The Ten Habits of Highly Effective Speakers

Written by Sandra Schrift


Words: 615 Publishing Guidelines: You are welcome to publish this article in its entirety, electronically, or in print fre*e of charge, as long as you include my full signature file for ezines, and my Web site address in hyperlink for other sites. Please send a courtesy link or email where you publish to sandra@schrift.com Thank you. ___________________________________________________________

The Ten Habits of Highly Effective Speakers

Successful speakers do not do allrepparttar right things all repparttar 104757 time. They often take risks and risk bombing. But all top speakers take daily action, to move towards their goals with many adjustments. Here are ten ways to be a highly effective speaker. 1. Have a passion for your subject(s). If you don’t care about your topic, who will? Make a list of five topics you love. Choose two and be willing to develop a program you are willing to stay with for at least two years.

2. Be persistent in your quest to be a speaker of excellence. You must be perceived as an expert with expertise. Demonstrate this through your life experiences, research andrepparttar 104758 way you customize your material for each audience. You are only as good as your last speech!

3. Haverepparttar 104759 patience to succeed. Is persistence your middle name? Don’t expect to be a success over night. Get support, mentors, a coach to help you master your presentation(s). One speaker said, This is a hard business to make an easy living.

4. Speak from your heart. Be authentic. Be vulnerable. Share your mishaps and idiosyncrasies. You won’t be perceived as real until you do this. When you are truthful, your audiences will trust what you are saying. Let your message provide hope for your audience.

5. Connect quickly with your audience. You only have 30 seconds to make your connection. So pay attention to your opening remarks. Don’t use jokes they may offend people in your audience. Do use short quotations, a funny story that is relevant to your message, a question or two to get their attention quickly.

Growing Your Meetings In CyberSpace

Written by Philippa Gamse


As increasing numbers of people search for information onrepparttar Internet, it becomes more imperative to have a compelling Website to promote and support your meetings.

Here is my list of "The Seven Most Important Things You can do Online":

1. Identify all your Online Markets It's a common mistake to focus your attention onrepparttar 104756 obvious target audience for your meetings site -repparttar 104757 potential attendees.

But many other types of visitor may find your site, and it's important to consider whether they're important to you, how you want to engage them, and what outcomes you'd like to achieve with them.

Visitors to your meetings Website might include:

* past / potential attendees * suppliers / vendors / exhibitors / sponsors / insurers * Board members / employees / volunteers * content seekers * media * job seekers * competition

"Content seekers" isrepparttar 104758 term I use for members ofrepparttar 104759 public who may not be regular customers or members of your organization, but who find you through a keyword search because they're interested inrepparttar 104760 content of your meeting. If you admitrepparttar 104761 public to your events, this is an important audience who might require different communications from your regular participants.

If you're looking for publicity, don't forgetrepparttar 104762 importance of a press center. This should be very easy to find, and should contain allrepparttar 104763 information that a reporter would need to cover your event - they're usually under tight deadlines and will really appreciate this.

I include "competition" in this list because many people have asked me whether it's dangerous to put too much good information on your Website "in caserepparttar 104764 competition sees it". My (somewhat obvious) answer? "If your competition can't see it, neither canrepparttar 104765 people you're looking to attract!"

2. Set your Goals This sounds self-evident, but is often overlooked. You can't evaluate your return on investment (see #7 later) if you don't know what you want to achieve. What will be your measures of success for this site in terms of your meeting? What arerepparttar 104766 key outcomes that you want - registrations, exhibitors, media attention, ongoing discussion forums, etc.

Also considerrepparttar 104767 expenses ofrepparttar 104768 site against any potential savings - for instance, if you're implementing online registration, you want to be satisfied that your system can replace (and hopefully improve on) your real-world processes in a cost-effective manner.

3. Make it About Them, not You Your site should be written from your visitors' point of view, not yours. Does your meeting description page clearly recognize whyrepparttar 104769 reader might be there - what's in it for them to attend your event, and why they should care? What arerepparttar 104770 problems or issues that they might have, and how will participating in this meeting address them?

Include some testimonials from previous attendees giving clear examples of how they've benefited from this event inrepparttar 104771 past. Third party endorsements are worth far more than your own promotional text. They should be spread throughout your site, not relegated to a separate page (because few visitors will go to it).

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