Public Speaking



The Extemporaneous Method for delivery and Speech Writing

The most popular delivery method is the one which requires the speaker to prepare only the outline and to memorize the ideas. It is popularly dubbed the extemporaneous method. It is popular because it makes you think on your feet and speak with a lively sense of communication. It lets you adapt to any advisable change as for example cutting your talk should the program run behind schedule.

You may or may not keep notes, but don’t lose eye-contact with your audience while you fumble among your papers. When, however, you are thoroughly familiar with your main points and your supporting material, you have little need for notes.

Concerning Speech Writing

A good speech, like a good book, should leave people wishing there was just a little more. Some speakers feel that unless a speech is long and involved, the audience will feel they haven’t received full value-yet few speakers have ever gotten in bad for brevity. A good speech writer must remember that the head can absorb no more than the seat can endure, for a listener made numb at one end grows dumb on the other.

The story of the beginning of the world was told in 400 words. The Ten Commandments used but 297; and Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address but 256. The speech you write and deliver should be your own; the guest who wore a gown that duplicated Jacqueline Kennedy’s felt no greater chagrin than the fellow following a speaker who delivered the very same “stock” speech that he meant to use.

Ghost-written speeches leading to embarrassing moments were brought home to a mayor who began to read a speech which he said included one of his favorite stories. It developed that he’d never even heard the story before, and he laughed so hard that his glasses fell off, broke, and he couldn’t read the rest of it!

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