|
| |
Public Speaking: 
Pick your audience
(Did he say "pick"
my public speaking audiences?). Yes, I did say pick your audiences. Some of
you may not have this luxury because you must do public speaking as part of
your job, but those of you that do, will move up faster in the speaking world.
When you are a beginner in public speaking it is important for you to experience
different types of audiences just FOR the experience. As you climb the public
speaking experience ladder where the audiences are bigger, or more important
to your career where the risks are higher, you must learn to just say no.
Most top speakers
don't accept every request to speak even if they are available, and the money
is right. They pick their engagements to put themselves in front of audiences
whose profiles indicate the greatest chance of success. If you are a highly
technical speaker, you would not want to be speaking to a widget sales group
at their annual retreat. Conversely, as a really fun retreat facilitator, you
would not want to be speaking to a group of radar technicians who are only interested
in performance data of the latest missile protection system.
Avoid accepting
public speaking engagements where the audiences needs are clearly out of sync
with your abilities, likes and dislikes. Don't get me wrong. I want you to keep
pushing your limits, but if your audience needs more than you can give -- that's
right -- you bombed. Although it will be a lesson learned, do yourself and everyone
else a favor. Learn to just say no.
|