Public Speaking Training:
Storytelling DO's
Stories can be used during your presentations to illustrate a point.
Always make sure the story you tell is relevant to the material you are
presenting. You will learn about the many different aspects of telling a good
story from my public speaking training.
Select stories that will match the intelligence, experience, occupation, and
age of the audience as well as the nature of what you are speaking about. You
don't want to talk over the heads of the audience members and you don't want to
bore them with stories that are too simple. If you can space stories at
intervals throughout your presentation to provide a change of pace and to
reemphasize your message. Remember the listening pattern you want to create in
the audience. You must connect with the audience and use your skills from
your public speaking training effectively.
Tell stories about your troubles, stupidity, or ignorance. People like you
when you use self-effacing humor because they see themselves mirrored in your
weaknesses. Make sure to eliminate unnecessary detail. Use the fewest number of
words that convey the message in an interesting fashion.
Rule: The longer the story, the funnier it must be. You must make jokes and
funny stories believable up to a point. Use factual, specific details that the
audience can relate to, i.e., say the brand name like 'Lots-o-Suds' rather than
just 'laundry detergent'.
Writing the story out will help you see words that you can eliminate without
changing the story, this is a valuable technique from my public speaking course.
Harry Truman once said "It takes me two weeks to prepare a good five minute
speech."
Keep your funny stories short during your presentations. An axiom in the
public speaking is the size of the laugh is inversely proportional to the number
of words used to get to the punch line.
The more truthful and specific the story sounds the more your audience will
get caught up in what you say. And getting the audience involved in what you
say, getting "connected" to your message for them is extremely
important to what you learned from your public speaking course.
Make sure to specify the location of a joke or story. If your story takes
place in a restaurant say, "I was at Jerry's Sub Shop in Rockville,
Maryland, the other day." This gives the audience something concrete to
think about, which makes them more involved mentally.
When crafting a story, use people, places, and things the audience knows.
When the audience is familiar with the elements in your story, they will become
even more involved. As soon as you mention the company cafeteria, their minds
race to the cafeteria to meet you and find out what happens. However, don't use
humor that is too inside. Only a few people will understand it. Your job is to
try to connect with every member of the audience.
Another tip is to emphasize the adjectives and verbs in your stories to make
them sound more interesting and detailed. For instance look around where you are
right now and describe anything you want. Make sure to use great detail. Really
put punch behind the adjectives and verbs and see how your description comes to
life. Use specific and interesting verbs and adjectives. Say I was exhausted,
not I was tired. Emphasize one syllable, and pause for effect.
Say, "her head was nodding and drooping, struggling to be held up",
not "her head was down".
Think about how a good book you read makes very descriptive sentences in
order to place you in the story. You must do the same when telling a story in
order to create the best effect. Learn your stories. In a normal speech if you
forget the exact thing you wanted to say, you can improvise and go on. But if
you leave out an important detail in a story or if you accidentally give away
the ending too soon, you have ruined its effect.
In practicing my skills I teach from my public speaking training, I tell a
story at least 30-50 times in private before I'll test it out in front of an
audience.
Always try to use true facts from your own life. This makes it easier for you
to tell the story because you lived it and someone else can't steal your story
as easily if all the facts have to do with your life.
Create a funny story so that it concludes abruptly with a climactic word.
Don't utter another syllable or sound after this word or you might distinguish
the laughter you worked so hard to get.
Exception: Some stories get laughter all along the way, if properly presented
after much private practice. More of these stories are used by humorists who
practice to be and are expected to be funny all the time.
Work out different lengths of the same story to fit different time segments.
(Yes, I've snuck a Don't in the Do's section.) Don't memorize your stories
word-for-word.
I know a speaker who speaks primarily to school aged children. They often
ask, "How do you memorize all that?" He replies, "I don't
memorize it, I know it by heart." There is a distinct difference. By not
memorizing, you won't feel forced to say every word, every time you tell the
story. You can change the length of the story easily by adding or subtracting
detail. You can even be interrupted, and pick up where you left off, which is
especially important with audiences of curious, rambunctious children.
Super Trick: Have a quotation ready that makes the same point as your story.
If your time is shortened, you can cut out a story and replace it with a quote.
Slant your story to the intended audience. When telling a story to a group of
executives you would probably want to use different language and emphasis than
if you were telling the same story to a group of secretaries. Change
nonessential elements of the story to make a better connection with your
audience.
Use terms like "Imagine this", "Have you ever had an
experience where ... ", "Let me take you with me to ...", to draw
the audience into your stories, into the word pictures you are painting on the
canvass of their minds.
|