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Public Speaking: Conquering Nerves and Powering Up Credibility

No matter how confident you are about your subject and what you’ve come to say, standing in front of others to say it can be intimidating. Ducking that part of the job however comes with a downside. If you’re not the one in the spotlight, you’re not the one who gets the credit and there’s always danger in having others explain your work for you. The next time you’re reluctant to take the spotlight, think about the power that comes from framing your ideas, your findings, your knowledge for others. Then consider these techniques to help you embrace the role of Chief Explanations Officer (CEO):

1) Set yourself up for success
The chances are good that if you do battle nerves when speaking in public, it’s at the beginning of your talk. Look for ways then to shift the focus to those you’re speaking to early, while you ease into your talk. For instance, you might say: “Before I begin, let me ask if anyone has a guess on why we didn’t get the results we were looking for with this rollout”. Your audience is always eager to interact, and throwing a question out first gives you a moment to calm yourself by sharing the spotlight.
2.) Always have a plan B.
If you’re working with technology, (a slide show, a video), always be prepared in case the technology fails. Rather than get frustrated, you simply pivot to plan B and re-route to the same goal through different means. Slide show fails? It’s ok, you’ve brought hand-outs. The audience doesn’t know what you were SUPPOSED to say or that something went wrong unless you tell them. (And why would you tell them?) Just smoothly transition and keep going. You can circle back later.
3.) Free yourself up to be in the moment
Of course you want to rehearse, plan and prepare. What you don’t want to do is tie yourself in knots by trying to memorize every word or being overly dependent on your materials. They’re not the presentation, you are. If you notice the audience looking skeptical, stop and adjust. You can’t meet your audience where they are if you plow through information regardless of how it’s being received.
4.) Embrace the fear
Butterflies are energy, and energy is exactly what we need when we’re standing in front of others. Your goal is to teach those butterflies to fly in formation. Harness that energy to show commitment, passion, belief in what you’re saying. Unless you faint in front of us, your audience is probably clueless that those butterflies are active. Harness that energy into your voice, your movement, your speech, and keep going.
Seize the spotlight every chance you get and learn how powerful it can be to be the one selling your own ideas.
For more tips and techniques: follow us at www.thepincusgroup.com