some tips on how you can have the
audience listen in rapt attention.
1.
Speak according to the listeners’
interests. It is always a good idea to find out what the crowd you are
speaking to is interested in. For example, if you have more teenagers
in the crowd, you don’t really want to talk about your
subject in
a way that bores them, like good education. Other aspects to consider
would be the local culture, age, sports, religious inclinations, etc.
Talk about what’s important to them, something they can
easily
relate to without a stretch of imagination.
2.
Praise the audience. Audiences are human
too, and each and every one of them has a need to be acknowledged as
much as you want to be acknowledged for speaking well in front of them.
There is only one requirement for this maxim, that your praise be one
hundred percent sincere. Anything less and you’ll have
resentment
in your hands.
3.
Connect with the audience. Find a common
thread that makes the audience relate to you, and you’ll find
that the speech will come through really well. Finding a common thread
humanizes you and the speech. It makes them want to listen to you
because it may in some way be of great benefit to them.
4. Have
the audience participate. Get
somebody to come onstage and participate in a demonstration. Ask
questions of the audience. Get feedback. Encourage them to walk up to
the microphone and give you a piece of their mind. The point is to
involve the audience, once more, making it more real to them. Taking
them along with you in your experience.
5. Less
you, more them. Play yourself down.
Nobody, especially an audience, likes to be lectured to. This will
cause resentment that will last a long time. Never feel that you are
above them. The better way to think about your audience would be that
you care about their welfare. Think of yourself as their best friend,
and more often than not, this will hold you in good stead.
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