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Speaking with
Confidence: How to “Manage” the Butterflies
by
Mimi Donaldson
As a manager, you have many opportunities to speak in front of groups of
people. You have to. Research
shows public speaking is the number one fear of people. Death is number
five. So when you say, "I'd rather
die than go up in front of the room,” you're not kidding. Almost everyone
experiences some degree of
nervousness when they have to be a "speaker,” whether it is a formal
presentation in front of a group
twenty-five, presenting information to someone "important,” or being
called on in a meeting to answer a
question. Your heart starts pounding loudly, your throat constricts, the
face feels hot and you're "on.” For most
people this feeling will never go away completely. We may never truly
banish the butterflies; the best we can do
is "manage” them to fly in a straight line.
Here are some tips to do just that.
We worry about nervousness, but the body produces extra energy at moments
of perceived danger which is
normal and good. In primitive times, that energy saved us from wild beasts
by enabling us to run faster
than we thought possible. We've all been awed by tales of moms who
experience super-human energy, and become
strong enough to lift an auto off their suffering child with their bare
hands. But that same energy in
front of a group, can come out as nervousness, which is distracting to our
listeners. The rule is: it's okay
to be nervous, as long as it doesn't show. How do we hide our knocking
knees and quivery voice from our
audience? Instead of suppressing your energy, learn to release it. Put
more energy behind your message through the
five channels of your body. They are: eyes, hands, voice, feet and body.
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Eyes - the most important channel to give out your energy and your
message. Eye contact conveys
credibility, sincerity, interest and involvement with your message and
your audience. Don't flit your eyes - it
makes you look nervous. Stay with one person for a complete thought; then
switch to someone in another part
of the room. Make sure all the listeners feel the energy pour out through
your eyes. No staring, please.
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Hands - You cannot plan what to do with your hands. They will move
naturally if and when you're giving
out enough energy through your eyes and your voice. If your voice is a low
monotone and your eyes are
downcast, you hands are simply not motivated to move. When hand energy is
suppressed, it comes out as fidgeting.
People wring their hands, pull a finger, "pray,” imitate a spider doing
push-ups on a mirror, play with coins
in their pocket. Be aware and stop doing those things -- they distract
your listener. Don't concentrate on
your hands; concentrate on projecting your energy through your eyes and
voice. And use your hands to support
your message: to show spatial relationships, movement, size and to
emphasize points.
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Voice - Don’t worry about it cracking. People want you to be real.
Focus on five qualities:
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Pace - not too fast or too slow.
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Intonation - ups and downs; variety in the voice.
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Tone - attitude or emotion in the voice. Stay clean - you can
unwittingly project anger or impatience or
insecurity.
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Volume - not too loud or too soft.
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Non-words - get rid of “like,” "really,” "you know,” "okay?” Trust the
silence, but remember to fill it with energy.
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Feet - Balance your weight on the balls of both feet, not the heels. Be
poised like an athlete ready
to go when you are channeling energy. Watch out for aimless pacing and the
opposite: being planted in one
spot may cause you to sway with the suppressed energy. Release the energy
through the feet. Walk forward a
couple of steps if you feel passionate about a point you're making.
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Body - Posture please. You don't want to look nervous by being hunched
over. Clothes shouldn’t be distracting
either. Make sure they fit. Have someone check you over before you speak.
You can't see if your collar is turned
up in back, but some nitpicker in your audience will.
Make your energy work for you, not against you. When you suppress it, it
comes out as nervousness anyway. Give the
energy away through your eyes, hands, voice, feet and body. Be impassioned
about your subject. If you’re not impassioned —
fake it. Managers are people who get the job done whether they feel like
it or not. Professionals are
people who speak even when they don't feel like it. Use your energy to get
those butterflies flying in a
straight line, and your audience won't even know they're there.
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