Saturday, September 7, 2013
How To Engage Your Audience When Presenting
Studies vary
on the length of human attention spans, but one study recently concluded that
the average attention span is eight seconds. Yes, 8 seconds!!!
Whatever the actual time might be, people have trouble paying attention, especially when listening to a presenter. Inattention is even more likely if it’s a technically-oriented presentation.
You know the audience is going to leave you several times in a 30-minute presentation. In essence, one of the major goals of any presenter should be to bring the audience back to pay attention to his or her content. No matter how effective the message is, the human mind cannot focus for very long.
Here are some ways of combating this consistent challenge.
Whatever the actual time might be, people have trouble paying attention, especially when listening to a presenter. Inattention is even more likely if it’s a technically-oriented presentation.
You know the audience is going to leave you several times in a 30-minute presentation. In essence, one of the major goals of any presenter should be to bring the audience back to pay attention to his or her content. No matter how effective the message is, the human mind cannot focus for very long.
Here are some ways of combating this consistent challenge.
1. Let the audience know early that you
have only 1, 2 or 3 points to make - When you begin by saying, “I plan to cover
seven different ideas,” your audience will be quick to shut down mentally.
2. Include an example every few minutes - The listener responds quickly to “Let me give you an example… “ We remember what it was like when we were young for an adult to start reading a story that began with “Once upon a time…” The example hook is the adult version of this technique.
3. Include at least one transition that encourages the audience to come back to you and your speech - The best one is probably, “You may forget everything else I say today, but remember this one idea.” Be sure this transition does lead to the most important idea; don’t use it as a gimmick to make them listen again. Be reminded that you can only use this once in a presentation. Another is “This may be something you know but have not been putting into use.” (Mental response: Me? Do I already know this?)
4. Include a “wow” factor every eight to ten minutes - This is simply a phrase, statistic, comparison, picture, or quotation that makes the audience member respond with “Wow! I did not know that.”
5. Change your delivery style - Soften your voice if you have been pretty loud. Move a step or two with purpose when making an important point. Movement attracts attention. Speed up or slow down your rate of speech.
6. Tighten the organisation of your presentation - If the audience feels that you are disorganised and finds it difficult to follow you, they will soon leave you - and may never come back. In preparation, check to see that each point relates to the other main points and that each piece of supporting material connects back to the point. Early in your presentation, preview your main points and stick to that structure.
Even the most effective presenter will lose his or her audience occasionally. These techniques, however, will at least make it less likely for the audience member to leave you for the duration.
All the best with your future business communications!!!
Posted in
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by effectivecommunication.com.au