Posts Tagged ‘author’

The Power Of Poetry In Your Next Speech

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011
Image Credit The Power Of Poetry Can Transform Your Next Speech

The Power Of Poetry Can Transform Your Next Speech

If you want to add some class to your next speech, if you are looking for a way to make your audience come to tears or break out in laughter, then perhaps what you need to do is to incorporate some poetry into your speech. I’m not talking the “Roses are red, Violets are blue…” variety, but rather poems that really mean something and which can lend their weight to your speech.

Just What Is This Thing Called Poetry?

Just in case you’ve been out of school for just a bit too long, maybe we should take a step back and make sure that we’re all on the same page when it comes to this poetry thing. The good folks over at Wikipedia seem to have a pretty good handle on it when they define poetry as being a:

“Literary work in which special intensity is given to the expression of feelings and ideas by the use of distinctive style and rhythm…”

We all know about the importance of public speaking and poetry is yet another way to get our points across. Because of the way that the words are put together in a poem, they can easily flow off of your tongue and into your audience’s mind. When your audience hears a line of poetry, they process it differently from everything else that you’ve been saying. It can almost instantly cause a reaction to occur in your audience.

The poems that we have all heard were written by famous, what else, poets. What this means is that when you add their poetry to your speech you’ll also be adding a new level of importance to what you are saying.

What’s The Best Way To Use A Poem In Your Next Speech?

The power of poetry is something that you can add to your next speech in order to make sure that your speech makes an impression on your audience. Celia Berrell writes a lot of poetry and she points out that you can’t add an entire poem to your speech, instead you’ll have to add just pieces and parts.

When you reach the point in your speech that you’ll start to recite the part of the poem that you’ve selected, you’ll find that you now have a license to do more. You can use more gestures and you can use more vocal variety to convey your message. You audience’s listening skills will be peaked because hearing poetry is not something that they do every day. It’s poetry so people expect you to act like a poet while you are reciting the poem.

The power of a poem comes from the specific words that make it up as well as the sequence in which they flow. In terms of presentation tips, clearly you’ve got some memorization to do here. On top of that you’ll need to take the time to practice, practice, practice. Reading poetry is probably not something that you do every day and so you are going to have to invest the time and energy that it’s going to take so that when you recite the poem, it sounds natural.

Finally, Celia makes a good point when she points out that just like you, your audience probably doesn’t encounter poetry every day. Therefore you can’t just hit them over the head with a poem right off the bat in your speech. Instead, you need to take the time to introduce both the poem and the poet. Give some backstory on when and why the poem was written. Tell them what the meaning of the poem is before you share the actual poem with them. By doing this you’ll prepare them to be wowed by the words of the poem.

What Does All Of This Mean For You

Even the most unread among us has heard some poetry at some point in our lives. The people who write the classic poems really know how to use words to create lyrical phrases that stir the memory and generate deep feelings.

Your next speech can tap into the power of poetry if you’ll just take the time to work some poetry into it. Take the time to prepare your audience for the poem that you’ll be sharing with them and then keep it short and to the point. Taking the time to carefully practice your delivery will allow you to ensure that the poem makes a lasting impression.

The goal of every speech is to make a lasting impression on your audience. The poet Mary Elizabeth Coleridge knew how hard it was to tap into an audience’s memory when she wrote:

Strange Power, I know not what thou art,
Murderer or mistress of my heart.
I know I’d rather meet the blow
Of my most unrelenting foe
Than live—as now I live—to be
Slain twenty times a day by thee.

Take the time to work some poetry into your next speech and you’ll have found a way to make a lasting impression on your audience.

- Dr. Jim Anderson
Blue Elephant Consulting –
Your Source For Real World Public Speaking Skills™

Question For You: How long of a poem do you think that you could work into a speech without losing your audience?

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Note: What we talked about are advanced speaking skills. If you are just starting out I highly recommend joining Toastmasters in order to get the benefits of public speaking. Look for a Toastmasters club to join in your home town by visiting the web site www.Toastmasters.org. Toastmasters is dedicated to helping their members to understand the importance of public speaking by developing listening skills and getting presentation tips. Toastmasters is how I got started speaking and it can help you also!

What We’ll Be Talking About Next Time

You’ve got great ideas trapped in you. You know the importance of public speaking and you want to use your speaking skills to make your audience’s lives better. The problem is that if you aren’t careful, what you say during your speech will just go in one ear and out the next. How can you make your next speech more “sticky”?

The Self-Published Presenter

Monday, February 16th, 2009
A Self-Published Book Offers A Way To Have Your Message Live On After Your Presentation Is Done

A Self-Published Book Offers A Way To Have Your Message Live On After Your Presentation Is Done

As a communicator, you’ve got a lot to say. Getting up in front of an audience is one way to get your message across, but it’s not the only way. We’ve talked a lot about slides, handouts, and summary sheets, but there is one even more powerful tool that you have at your disposal – the self-published book.

The best thing / worst thing about giving a presentation is that when it’s over, it’s over. If your audience got your message, then congratulations you made a difference. However, not everyone gets what you have to say the first time around. Providing your audience with a self-published book is a great way to either prepare them for your presentation before you speak or remind them what you spoke about after you are done.

The world of publishing can get quite complicated very quickly. In order to find our way through this new territory, we should talk with Patricia Fry who is not only an author, but also speaks on publishing topics.

Fry reminds us that there are multiple paths to get to where you want to be. Specifically, there are three different ways that you can get a book published. These include:

  • “Self-Publishing” Companies: These firms will, for a fee, work with you to create a cover, file for an ISBN number, format your manuscript for publishing, and then print on-demand as many copies of your book for you as you request.
  • You Self-Publish: basically this means that you set up your own self-publishing company and make all of the decisions. This requires more time and effort on your part, but it does give you full control over the final product.
  • Traditional Publisher: these are the guys who print all of those books that you see down at your local Borders book store. You provide the manuscript and then they take it from there – you have very little control over the final product.

Writing a book proposal should be your next step. Even if you plan on self-publishing your book, writing a book proposal BEFORE you write your book is a good idea in order to make sure that your book will line up with your target audience. A book proposal is basically a business plan: it discusses who you think will buy your book, what the competition is, and what’s going to make your book special.

If you decide to go the self publishing route, then you need to be prepared for the steps that you are going to have to go through to get your book into the hands of your audience. Once the book has actually been published, you will need to locate and strike a deal with a wholesaler / distributor who deal with the places that your target audience shops for books. This can be as diverse as a Borders or Barns & Noble or maybe even university bookstores.

Since you are self-publishing, it’s going to be your responsibility to contact and talk with each possible outlet in order to get them interested in your book. Once they are interested, then you can have them work with your distributor to get copies of your books.

Self-publishing is a great way to make sure that the message in your presentation lives on well beyond your delivery to your audience. It’s a lot of work, but the rewards make it all worthwhile.

Have you ever been published? How did you get published – did you self-publish? Do you think that you have enough material to write a book about what you talk about? How long do you think that it would take you to write a book? Leave me a comment and let me know what  you are thinking.

Hey Officer, Book That Presenter…

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009
Forget The Police, How About If You Write A Book To Get Your Message Across...

Forget The Police, How About If You Write A Book To Get Your Message Across...

We spend a lot of time talking about how to deliver your message verbally to your audience. However, there’s a lot more to communications than just the spoken word. For your typical do-it-once-and-it’s-over internal business presentation, the actual delivery is enough – do it well and then move on. But what about those presentations that you REALLY care about – the ones in which you’d like to change the world…?

There’s a lot of different ways to make your presentations have a life after you’ve gotten done giving them. Podcasts, videos, etc. are cheap and easy to do these days. However, I think that if you are really trying to get your message across, then the written word is your most powerful tool. That my friend means that you just might have to write a book…

Write a book you say? Not me! I’m no J.K. Rowling or Steven King. Hey, you don’t have to be – you just have to have something interesting to tell your audience and the words will flow out of you.

Neil Chethik is a published author who also works with others to help them get their books published. If you really care about the message that you are trying to communicate, then perhaps we need to spend just a few moments listening to what Neil has to tell us about getting a book published.

If you care enough about your message, then Neil says that there are three things that you need to think about when you are writing things down:

  1. What is going to make your book unique (there are a lot of other books out there!)
  2. What makes you so special that you are the best person to write this book (you are the best person, now figure out why…)
  3. What are you going  to do to make this book appear to have value for the audience of readers that you want to buy or obtain this book?

If you can make sure that your writing answers all three of these questions, then you are getting close having a published book. Once you have poured your heart out onto the (electronic) pages before you, the next step is to get yourself published.

Thankfully, Neil is once again here to help us out. He points out that here in the 21st Century there are a number of ways to get your message/book published. Its actually pretty easy to publish a book yourself. Somewhat tellingly this is called “vanity publishing”. However, let’s spend some time talking about the more difficult road to traditional publishing.

Neil tells us that here’s what you are going to have to do in order to get the attention of a traditional publisher:

  1. Do Some Research: off you go to your local Borders store. Find out where your book, once published, would be displayed. See what’s already there. How would your book be different? Make sure that it would be different!
  2. Propose!: Create a 10-25 page (double spaced) business proposal that tells a prospective publisher why they should publish your book. It’s good to get help on this and the book How to Write a Book Proposal is a good place to start.
  3. Do You Need An Agent?: This one is pretty simple – if you want one of the 25 biggest publishing companies to publish your book, then you need an agent. If you can live with being published by a smaller shop or a university press, then you can just send your book proposal to them directly.
  4. Pick An Agent: book agents get about 15% of anything that you make. Just like when finding a real estate agent, pick carefully.
  5. Personalize It: After you’ve picked the agent that you want, create a personalized letter to include with the manuscript that you are sending to them. It has to make them want to read your manuscript – make it interesting and watch your spelling!
  6. Get A Lawyer!: Because I know that you are going to be successful, please get a lawyer BEFORE you sign any agreement with an agent. You don’t want to get taken to the cleaners here!

Do you think that you could write a book about a topic that you really care about? How long do you think that it would take you to write a book? Would you know how to promote your book once you had written it? Leave me a comment and let me know what you are thinking.