What Obama Needs to Say in His State of the Union Address
President Barack Obama is preparing for his first State of the Union speech. Media specialist T.J. Walker tells WSJ's Kelsey Hubbard what techniques he can employ to convince Americans he will deliver on his promises.

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Tailoring the speech for the type of audience. Personal stories vs. just the facts.

The following is an excerpt from my upcoming book “How To Give a Pretty Good Presentation” (Wiley 2010)

If you simply want to give a pretty good presentation, don’t waste time trying to figure out how to tailor your speech to your audience in terms of stories versus facts. Because audiences around the world are all the same: they want stories that involve relevant ideas and facts that affect them. If all you do is present the facts, ma’m, there is an excellent chance your speech will come up short—just below pretty good. Instead, if all you do is deliver facts, there is a great chance that your speech will be incredibly boring and be instantly forgotten.

It is true that different audiences will tell you they like different styles as far as facts, versus concepts versus stories. Ignore them. Instead, you do want to tailor your messages to your audience, so, by all means, do some research and find out what messages your audience is interested in, what questions do they need answers, what problems do they have that you can solve. Then give them a presentation that is focused on a handful of messages that are important to them and to you, give them a story for each, and give them the most essential facts for each message.

I know you’ve heard that one size doesn’t fit all, but in this case, it really does. Messages may differ from audience to audience, but the best way to tailor your speech to an audience really does not change.

Don’t be fooled when people tell you their audience is different because everyone has advanced degrees or are all industry insiders. Yes, their audience is different because every audience is different, but audiences are never different tin the way people think they are. Audiences are different in that certain messages will bore them or interest them in different ways. But audiences are more alike than they are different. And they #1 way most audiences are alike is that they easily bored to death by a presenter who tries to “just stick to the facts” and leaves out all of the examples, stories, and vignettes.

 

 

More Insights from TJ Walker & Jess Todtfeld
http://www.tjwalker.com and www.SpeakingInsider.com

 

 

 

Why You should Give a Speech?

  1. Speeches are good for inspiring your audience, getting them to understand your passion for a subject, and hoping some of that passion rubs off on them in the process.
  2. I am NOT talking about inspiring or motivating in some generic and therefore useless sense of how to be richer, happier and thinner through “positive thinking.”
  3. Good speakers “inspire” and “motivate” audience members to do such things as wear hard hats more often, meet sales quotas, give better customer service, or clean up trash in the office lunch room.
  4. Your primary responsibility as a good speaker is to inspire.
  5. If you can’t even get inspired to do this, then don’t give a speech; instead, send an email.

Promoting Yourself in a Radio Interview

  1. If you are promoting a particular book, company, or cause, don’t be afraid to mention it by name.
  2. The more radio you do, the more TV requests you will receive.
  3. Build an audio radio resume tape featuring your best performances during radio show appearances.
  4. Don’t count on the host to plug your book or web site.
  5. When giving out a web site address or phone number, do it twice slowly.

 

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2 SHORT VIDEO
LESSONS OF THE DAY

 

AUDIO
LESSON OF THE DAY

Analogies - Warren Buffett
To have your message remembered you need to explain it in a visual, interesting way.

(More Videos)

Don’t Date Yourself
When talking to the media about a future event, it’s often good to ask when the interview will broadcast.

(More Videos)

One Thing At A Time
TJ Walker gives you some tips on using PowerPoint.

(More Audio)


 

[[[ OUR Top Rated Lessons]]]

Power of Selling

Job Interview Success

The Greatest Fear - Fear of Speaking

Bonding with Your Audience - JFK

I Hate My Voice

PowerPoint Tips

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