Leadership, Communication, Presentation & Sales Development Blog

Ensure You Connect With Your Audience when You Present

How you relate to others matters greatly when delivering a face-to-face presentation.

A key that creates immediate connection with any executive, manager or peer is strong eye contact. Sustained eye contact should begin the minute you walk in the door. With solid eye contact, you instantly appear transparent and confident. You project sincerity and demonstrate respect.

Remember that being nervous can cause your eyes to shift and dart. There is a big difference between glancing at someone and really connecting with them. Not only will poor eye contact make you appear unsure, but it may also result in you and your message being dismissed.

When you feel you are not on an equal playing field with others in the room, strong eye contact can narrow the gap. It can also help you to read other people's reactions. If their non-verbal messages are positive, it will help you to relax. If the feedback indicates resistance, you can adjust your explanation accordingly.

The beauty of giving strong eye contact is most people will likely return it, almost as if there is an obligation. Consequently, you will keep even the most easily distracted attendee engaged and focused on critical points. Sustained eye contact typically triggers:

    -  Listening
    -  Acknowledgment
    -  Understanding
    -  Trust

It is a critical skill for effectively communicating and building credibility. Never underestimate its importance.

Another way to intensify the relationship with others in a meeting situation is to allow your spontaneous sense of humor and informality to surface during the conversation. However, many people do not do so because they think this is too risky and inappropriate on the job.

When you leave your sense of humor at the door, you are missing a powerful tool for achieving your communication goals. Humor creates rapport and makes even the most senior executive more receptive to you and your message. A dash of humor can also help resolve difficult situations or defuse tension.

A lot of people think you have to be a comedian and tell jokes to convey a sense of humor, but that is not true. In fact, you should never try to be a joke teller. Rather, identify the types of things that make you laugh. For example, if you recently came across a funny quote, you might weave that into your conversation. If you notice someone appears confused, a humorous analogy or example may help clarify your point and alleviate frustration.

Often times, real life is funnier than fiction anyway. An amusing story related to your topic rejuvenates interest when attention is lagging. If you poke fun at yourself, you convey that you are relaxed. The bottom line is people like to laugh. Business professionals are no different.

Connection also comes from being observant. If you know that someone in the meeting is devoted to family, a chocoholic or loyal to a cause, the observant communicator would incorporate these observations into examples or analogies.

Lastly, those that know the importance of building a relationship use others names across the audience throughout the conversation and the pronoun "we" to draw commonalities that subtly suggest you are just like them. "We're both eager to see..." or "As you and I both know...." As the conversation intensifies, these little things matter.


All the best with your ongoing business communications!

Posted in , , , , , by effectivecommunication.com.au
Find out about our free trial
  • Return on Investment - testimonial
    Korry Hoogestegerd - National Account Manager - Vodafone

    23 out of 24 presentations 'hit the mark' by achieving all pre-planned outcomes. Based on the calculation of commitments gained during all presentations, I believe these results will lead to a 60% increase in sales of our presented product through Woolworths Ltd

    Read full testimonial

    vodafone logo
  • Return on Investment - testimonial
    Jonathan Gould - Project Manager - Broad

    The learning experience has saved me much time when preparing for business presentations and given me renewed confidence to speak before a group of people

    Read full testimonial

    broad logo
  • Return on Investment - testimonial
    Michael Aquilina - National Account Manager - Philips

    ...at your advice allowing the product to speak for itself, we experienced the best outcomes we could have hoped for in terms of presentation efficiency, effectiveness and audience "buy in‟.

    Read full testimonial

    philips logo
  • Return on Investment - testimonial
    Roy Wakim - Solutions & Marketing, APAC - Avaya

    ...during my prospect presentation the day following workshop, my business gained a new client...

    Read full testimonial

    Avaya logo
  • Return on Investment - testimonial
    Bob Watling - General Manager - Power & Industry - Silcar

    ...Ultimately, during the presentation our organisation gained immediate commitment with this prospect to review 2 of their sites....

    Read full testimonial

    Silcar logo
  • Return on Investment - testimonial
    Ben Nicholson - Zone Dealer Sales Manager - QLD - Isuzu Australia

    ...I am much more able to produce improved presentations that rely less on PowerPoint and more on me delivering the message.....

    Read full testimonial

    Isuzu logo
  • Return on Investment - testimonial
    Steve Holden - Building Manager - Thiess

    I know some of my staff could not have presented their input on the two examples above without the preparation work EC put them through leading up to the workshop...

    Read full testimonial

    Theiss logo