Public Speaking Tip: Taking a Pause
During
their public speaking
presentations, many
speakers get so excited
that they try to finish the whole thing in a single breath without
having any pauses in between. This not only takes the dramatic
effect away from their speech, but also makes the audience restless.
Suppose a man in your audience wants to ponder on a point and
analyze it – so they do not listen to you for a few moments to
ponder. However, once he rejoins you, you have already rushed ahead
a few minutes or so, and now he cannot figure out where you are. If
this happens a couple of times more, he gives up the effort to
understand and waits impatiently for your presentation to be
finished. Surely you don’t want your audience to rush out of the
room as if their hair is on fire as soon as your presentation ends.
So, what’s the solution? Simple – take some pauses.
Think how you
speak to a friend or with your family members. You speak in a calm
tone, with pauses here and there. Apply the same to your speech.
Imagine that you are talking with your audience and not at them. Let
them get involved by taking adequate pauses. After you have shared
an important story, or a lesson - pause. Give them the time to think
about the story, the lesson hidden in it or analyze the golden
nugget. After some time, resume your speech.
Taking some pauses will
not only make your public speaking presentations
a lot better but even let you do things at your own pace without
rushing though the whole
schedule. Unlike what many people think, taking a pause isn’t a sin.
Rather, it’s a necessity to take your presentation a notch above, if
not more.
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