Warning: file_put_contents(/home2/aishagha/public_html/wp-content/uploads/.htaccess): Failed to open stream: Permission denied in /home2/aishagha/public_html/wp-content/plugins/wp-optimize/includes/class-wp-optimize-htaccess.php on line 135

Warning: file_put_contents(/home2/aishagha/public_html/wp-content/uploads/.htaccess): Failed to open stream: Permission denied in /home2/aishagha/public_html/wp-content/plugins/wp-optimize/includes/class-wp-optimize-htaccess.php on line 135

Warning: Constant WP_MEMORY_LIMIT already defined in /home2/aishagha/public_html/wp-config.php on line 104
How to deliever a powerful speech – Aisha Ghani

Aisha Ghani

Hi, I am a Happiness and High Performance Coach with over 2000+ Live sessions across 30+ countries. I help people find what is within: inner peace and happiness...

Follow Me


How to deliever a powerful speech

As a public speaker with a decade long experience, Here are some techniques that I share with my coaching clients who want to become paid professional speakers or business professionals and want to deliver a masterful presentations.

  • Speak from the heart

Believe in what you have to say, or don’t say it. If you’re passionate about your subject the words will come. Speak about the fundamental beliefs you have about life, the simple truths that you believe in with all your heart.

  • Write down two or three specific objectives you have for this speech

Ask yourself, ‘What do you want the audience to do as a result of your speech? ‘Think differently? Act differently? Do something differently?

  • Write it out

When you give a speech be sure that people need to hear what you have to say. Then you need to understand it so well that you could explain it to an eight-year-old. You know, if you write it down enough times, then you will become familiar with it. Don’t read your speech if necessary, just read the lead sentences that you write on a three by five card/ cue card.

  • Be present

Connect with your audience in the first 60 seconds and then engage them throughout your speech. Once you get the audience rolling, be sure to embellish certain comments that you know are being well-received.

  • Know your audience

Interview the program chair in advance to know who will be sitting in your audience and what they expect to hear from you. Are they men or women? What is the theme of the meeting or conference? What is their purpose in being there? Because that then becomes your purpose. Be sure to give your audiences not just what they want, but also what they need to hear.

  • Arrive Early

Be sure to check out the room where you will present your speech in advance. The worst thing that can happen to you is when they put the bright lights in your eyes and blackout the audience. If you go early to do your room check, you can tell them that you can’t give a speech with the audience in darkness. As a speaker, it is important that you see the faces in your audience.

  • Is there a technique?

Try to be as natural as possible, just speak conversationally. Talk to your smaller audiences as if you were in their living room. Don’t look over their heads or beyond them. Speak directly to them. If you are addressing a crowd of several hundred or more people, look at one person, then another, then a third. But really look at them.

  •  “Ums” and “Ahs.”

“Ums” and “ahs” come from uncertainty. The key is to know your subject and what you want to say. And then practice, practice, practice. Use your mirror or give your speech to your friends and family. And above all, don’t try to remember exactly the same words.

  • Stories & more stories

Nothing reaches an audience better than a well gripping story. Be sure to share your personal stories with the audience. People will learn from your vulnerability and your mishaps and will be only a step away from their own story. We delineate our thoughts visually and so your audience needs to see what they hear. So just consider them to be your friends and inject humor wherever possible.

  • Closing your speech

Develop an action plan. What do you want your audience to do now that they’ve heard your speech? Go around the room, and ask them to share one nugget they got. Ask them for one idea that they can use NOW. In two weeks. In one month. Be sure to summarize your speech and then give them a call to action.

2 Comments

  • Jane

    10/10/2014 at 6:18 pm

    Vivamus eu felis tempor, venenatis nisl id, elementum leo. Quisque non sapien massa. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Pellentesque mollis odio quis mi euismod, non posuere lorem cursus.

    Reply
    • John Doe

      09/09/2014 at 6:18 pm

      Primis turpis ad class fermentum lorem porttitor maecenas vitae vivamus ornare conubia, morbiuis fermentum ut posuere risus aliquet volutpat suspendisse dictumst, pharetra vitae auctor pulvinarm curae diam volutpat sagittis aenean efficitur nibh at metus.

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Jane Cancel reply