Managers eDiges
Overcoming Your Fears 
of Public Speaking
By Patricia Fripp, CSP, CPAE

You're waiting your turn to make a speech, when suddenly you realize that your stomach is doing strange things and your mind is rapidly going blank. How do you handle this critical time period?

People ask me this question in all my speaking classes, but there is no single answer. You need to anticipate your speech mentally, physically, and logistically.

Mentally

Start by understanding that you'll spend a lot more time preparing than you will speaking. As a general rule, invest three hours of preparation for a half hour speech, a six to one ratio. When you've become a highly experienced speaker, you may be able to cut preparation time 
considerably in some cases, but until then, don't skimp.

Part of your preparation will be to memorize your opening and
closing -- three or four sentences each. Even if you cover your key points from notes, knowing your opening and closing by heart lets you start and end fluently, connecting with your audience when you are most nervous.Logistically

Go to the room where you'll be speaking as early as possible so you can get comfortable in the environment. If you will be speaking from a stage, go early in the morning when no one is there and make friends with the stage. Then, during your presentation, you can concentrate on your audience, not your environment.

Physically

A wonderful preparation technique for small meetings is to go around shaking hands and making eye contact with everybody beforehand. For larger meetings, meet and shake hands with people in the front row at least, and some of the people as they are coming in the door. Connect with them personally, so they'll be rooting for your success. We as speakers are rarely nervous about individuals, only when faced with the thought of an audience. Once you've met the audience or at least some
of them, they become less scary.

It's totally natural to be nervous. Try this acting technique.Find a private spot, and wave your hands in the air. Relax your jaw, and shake your head from side to side. Then shake your legs one at a time. Physically shake the tension out of your body.

Try not to sit down too much while you're waiting to speak. If you're scheduled to go one an hour into the program, try to sit in the back of the room so that you can stand up occasionally.It is hard to jump up and be dynamic when you've been relaxed in a chair for hour. (Comedian Robin Williams is well known for doing "jumping jacks" before going on stage to raise his energy level.) Sitting in the back also gives you easy access to the bathroom and drinking fountain. There's nothing worse than being stuck down front and being distracted by urgent bodily sensations.

Patricia Fripp
Member: Speakers Roundtable Web site:
http://www.speakersroundtable.com
Email: office@SpeakersRoundtable.com

Speech is power:
Speech is power: speech is to persuade, to convert, to compel.
It is to bring another out of his bad sense into your good sense.
_Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-82), 
The mark of a true politician is that he is never at a loss for words because he is always half-expecting to be asked to make a speech.
_Richard M. Nixon (1913–94), .
The object of oratory alone is not truth, but persuasion.
_Thomas Babington Macaulay 
The right word may be effective, but no word was ever as effective as a rightly timed pause.
_Mark Twain (1835–1910), U.S. author.
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All speech, written or spoken, is a dead language, until it finds a willing and prepared hearer.
_Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–94), 
Amplification is the vice of modern oratory. It is an insult to an assembly of reasonable men, disgusting and revolting instead of persuading. Speeches measured by the hour, die by the hour.
_Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826), 
I 'd like to add that taking part in small discussion groups and debates helps build confidence in facing big crowd to deliver a talk. As regards the question whether the phillosophers can be good orators here is an extract from an article by
MARTHA NUSSBAUM

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