“That’s a lot of people to ignore,” I commented. “I can help minimize your
anxiety but…. it will mean a change in your attitude.”
Instead of ignoring your audience, a
speaker’s task is to connect and interact with them. If you want to be successful, you need to call
up ideas and images in their minds that will be understood, relevant and of
value to them. The opening song in The Music Man, “Ya Gotta Know
the Territory," is astute advice for any speaker. Do a thorough
audience analysis. Shift the focus off yourself and become audience-centered.
To do this, you need to progress through the Three Stages of
a Presenter.
The lst stage is when you are involved with yourself. Fears
and anxieties are running rampant in this stage. It is all about ME, ME , ME.
The speaker is concerned about making a fool of themselves and the impression
they make on the audience. “Do they think I’m intelligent? What if I fail? Someone
laughed - did I say something stupid? Am
I dressed too casually?”
The 2nd stage is
involvement with your material or visuals. The speaker is so wrapped up in the
content that he/she will get through their material no matter how the audience responds. “I know I’m going overtime but I want to get in another
point.” Five people can fall off their chairs in the back row from
boredom but the speaker doesn’t react to this – they just plow through the
graphics.
We should all be working towards the 3rd stage. This
is when the speaker goes beyond him/herself and the material and is focused on
the audience. “Am I starting from where they are?
Have I transformed concepts and ideas so that they are understandable and useful
to the audience? In this stage,
the speaker is aware of developing an emotional connection as well as
delivering information. He or she involves the audience immediately and draws
them in throughout the speech. “Am I getting the
response I want or should I modify my words or delivery?” Instead of
“me” oriented it becomes “we” oriented.
As I helped my client focus on his
audience’s needs, desires and goals, he began to forget some of his anxieties.
He told me later he waved to the audience when he went on stage and although
startled at the welcoming response, felt ok. Then he concentrated on making
sure they left with practical information.
Make the audience your partner in your next communication situation.
jan@jdarcy.com
www.jdarcy.com
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