Public Speaking Book - Wake 'Em Up! |
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Humor PlacementBy now you are probably wondering where the best place is to put all this funny material you have collected. Most members of the audience expect you to start off your speech with a story or joke. You may want to postpone your story until the audience has resigned itself to a boring presenter and then you can surprise them your witty humor. A good rule to know from my public speaking book is "Don't be afraid to do the unexpected." Humor is one of the best attention getting devices that can take your audience to the peaks of intensity. In order to start figuring out where to put your humor, you first need to find out how long your presentation time slot will be. Once you have this information, divide the time into equal segments. If the percentage of humor is going to be low, you might make a funny comment every six to eight minutes. If the percentage of humor is very high, you might be making a funny comment every minute. Going through this process tells you roughly how much humor or other attention gaining devices you will need during your presentation. Planning ahead for each presentation is taught in my public speaking book. I'm assuming by now that all the humor you have selected is completely relevant to your audience and your topic. If it is not, throw it out now and start searching for something to replace it with that is relevant to your program. You must have fresh humor for every audience, not canned humor, or canned speeches. Next, you should be ready to place the humor in your program. Don't make the mistake of forcing humor and other material to fit into a presentation, always choose relevant humor. It makes no difference if one segment goes several minutes longer than another or if you don't hit the funny bone exactly every six to eight minutes. Just use that time length as a guideline. All you have to do now is decide if you want humor in your opening and/or closing. Finally, the third aspect of timing has to do with 'planned spontaneity.' When it comes to professional presentations, preparation will be a big factor in your ultimate success. Prepared remarks that appear spontaneous to the audience deserve a mention when talking about timing. During the course of a presentation, windows of opportunity for witty remarks open and close. They are usually related to 'expected/unexpected' happenings during the presentation, or questions from the audience. Let's say you are writing on the flipchart and your marker runs out of ink. Your window of opportunity is now open. You might jump through the window and say, 'I guess I've come to the dry part of my presentation' Window slams shut. Everything is fine. You look like a quick wit and a pretty cool NO ZZZZZs presenter, all of this is part of what is taught in my public speaking book. What if you waited until you searched out a new marker to say the same line? The opportunity is already lost, the spontaneity is gone and so is the impact. Many situations can be anticipated. If you are using a slide projector, the bulb might blow. You may be interrupted by a loud noise. Your microphone might squeal, etc. Prepare comments in advance so you can recall them immediately when needed. If you let too much time pass between the incident and your comment, you're better off foregoing the comment. It's too late to make it funny now, so just move on in your program. Questions from the audience can be treated the
same way. Dealing with awkward questions is
talked about in my
public speaking book. If you've been
presenting your material long enough, you can
probably anticipate most of the questions that
will be asked. Prepare a witty answer to each
question and use it when the question arises.
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