| Start a career in public speaking and earn money while having fun. Learn how to make $5500 or more for each speaking presentation you do.  You can get all the latest public speaking tips and tricks for FREE by signing up for Tom's Great Speaking Ezine. Be Careful I learned this lesson the hard way through a personal experience. I once held a speaking engagement for 3200 people in California that was a huge event. I definitely had to make sure I used the skills I have learned from my career in public speaking. I had two stage managers with headsets counting down 30 seconds till show time, a personal assistant and complete video crew for tape and image projection. All of my team was rushing around trying to get everything running on time and going smoothly. I had some assistants who, on cue, were going to pass out plastic glow stars to the audience so the whole room would be lit with the stars for the grand finale where I had blacked out the room. The entire presentation went off without a problem. The audience had a great time. Afterwards as I was busy shining my halo ... the production company head came up to me and said, 'We have a problem.' ... I had no idea what could have gone wrong. He told me the assistants were throwing the stars into the crowd and one of them hit a member of the audience in the eye and scratched his cornea ... Talk about your stomach sinking. No one knew if he was going to be OK or not. He was on his way to the hospital. ... It was six weeks before he found out if the damage was permanent or not. Thankfully he'd only had a badly scratched cornea and his eye soon recovered completely. Like the song, "I can see clearly now", I had let all the hoopla get in the way of my normal briefing of my assistants and it almost cost someone their eyesight. Make sure you do your normal briefings, and proper preparations. I never even considered the possibility of injury for that stunt so I encourage you that throughout your career in public speaking that being careful must be a priority. You must think ahead of possible adverse consequences of unusual interactions with the audience so to prepare the event for everything to go smoothly. ... BE CAREFUL! Home Article Index |  Like this site? Bookmark Now! (Control-D) Tell a Friend! Email This Article      |