Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
1. Introduction
You might start with a story or incident that engages the attention and interest of the
audience.
2. An Indication of the structure of your talk
Give a brief outline
3. The body of your talk
A clear, brief presentation
4. Conclusion
Summarise your points and perhaps return to the story or incident you began with.
1. Set up a good relationship with the audience. ‘Be friendly, look friendly, sound
friendly’.
2. Grab the attention of the audience with an incident, a “slice of life” from your own
experience.
3. Arouse curiosity / build up the theme
4. Present arresting facts or catchy statements
5. Make it more interactive; ask questions..
1. When you have said what you wanted to say, STOP ! Speaking is like drilling for
water: when you have struck water, stop boring. “Be clear, be brief, be seated ”.
2. Go back to the story/incident with which you started. Connect the main point of your
talk with it and finish.
3. Often a little summary is helpful. “ Tell them what you are going to tell them, tell
them and then tell them what you told them.
4. Have a strong finish. The last words will remain in their minds.
5. Don’t leave the speaker’s stand while saying the last few words. After the last word,
pause for just a moment and then leave the platform with purpose decision.
DELIVERY
Introduction Clear
Interesting
Attention getting
Conclusion Strong
Clear
Convincing
1. Be relevant
Refer to the central thought or position that struck you most.
2. Be Positive
This is no time for display of your analytical skills. Emphasize the positive, forget
about the negative.
3. Be Crisp
The audience is tired after the talk. You’re just a punctuation mark.- Be brief and be
gone.