|
| |
Public Speaking: 
How to Close a Speech
One of the worst
mistakes you can make in your public speaking is talking too long. Not only will
you send some folks to never, never land, you will make some of them downright
mad. It doesn't matter if your entire speech was brilliant and the audience came
away with information that will change their lives. If you talk too long, they
will leave saying, "That speaker just wouldn't quit." Don't let this
happen to you! Say what you have to say and sit down. Before you do, give them
a well thought out closing.
The last thing
you say may be the most remembered. You must put as much time into selecting
and practicing your closing as you put into any other part of your public speaking
presentation. Just like your opening, your closing does not have to be humorous.
It could be motivational, challenging, thoughtful, respectful of the length
of the presentation, or it could restate your point in a different way. This
ending segment will have a strong influence on what the audience takes home
with them when you are done. Please, at sometime during your talk ask the audience
to do something. Many a great NO ZZZZZs talk went no further than the walls
of the meeting room because the audience wasn't moved to action. If you haven't
ask them to do something by now, the closing is your last chance.
If the subject
is appropriate, I happen to be fond of humorous closings for several reasons.
If you leave them laughing and applauding, you will exit, but an extremely positive
impression about you will remain. Another good reason to leave them laughing
is that the room will not be deadly silent as you are walking back to your seat
at the end of your public speaking. I hate when that happens. I do love laughter
and feeling good; finishing a speech humorously gives me and the audience an
opportunity to feel great. Speeches that are for entertainment purposes only
should generally leave the audience laughing.
Finally, if the
subject is not appropriate to end with laughter, you could end with a touching
story or quotation that leaves the audience thoughtful and quiet. Even the most
serious public speaking subjects can benefit from humor, but the humor should
be sprinkled throughout the body of the presentation. Don't put it at the end
because closings are powerful and the audience will think your overall attitude
toward the public speaking subject is flippant.
This same technique
can be very effective in ending a mostly humorous public speaking engagement.
Have them laughing all along while you make your points. Then finish seriously.
This contrast will create a great impact. It will convey the fact that you believe
in a lighthearted approach to the subject, but the results are very serious
to you.
Don't be afraid
to use humor when you have a public speaking presentationJust make sure you
learn to use it in public speaking, appropriately.
|