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IMPROMPTU SPEAKING Speaking without preparation. Impromptu Speaking  Most of us don’t think or worry about giving impromptu speeches until we’ve been.

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Presentation on theme: "IMPROMPTU SPEAKING Speaking without preparation. Impromptu Speaking  Most of us don’t think or worry about giving impromptu speeches until we’ve been."— Presentation transcript:

1 IMPROMPTU SPEAKING Speaking without preparation

2 Impromptu Speaking  Most of us don’t think or worry about giving impromptu speeches until we’ve been put on the spot — and by then, it's too late. Consider some of the possible scenarios when you may be called upon, unexpectedly, to offer a few remarks or to give an impromptu speech:

3 Impromptu Speaking  In business, at a meeting or a conference, you may be asked to speak on a topic or stand in for someone who, for whatever reason, is unable to speak. Turning down the request can make you appear uncooperative, but accepting it tells others that you’re a team player and your performance is judged with more sympathy than generally given to prepared speakers.

4 Impromptu Speaking  In social settings such as a wedding or a commemoration, you may be asked to say a few words or even offer a toast. This atmosphere may be more casual and the stakes may not be as high, but this is no excuse for a lousy performance.

5 Impromptu Speaking  The benefits of effective impromptu speaking skills.  Improve oral expression of thought.  Develop confidence in public speaking.  Think quickly on your feet.  Develop leadership and communication skills.

6 Techniques  The following techniques can help to give you more confidence in giving impromptu speeches and that will in turn reduce any nerves or butterflies you might have at the time.

7 Techniques  Give yourself time to prepare  Take deep breaths.  Rise slowly from your chair and walk slowly to the lectern (or stand behind and away from your chair).  Use this time to collect your thoughts and decide on the purpose and plan of your speech.  Think about the opening sentence. Remember: You don’t have to start the speech immediately.

8 Techniques  Feel confident  Look around at audience and smile. Stand tall.  Don't slump, don't fidget, don't play with notes, don't put hands in your pockets.  Speak and act in a confident manner.  If you don’t feel confident, fake it until you make it!

9 Techniques  Slow delivery  Gives you time to think ahead.  The audience has time to absorb and react to what you are saying.  Helps you reduce umms and ahhs.

10 Techniques  Focus  Keep the focus on the subject while talking.  Don't think of any negatives (e.g. being unprepared).  Talk directly to the audience and adapt to their feedback.  Maintain good eye contact with the audience  Be brief and to the point.  Don't ramble or say too much on the subject.  Speak at the audience's level.

11 Speech Structure  An impromptu speech is simply a mini-speech and therefore it has an Opening, a Body and a Conclusion.  Opening  Body  Conclusion

12 Speech Structure  Opening  Open by addressing the your audience.  Brief introduction/opening sentence – attention getting.

13 Speech Structure  Body  Cover the main points (Try to find 1 or 2 central themes).  Use clearly worded simple sentences and try to link the themes.

14 Speech Structure  Conclusion  Be brief and look for an elegant closing that links back to the opening.  End by acknowledging and thanking your audience.

15 Sources of Content  Personalize it  This is the subject you know most about.  Audience can relate more easily to personal topics - they probably have similar experiences.  Give your opinion  Use humor  Relaxes you and the audience.  Others  Current events, something you have read or seen (newspaper, book, TV), knowledge of pertinent facts.

16 Methods to Determine Content  The following methods are for guidance only. You don’t have to use them however they may help you to think quickly on your feet. You may develop other techniques that suit your style of speaking better.

17 PREP Method  When asked to express an opinion - to inform, persuade or inspire:  Point Make your point (Opening). Reason State your reason for making the point (Body). Example Give an example to justify your previous remarks (Body).  Point Drive home the point again. Links the conclusion back to the opening.

18 5w’s and an H Method  Answer some or all of the following questions for the topic:  Opening. Who? What? When? Why? Where? How?  Closing.

19 Tips: Open with a personal Experience  Regardless of the setting, open by sharing a brief personal experience. This provides you with something crucial: a theme, and it's one you know and understand.  It keeps your subject matter within your grasp so that the foundation of your speech is built on something close to you  Very few people can discuss, on the fly, subjects they know nothing about.  “Personal experience” means some incident or event you either experienced yourself or know anecdotally, one which you can relate to the occasion at hand.

20 Tips: Set and follow a structure  How can you most easily spot the difference between a prepared speaker and an impromptu one? By how much the speaker rambles on.  Rambling — dragging down a speech with disconnected tangents or watering it down with "ums" and "ahs" and "uhs" — is the hallmark of the unprepared speaker, and is the most common mistake impromptu speakers make. In order to prevent yourself from falling into this morass, set out and stick to a simple structure.

21 Tips: End on a strong note  End your speech with something strong and reasonably memorable, if for no other reason then to make sure that your audience forgets whatever forgettable moments you may have already created during the rest of your speech.  Enlist the help of a profound and fitting quote, an insightful or humorous observation, or a reworded summation of your theme.  In the event inspiration completely eludes you, at least pull a cliché out of the hat in order to communicate a closure to your speech.  However you choose to finish, don’t end with an apology. No matter how unprepared and cluttered your remarks were, you have nothing to be sorry about, you made it through the impromptu speech, didn't you?

22 Summary  Deliberately rise from your chair very slowly and pause for a moment. Use this time to decide on the purpose and plan of your speech.  Keep the focus on the subject while talking, and don't think about any negatives such as being unprepared or that you will look or sound foolish. Rather, think about the subject.  Look for opportunities to bring in humor.  Talk directly to the audience and adapt to audience feedback.  Be brief and to the point. Guard against rambling and the temptation to say too much about the subject.  Remember, this is a mini speech so try to have an opening, a body and a conclusion. The conclusion should reflect back to the comments in the opening.  Always try to speak and act in a confident manner.  Don’t rush.  Address your audience before and after the speech.

23 Impromptu Speaking Rubric

24 Impromptu Speech  2 Minutes Preparation  2 Minutes Delivery


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