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Be Succinct: Public Speaking without the Clutter

public speaking: be succinct
Is your talk too ‘cluttered’ for your audience to act on? These structure tips will help.

A few years ago I was looking at houses to buy, and visited properties that were ‘open for inspection’. At one house, the outside looked very appealing, well cared for and with a great garden.

The real estate agent greeted me at the front door, saying “letting you know that tenants are still living here”. The front door swung open to reveal the most cluttered home that I have ever seen –  there was stuff everywhere! Not mess, just an overwhelming amount of furniture… and ornaments… and fitness equipment… and books…and…

I never got to see the ‘bones’ of the house. And yes, I could have worked hard to picture the place without the clutter, but I didn’t want to use that much head space – so when I walked away, all I could remember was the mess.

It’s the same when we speak to a group. If we try to cram too much in, our audience will miss the ‘bones’, the spine of our message – and don’t think they’ll bother to search through the clutter to find it, no matter how brilliant and useful our core information. They will tune us out, and forget our message – and us – as they leave the room.

This also means very little chance you or your carefully honed message  will go ‘viral’ (if that’s important), because anyone who didn’t hear your presentation and asks an audience member what it was about will get a vague, woolly response that’s not clear enough to be neatly passed on to others.

 

Why do we speak to a group in the first place? 

Remember that unless you’re giving a talk that’s purely for entertainment value – a wedding speech, or account of your last trip to Vietnam – your goal is always for the audience to take action as a result of hearing you speak.

 

Why we give too much information

Here are some of the usual reasons why we give too much information when we speak to groups:

 

Action Steps: solutions to your clutter

If you’re an “everything including the kitchen sink” speaker, start de-cluttering:

Don’t throw everything at your audience, leaving them glazed over and eager to get out of the room: leave them wanting more!

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