Free Public Speaking Tips, Tricks and Articles
How To Use Stories In Your Professional Speaking Presentation
Public Speaking: 11 Story Telling Tips
For The Public Speaker
Stories Make A Great Speech Even
Better
Telling stories is a fun way to humanize your topic. The story
brings the "real-life" element into your topic making it more
relatable to your audience. Telling stories are also a great way
to change the pace of your presentation. Here are some tips to
help you incorporate story telling into your presentations.
- Stories serve many purposes in your
presentation. They can by used to highlight and
clarify a specific point you want to address in
your presentation. Stories can also reemphasize
those points in your message to stress their importance.
- Stories should be relevant to your topic. The
stories should also match the audience's needs and wants in
terms of intelligence levels, experiences, and other demographic
data such as age and occupation. The stories should be relatable
to your audience and easy to understand.
- Telling a story can change the pace of your message.
Stories can serve as a mental break for your audience so they
can process the information they've been given.
- Humorous stories are great presentation openers
and can set the tone of your message. Tell about
problems and errors that you've made. Audiences like
self-effacing humor because they can see themselves making the
same mistakes or having the same issues.
- Get rid of unnecessary details of your story
in your presentation. You can potentially lose your audience
with all those details and if they serve no purpose, then get
rid of them.
- Use short humorous stories in your presentation.
If your story is too long or you take too long in getting to the
punch line, your audience could tune you out.
- Tell where your story happened. Give your
audience concrete information to think about and draw their own
mental image in their mind.
- Use things that your audience is well associated with
in your story. Your audience should be familiar with all the
details of your story to they can remain hooked into it,
however, only be as detailed as is common knowledge. Specific
knowledge or "insider information" will not be relatable to most
people since only a few people know about it.
- Let your words work for you. Emphasize
adjectives and verbs so that they are more interesting to your
audience.
- Rehearse your story telling. Every word
counts and leaving out details can impact whether the story
relates to your audience or not.
- Get the emotions involved in your storytelling.
Hook your audience into your story by playing on their emotions.
Storytelling is not a difficult element to add to your
professional speaking presentation. By practicing, you will be
able to add more stories to your presentation to liven it up and
change the pace. You will find that your audience will become
more engaged in what you're saying because they can mentally
relate better to your information. As you tell your stories,
they will have mental images playing in their minds. They will
also see themselves in the stories you tell and have it relate
better to them. Start by adding one short story and then grow
your story telling abilities from there. Stories a great way to
make a great speech even better.