Start a Career in Public Speaking Today


 
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.

Get 'em in Fun

Sigmund Freud offered some great insight tht you can apply to your career in public speaking.

This is what he wrote:

"The best condition for comic pleasure is a generally happy disposition where one is in the mood for laughter. In these happy states almost everything seems funny. We will laugh at the expectation of laughing, at the appearance of who is giving the humorous material (sometimes even before he [she] attempts to make us laugh), and finally, we laugh at the recollection of having laughed."

This concept has been termed '"In fun" by scientists that study the effect of humorous behavior on people. If you want your audience to laugh, they must be "in fun". You, the speaker, must be "in fun". The emcee or program coordinator needs to be "in fun". The whole program should be designed around the audience being 'in fun'.

Try not to do anything to take your audience out of  being "in fun". Don't speak about controversial subjects like religion or politics and don't make unfriendly comments to other audience members. If a situation occurs which must be dealt with, find a funny way of taking care of it. For instance, if I'm at a presentation and someone asks me who I voted for I just say, "I voted for the USA." That's just a  clever way to say that I really prefer not to talk about it. Keeping in tune with your audience is important to your career in public speaking.

Dr. Charles Jarvis who is a retired National Speakers Association member and one of the greatest
humorists of all time, told me about a friend of his who was an great speaker, but lost his audience when he told someone to turn off a tape recorder. He was so mean about the way he treated that person that the "in fun" audience totally turned on him.

An "in fun" audience is more critical for the speaker who is there to entertain, but the concept should be in the back of every presenter's mind who wants to have a successful career in public speaking. Your material may be controversial by nature, but that doesn't mean that you should go out of your way to do or say things that will take the audience further out of in fun.

Also, pay close attention to the total program. One friend of mine had to present comical material just after a passionate plea went out to the audience to collect funds for starving babies. He came on stage just after the teary-eyed audience had seen slides of starving children. 

DON'T start right in with your best funny material. Start out gently with a sincere reference to what the audience has just experienced. Cut most of your early speaking humor and get right to your subject to ease the audience's transition to your more lighthearted topic.

How do you put being "in fun" into practice during your presentation? One time I had a ventriloquist
introduce me at an early morning meeting to wake up everyone and get them in fun. You could pass out some snacks to the audience or put balloons on their chairs. Public announcements and agendas can be decorated with funny cartoon characters. A great way to get people "in fun" during your career in public speaking is to use funny props.

Do anything you can to be sure your audience knows that it's OK to laugh.

Home
Article Index

Ultimate Guide to Pro

Like this site?
Bookmark Now!
(Control-D)

Tell a Friend!
Email This Article

Bookmark and Share

View Tom Antion's profile on LinkedIn

Copyright 2011 © All Rights Reserved