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97 contributions to The Public Speaking Community🔥
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Shoutout to the participants who have already signed up to SKOOLx 🔥 @Danny Hansen @Rodrigo Rios @Éva Raposa @Doa Kaptan @Sungsoo Choi @lori-ann-muenzer-2215 @Subhan Nair @Janet Little @Semih Yalap @Anil de Vries I know A LOT more of you have said "I'm In!" - I'm ready to add you to the list! 👉 All you need to do is either unlock the SKOOLx course here in The Public Speaking community for $199 OR join the Speaking Blueprint membership at $99/month (VAT added where applicable). This competition is going to be EPIC! 🤩
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4 likes • 7d
Let's do this :)
Test something new in your speech
I want to ask a question from you, How often do you test a new thing in your speech, I mean telling a funny joke, a private story, role playing and other things. For years, I didn't want to try new things in my speech because I think it could put me in a risk of criticism. What will happen if I cannot do it well! And I was remaining in my comfort zone, but recently I decided to test new things and improve my speech. What is your opinion and experience for this?
1 like • 9d
A Britiish public speaker said once 'I left my comfort zone... and when I tried to get back into it? Horror... it had simply grown around me...' (paraphrasing Miles Hilton-Barber) I try and tinker most of the time. Not 'burn the house down' tinkering... subtle shifts, different metaphors, shifts in energy... Over the last few months I had the opportunity to lecture and in every lecture I tried a different aspect... learned a lot and helped me to expand my range. I'm still very much learning how to communicate effectively so adjusting, adapting? Is very much part of the package for me. Which is also why I test drive almost all presentations with varying degrees of tenacity on unsuspecting colleagues, family members or other (willing) listeners.
Your Go-To Method for Memorizing a Presentation?
What methods do you use to memorize your speeches? I’m exploring different ways speakers prepare before going on stage, and I’d love to learn what actually works for you.
3 likes • 9d
@Keiko Lim You said 'speeches' which can imply a few things... 1) on record speeches where verbatim is part of the agreement. Here I'd try teleprompters and memorize key segments over time. There will be less ability to adjust your style... so you're delivering a package. I also agree with @Amir Salemi re mindmaps or other visuliation techniques. Memorizing here is probably time intensive especially if you haven't written the speech yourself. 2) a message/theme you're trying to transport. Here I find audience reaction in real time is as almost as important as your prepared speech. So key anchor ideas and a sturdy overall map how you get from A to Z tends to help me most. A written down speech can read clever, inspiring, fascinating... it shouldn't become a corsett that robs you of the flexibility to take a detour or home in by adding another perspective Are you mostly in camp 1 or 2?
Question
What helps you feel more confident when speaking in public? I heard something the other day that before you speak you should try get rid of the adrenaline build up so you arent nervous like doing twenty start jumps 10 press ups etc so you wont pace about so much might give that a try next time i have a interview thing tomorrow so gonna do that in advance i do random star jumps all the time anyway so hope it helps lol
2 likes • Apr 20
@Monica Daly For me, it helps to ground my presence in the purpose rather than in myself. - What am I actually trying to convey? - What am I offering the audience here? That slight shift tends to take the edge off the nerves because the focus moves away from “how am I coming across?” to “is this useful for them?” Physical activity beforehand can definitely help as well — it settles the body. I’d just see it as support, not the main lever.
1 like • Apr 23
@Monica Daly how did it go?
Your Story
Share your story! Where are you, where are you going, and how is public speaking part of that journey? Newbies: use this to try your ideas, explore whats possible! Pro's: share inspiration! Where were you before, where are you now? What can others learn from it? Let's go!
Your Story
4 likes • Apr 15
Many inspiring takes here. For me, it’s become less about “getting on stage” and more about leaving a place slightly better than I found it — whether that’s a lecture hall, a conversation here, or a drink with a stranger. Public speaking then feels less like a goal and more like one expression of that. Over time, that’s led me to start writing, teaching more formally, joining a LinkedIn Live, and perhaps circling a TEDx next year. Still figuring out the direction — but the intent feels clearer than before.
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Wolfram Grohnert
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@wolfram-grohnert-6590
Optimistic diver of human patterns — writing what I learn.

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