4 Steps to Delivering a Powerful Speech Introduction
If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!
It’s natural when involved in public speaking for you to be nervous when you’re first giving that introduction speech. When you can overcome that initial nervousness, and produce a speech that your audience will remember for a lifetime - that is the mark of a trained public speaker.
Your goal as a public speaker is to provide a great speech introduction. Without one, you are lost before you even begin. As such, there are 4 steps or examples of speech introduction that may just help you get over the hump, produce the kind of speech your audience will learn from, and be glad they came.
The first method or step is by acting like a coach. If you presented yourself as a coach to your audience, you won’t present your material like normal speakers do. Instead, you would act as someone who has something vital to say that will benefit the person, and you gear your introduction so you present your material in this matter.
The second step is to state that you have something important to say that you will need your audience to take home. Provide samples of your work so your audience can pick up one or more when you leave the room. A great introduction into your speech could be making a point about something you’ve written or done and emphasizing that if your audience does it they can be successful like you too.
Just remembering people are decisive by nature is the third step. They will decide quickly, whether it be buying something or listening to something. It is your choice whether or not what you deliver in your speech is what they came to hear. It is vitally important that your audience understand that nothing else matters but what you have to say.
Talk to experts in the field if you wonder how you should start a speech. To overcome nervousness, some professional speakers use a signature opening and get the audience involved. You need to develop your own signature opening as a speaker in training. Doing so will make your speech introduction on target and powerful, every time you give it.
As stated earlier, public speaking is a skill you can develop. It takes time. You can’t become a successful public speaker overnight. But you can develop the ability to become one by simply learning the trade and practice your delivery often. This is how the experts did it and if you follow in their footsteps, you’ll find yourself doing it as well. Before you know it, you’ll be right up among them as an expert public speaker too.