| 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. Simile In your career in public speaking you can utilize simile's during your presentations to add something different. A simile means to compare two things that seem different in some ways, but have other strong points in common. The words 'like' and 'as' are typically used when making these types of comparisons. You might say, 'Getting this contract signed is as impossible as trying to smuggle daybreak past a rooster.' Contracts and roosters don't have much in common (which is funny), but in this case, the presenter is telling you what they do have in common. Getting the contract signed and smuggling daybreak past a rooster are both impossible. You could shorten the last simile by changing 'as impossible as' to 'like.' "Getting this contract signed is like trying to smuggle daybreak past a rooster." With this example, the audience must make the connection that both are impossible. It's good to make the audience think sometimes because it forces them to be involved, which as you know is the key to having a successful career in public speaking. One thing I say repeatedly is that funny things surround you everywhere you go, so look around and share it. I got a great simile out of a child's joke book I acquired for 10 cents at a flea market. I now use this line in presentations all over the country. I do a seminar called Business Lite: Low Cost/No Cost Ways to Improve Productivity. In that seminar I talk about how employees feel at work. I say, 'Sometimes you go to work and you feel like a turtle with claustrophobia you've got to be there, but you feel closed in.' I like to mix and match different forms of humor in one concise chunk. Here's a simile that I just love. "If you put his brain on a matchstick, it would be like rolling a BB down a four-lane highway." Let's break this one-liner down to see how several different forms of humor were used. Putting a person's brain on a matchstick and rolling a BB down a four-lane highway are both ludicrous juxtapositions. (View this web site's 'Juxtaposition' article, for reference.) No one is going to put someone's brain on a matchstick, or roll a BB down a four-lane highway. This piece of humor is a simile because the two ludicrous juxtapositions are compared with the connective word "like". The effect of the simile is to exaggerate how small this man's brain is. So, three different types of humor are used which were juxtaposition, simile and exaggeration were combined to make a great one-liner. These are the types of relationships you would explore if you were feeling adventurous and decided to write some of your own humor. Many of the one-liners you run across will be combinations like this. You don't have to be able to dissect them like I just did. All you have to be able to do is pick the ones that make your point (in this case similes), and use them where and when appropriate. The proper use of similes in your career in public speaking can some fun to your presentation. Home Article Index |