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Effective
Public Speaking for Small Business Owners |
by:
Keith
Longmire |
Public
speaking is comfortably the quickest and
easiest way to improve your company visibility,
establish yourself as an expert, get you
face known and get businesses coming to
you.
Most small business owners and managers
fully recognise this yet even the thought
of standing up in public to speak to a room
full of strangers can evoke a somewhat nauseous
feeling in many people.
Some of the most confident business people
often do their best to avoid public speaking.
But not taking advantage of every public
speaking opportunity is a serious mistake.
Public speaking is great for your business
in two main ways.
One - you gain face recognition, and
Two - it establishes you and your company
as industry experts.
Let’s start with face recognition. This
sounds like a simple thing, but don't discount
its importance. Imagine you are at an industry
trade show. You are side by side with another
company in the exhibit hall. You sell basically
the same product.
But you are delivering the keynote speech
at the conference. Your picture, name and
company is on each of the entry-way signs
into the conference center.
Which company are attendees at the conference
(who, by the way, are qualified prospects)
likely to visit?
Odds are they will stop at your stand.
Even people who are just walking by may
stop to talk to the person they saw speak
at a conference session. Sometimes that's
all the edge you need to make that lucrative
sale.
The other reason they decide to stop is
they recognise you as the industy expert.
You must be. How else did you get invited
to give the prestigious keynote speech?
The prospects assume you know your business
or you wouldn’t have been invited to speak
at the conference.
This is true regardless of industry. If
you are a psychologist with a local practice
and people see you speak at a conference,
or even at a local Rotary meeting, they
will begin to see you as an industry expert.
Should the occasion arise for that person
to need to visit a psychologist, or to refer
a colleague or friend, your name may come
to mind simply because they’ve seen you
before.
It is important, however, that if you decide
to take public speaking engagements, that
you deliver a good speech.
The good news is that you don't have to
be perfect. In fact, usually public speakers
do not have to be particularly good to be
a great success. Your audience is usually
more than half on your side. They want you
to do well.
And providing you deliver good, solid content
in a professional manner your audience will
leave well satisfied.
But be prepared.
There is nothing worse than letting a prospect
see you give a less than well prepared speech.
If your lack of preparedness causes you
to pause a lot, stumble over sections of
presentation, or fumble with slides or other
presentational aids, that will give you
the air of incompetence just as surely as
a well prepared and delivered presentation
will give you the air of expertise.
Here are my top 7 tips for preparing presentations.
1. Choose 3 or 4 key topics - no more.
2. Make sure your have researched your content.
3. Write a script - you may not need to
use it but the act of writing out a script
is a great way for getting your thoughts
and ideas straight.
4. Structure your speech around your core
topics. Make sure you have a beginning,
middle and end.
5. Make sure your presentational aids are
prepared well in advance. Test them in the
conference hall.
6. Rehearse - words that look great on paper
often don't flow well when spoken aloud.
7. Rehearse again.
Just as much as being seen and heard can
gain you recognition and business, being
seen and heard giving a poor presentation
can lose you business.
So you may want to look into taking a few
public speaking courses to brush up on your
skills.
Public Speaking may well seem like a lot
of effort and trouble. It might even cause
you enormous personal anxiety. But there
is not doubt that it is worth the time and
energy it takes any manager or business
owner to give public speaking presentations.
There are few better ways to gain recognition
for your name, company and to establish
yourself as the obvious expert in your industry.
About the author:
Keith Longmire is the owner of JKL Business
Growth Solutions. JKL specialises in bringing
main stream business improvement and marketing
solutions into the reach of smaller businesses.
His website http://www.jkl-small-business-marketing-solutions.comhas
been designed to help owner-managers cut
through the hype and produce innovative
marketing plans that deliver results.
Circulated by Bandoni
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